“My work is my service,” she explains. When promoting something like “The Terror: The Devil in Silver,” the Emmy- and Tony-winner gets to talk about issues like mental health.
- BRUCE R. MILLER Lee Enterprises
Andie MacDowell brought Hollywood clout to the Hallmark Channel and, in the process, opened the door for other recognizable names.
- BRUCE R. MILLER Lee Enterprises
Inner conversations between twin sisters lift “Is God Is” to another level — one where you understand why people do bizarre things.
- BRUCE MILLER and TERRY LIPSHETZ Lee Enterprises
In this episode, co-host Bruce Miller speaks with director Andrew Bernstein, co-star Michael Kelly, star, writer and producer Krasinski, and co-star Sienna Miller.
- Brian Truitt, USA TODAY
Love movies? Live for TV? USA TODAY's Watch Party newsletter has all the best recommendations, delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now and be one of the cool kids.
- Bruce R. Miller Lee Enterprises
Jack Ryan is back, and the latest installment, “Ghost War,” is as big as anything Tom Cruise encountered in “Mission: Impossible.”
- Los Angeles Times
If gas prices have you second-guessing a road trip this summer, this season’s crop of television series can transport you to distant lands for a much lower price.
"Bangaranga," sung by female artist Dara, a thumping, crowd-pleasing dance track, avoided politics and touched on themes of empowerment.
Grief, resentment and vulnerability take center stage in a film built on long, uninterrupted moments.
John Krasinski wears many hats in the entertainment world — actor, writer, director, producer. But his career is more than that.
You can’t pull the wool over all sheep’s eyes. In the charming mystery, “The Sheep Detectives,” a flock of them work together to figure out who killed their owner.
Stephen Colbert, Seth Meyers, John Oliver, Jimmy Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon released the first new episode of their podcast since 2023.
There is something to be said about the opportunities that come with independent films.
Whether you want to see Sally Field chatting with an octopus or Rachel McAdams battling a killer boar, streaming services have a new movie for all sorts of different tastes.
There’s the framework here for a cracking good story, but "Neglected" needs a little more meat on its bones.
Vanesa McCaskell took home $227,500 in cash plus a mother‑daughter trip to Morocco while playing “The Lion’s Share” during the May 8 broadcast.
Democrats painted the series as a free extended vacation for the Duffys and pointed out rising gas prices tied to the war in Iran.
Playing a detective on his last day of work, Josh Duhamel has the ultimate assignment: Find his son before he runs out of oxygen.
The White House called "Star Wars" star Mark Hamill "one sick individual" after an AI-generated image of President Donald Trump in a shallow grave was posted online.
"It was worth the 20-year wait to get a 'Devil Wears Prada' sequel," Bruce Miller writes in his review.
Summer isn’t just for blockbuster movies. Whereas network television traditionally went into hibernation by late May, in the age of streaming, fresh TV programming is needed 12 months a year.
David Lipper wrote, produced and stars in the new thriller, “Neglected,” but “that’s the beauty of independent film,” he says.
Here's a look at what's ahead for the summer movie season.
"Key moments in the singer’s life are absent, but that’s to be expected considering family members produced the film," Bruce Miller writes in his review of the biopic "Michael."
Does it feel like summer? If not, soon it will be with a nonstop flow of big movies about to hit theaters.
Kate Hudson didn’t need to search to play a high-powered businesswoman in “Running Point.”
Nearly 17 years after his death, the Michael Jackson brand is more carefully curated than ever.
“Lee Cronin’s The Mummy” goes all in on shock — and leaves more questions than answers.
Do we stay the same throughout life, or do we morph? Richard Gadd, the creator of “Baby Reindeer,” poses the question repeatedly in his new, six-part series "Half Man."
“Hive” turns a playground into something far more unsettling.

