Netflix’s Drive to Survive has never been short on drama, but Season 7? It’s shaping up to be the most explosive yet. With F1 rocked by its biggest scandal, the docuseries is making a bold shift that could change everything. The show’s boss is eager to see how fans react, as this season promises to dive deeper into the chaos like never before.
A still from Drive to Survive | Credits: Box to Box Films
Will the new approach fuel even more excitement or leave audiences divided? One thing’s for sure: when F1’s off-track drama meets Netflix’s signature storytelling, the result is bound to be unmissable.
Drive to Survive season 7 revs up the drama with bold changes, says James Gay-Rees Christian Horner in Drive to Survive | Credits: Box to Box Films
Netflix’s Drive to Survive is back, and this season’s different. Executive producer James...
A still from Drive to Survive | Credits: Box to Box Films
Will the new approach fuel even more excitement or leave audiences divided? One thing’s for sure: when F1’s off-track drama meets Netflix’s signature storytelling, the result is bound to be unmissable.
Drive to Survive season 7 revs up the drama with bold changes, says James Gay-Rees Christian Horner in Drive to Survive | Credits: Box to Box Films
Netflix’s Drive to Survive is back, and this season’s different. Executive producer James...
- 3/8/2025
- by Heena Singh
- FandomWire
Jeremy Roloff and Audrey Roloff from Little People, Big World recently celebrated their tenth wedding anniversary. To mark the special milestone, they took a look back down memory lane and spoke about conflict and attacks in their marriage.
Little People, Big World: Jeremy & Audrey Roloff Look Back at Wedding
Jeremy Roloff and Audrey Roloff recently celebrated their tenth wedding anniversary. He admits it doesn’t feel like they have been husband and wife for that long. However, she thinks it feels like it has been longer. She explains that after looking back at their wedding and seeing how young they were, she feels like it was a long time ago.
Little People, Big World | Youtube
The Little People, Big World reality star reveals that she and her husband watch their wedding video every anniversary. However, to celebrate their tenth wedding anniversary, they decided to watch the televised episode of their wedding.
Little People, Big World: Jeremy & Audrey Roloff Look Back at Wedding
Jeremy Roloff and Audrey Roloff recently celebrated their tenth wedding anniversary. He admits it doesn’t feel like they have been husband and wife for that long. However, she thinks it feels like it has been longer. She explains that after looking back at their wedding and seeing how young they were, she feels like it was a long time ago.
Little People, Big World | Youtube
The Little People, Big World reality star reveals that she and her husband watch their wedding video every anniversary. However, to celebrate their tenth wedding anniversary, they decided to watch the televised episode of their wedding.
- 10/10/2024
- by Jessica Almeida
- Soap Dirt
Must of the Month
A great way to celebrate Pride this year is with The Signifyin’ Works of Marlon Riggs, a Criterion Collection box set that pays tribute to an essential voice in LGBTQ+ cinema and Black filmmaking. Before his death of HIV/AIDS complications in 1994, Riggs created a vital body of work that includes the sensual and poetic “Tongues Untied” — a film decried on the senate floor by Jesse Helms, and recommendations don’t come much higher — the incisive documentary “Color Adjustment,” about the history of Black characters on American TV, and brilliantly moving personal and experimental films like “Black Is… Black Ain’t” and “Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien (No Regrets).” This compilation of a singular artistic voice belongs in every library.
New Indie
Carrie Coon and Jude Law gave firecracker performances in the under-seen “The Nest” (IFC/Shout Factory) from director Sean Durkin (“Martha Marcy May Marlene...
A great way to celebrate Pride this year is with The Signifyin’ Works of Marlon Riggs, a Criterion Collection box set that pays tribute to an essential voice in LGBTQ+ cinema and Black filmmaking. Before his death of HIV/AIDS complications in 1994, Riggs created a vital body of work that includes the sensual and poetic “Tongues Untied” — a film decried on the senate floor by Jesse Helms, and recommendations don’t come much higher — the incisive documentary “Color Adjustment,” about the history of Black characters on American TV, and brilliantly moving personal and experimental films like “Black Is… Black Ain’t” and “Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien (No Regrets).” This compilation of a singular artistic voice belongs in every library.
New Indie
Carrie Coon and Jude Law gave firecracker performances in the under-seen “The Nest” (IFC/Shout Factory) from director Sean Durkin (“Martha Marcy May Marlene...
- 6/2/2021
- by Alonso Duralde
- The Wrap
Mike “Heron” Herard keeps an email list of roughly 200 of the best producers making music today. As the founder of the company BeatHustle, he routinely sends these producers potential samples made by a team of crack musicians; some of these loops have made it on to hit albums from Beyoncé and Migos. Last year, instead of feeding raw material to hitmakers, Herard reversed the process. “Hey, I’m emailing in my role as an A&r at Shady Records,” he said. “We’re looking for beats for an Eminem record.
- 1/22/2020
- by Elias Leight
- Rollingstone.com
The Hallmark Channel recently came under fire for its decision to pull four commercials from wedding planning company Zola which featured two women kissing. The decision came in response to pressure from conservative group One Million Moms, which called for a boycott of the network, though afterwards Hallmark quickly found itself in even hotter water with the rest of its audience. While the network cut four ads showing the women kissing, it continued to air two that featured a heterosexual couple kissing.
The network, which is owned by Crown Media Family Networks, reversed course on Sunday, reinstating the ads and issuing an apology. “The Crown Media team has been agonizing over this decision as we’ve seen the hurt it has unintentionally caused,” Hallmark Cards Inc. President Mike Perry said in a statement. “Said simply, they believe this was the wrong decision. Our mission is rooted in helping all people connect,...
The network, which is owned by Crown Media Family Networks, reversed course on Sunday, reinstating the ads and issuing an apology. “The Crown Media team has been agonizing over this decision as we’ve seen the hurt it has unintentionally caused,” Hallmark Cards Inc. President Mike Perry said in a statement. “Said simply, they believe this was the wrong decision. Our mission is rooted in helping all people connect,...
- 12/17/2019
- by Jude Dry
- Indiewire
Halfway through the year, we’ve already lost a number of stars across Hollywood. Here’s a list of some of the notable celebrities and industry professionals in film, TV, music and sports who have passed away so far in 2018.
Jon Paul Steuer
Jon Paul Steuer, a former child actor who starred in “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” and most recently under the stage name Jonny Jewels for the rock band P.R.O.B.L.E.M.S., died on January 1. He was 33.
Mark Tenser
Mark Tenser, president and CEO of B-Movie studio Crown International Pictures, died on January 1. At his request, his age was not disclosed.
Frank Buxton
Frank Buxton, a writer and director best known for his work on “The Odd Couple” and “Happy Days,” died on January 2. He was 87.
Donnelly Rhodes
Donnelly Rhodes, a Canadian actor who played chief medical officer Dr. Sherman Cottle on the “Battlestar Galactica” reboot,...
Jon Paul Steuer
Jon Paul Steuer, a former child actor who starred in “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” and most recently under the stage name Jonny Jewels for the rock band P.R.O.B.L.E.M.S., died on January 1. He was 33.
Mark Tenser
Mark Tenser, president and CEO of B-Movie studio Crown International Pictures, died on January 1. At his request, his age was not disclosed.
Frank Buxton
Frank Buxton, a writer and director best known for his work on “The Odd Couple” and “Happy Days,” died on January 2. He was 87.
Donnelly Rhodes
Donnelly Rhodes, a Canadian actor who played chief medical officer Dr. Sherman Cottle on the “Battlestar Galactica” reboot,...
- 1/1/2019
- by Brian Welk
- The Wrap
ABC Entertainment President Channing Dungey says she has “no regrets” about greenlighting the Roseanne revival,even months after she was forced to fire the show’s star over a racist tweet.
Dungey said she was surprised that Roseanne Barr’s ouster, which thrust a behind-the-scenes executive into the spotlight, became a national news story. Still, she said she had no regrets about her decision to return the blue-collar comedy to ABC after a 21-year hiatus.
“We had a great conversations about the kinds of stories they wanted to tell, those broader stories that deal with a part of our country, particularly those that are more challenged economically,” said Dungey during the Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit in Laguna Niguel.
Dungey said she felt Roseanne hit all the right narrative notes. She said she is pleased that the spinoff, The Conners, will return most of the cast to the network on Oct.
Dungey said she was surprised that Roseanne Barr’s ouster, which thrust a behind-the-scenes executive into the spotlight, became a national news story. Still, she said she had no regrets about her decision to return the blue-collar comedy to ABC after a 21-year hiatus.
“We had a great conversations about the kinds of stories they wanted to tell, those broader stories that deal with a part of our country, particularly those that are more challenged economically,” said Dungey during the Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit in Laguna Niguel.
Dungey said she felt Roseanne hit all the right narrative notes. She said she is pleased that the spinoff, The Conners, will return most of the cast to the network on Oct.
- 10/3/2018
- by Dawn C. Chmielewski
- Deadline Film + TV
Lari White, the country singer whose hits included “Now I Know” and “That’s My Baby,” died on Tuesday following a battle with cancer, Rolling Stone reports. She was 52.
In addition to her singing career, White was also an actress whose credits included the 2000 Tom Hanks film “Cast Away” and 2004’s “No Regrets.”
White told fans of her cancer battle in November, saying that she had been diagnosed with advanced peritoneal cancer.
“Since then a series of complications including pain management, pneumonia and a bowel obstruction requiring emergency surgery has kept me in...
In addition to her singing career, White was also an actress whose credits included the 2000 Tom Hanks film “Cast Away” and 2004’s “No Regrets.”
White told fans of her cancer battle in November, saying that she had been diagnosed with advanced peritoneal cancer.
“Since then a series of complications including pain management, pneumonia and a bowel obstruction requiring emergency surgery has kept me in...
- 1/23/2018
- by Tim Kenneally
- The Wrap
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