Tag: Netflix

  • Hansal Mehta’s Scoop to stream on June 2

    By Express News Service

    Filmmaker Hansal Mehta’s upcoming series Scoop, set around the world of crime journalism, now has a release date. The show, starring Karishma Tanna, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, Harman Baweja and Prosenjit Chatterjee, will premiere on Netflix on June 2.

    Making the announcement on Twitter, Mehta wrote, “Proud to share that Scoop a series that Mrunmayee Lagoo, Matchbox Shots, Netflix  and I have been nurturing for nearly 3 years streams from June 2, 2023.” The series is inspired by the book Behind Bars in Byculla: My Days in Prison by Jigna Vora, who was arrested on suspicion of being part of a conspiracy that led to the murder of her peer.

    Created by Hansal Mehta and Mrunmayee Lagoo Waikul, the first season will track crime journalist Jagruti Pathak, played by Karishma Tanna who in pursuit of a career-defining story is caught between the powerful nexus of the police, the underworld, and the media, and is charged with the murder of a fellow-journalist. The show is written by Mrunmayee and Mirat Trivedi.

    Filmmaker Hansal Mehta’s upcoming series Scoop, set around the world of crime journalism, now has a release date. The show, starring Karishma Tanna, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, Harman Baweja and Prosenjit Chatterjee, will premiere on Netflix on June 2.

    Making the announcement on Twitter, Mehta wrote, “Proud to share that Scoop a series that Mrunmayee Lagoo, Matchbox Shots, Netflix  and I have been nurturing for nearly 3 years streams from June 2, 2023.” The series is inspired by the book Behind Bars in Byculla: My Days in Prison by Jigna Vora, who was arrested on suspicion of being part of a conspiracy that led to the murder of her peer.

    Created by Hansal Mehta and Mrunmayee Lagoo Waikul, the first season will track crime journalist Jagruti Pathak, played by Karishma Tanna who in pursuit of a career-defining story is caught between the powerful nexus of the police, the underworld, and the media, and is charged with the murder of a fellow-journalist. The show is written by Mrunmayee and Mirat Trivedi.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

  • ‘The Diplomat’ renewed for second season

    Express News Service

    Netflix has renewed its political drama The Diplomat for a second season. The first season premiered on April 20 and was created by Debora Cahn who executive-produced the show along with Janice Wiliams and Keri Russell.

    The makers are yet to reveal the additional details of the second season.

    The series features Kate Wyler and the first season had eight episodes. It features Kate as US Ambassador to the UK. David Gyasi, Ali Ahn, Rory Kinnear and Ato Essandoh were also featured in the first season.

    “Fans around the world are loving every minute of The Diplomat’s gripping and propulsive drama, and embracing Keri Russell’s powerful performance as Kate Wyler.  After that jaw-dropping cliffhanger, we can’t wait for them to see what the amazing visionary team of Debora Cahn, Janice Williams and Keri Russell have in store for Season 2,” said Jinny Howe, Vice President of Drama Series at Netflix. 

    “I am thrilled to be headed back for another round of this smart screwball show. Dare I say it’s fun? Thank you Netflix for giving us another shot.” – Keri Russell, Executive Producer/“Kate Wyler”

    The first season involved Kate Wyler (Keri Russell) as the new US Ambassador to the United Kingdom. She was supposed to go to Afghanistan and will have to diffuse international crises, forge strategic alliances in London, and adjust to her new place in the spotlight — all while trying to survive her marriage to fellow career diplomat and political star Hal Wyler (Rufus Sewell).

    (This story originally appeared on Cinema Express)

    Netflix has renewed its political drama The Diplomat for a second season. The first season premiered on April 20 and was created by Debora Cahn who executive-produced the show along with Janice Wiliams and Keri Russell.

    The makers are yet to reveal the additional details of the second season.

    The series features Kate Wyler and the first season had eight episodes. It features Kate as US Ambassador to the UK. David Gyasi, Ali Ahn, Rory Kinnear and Ato Essandoh were also featured in the first season.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    “Fans around the world are loving every minute of The Diplomat’s gripping and propulsive drama, and embracing Keri Russell’s powerful performance as Kate Wyler.  After that jaw-dropping cliffhanger, we can’t wait for them to see what the amazing visionary team of Debora Cahn, Janice Williams and Keri Russell have in store for Season 2,” said Jinny Howe, Vice President of Drama Series at Netflix. 

    “I am thrilled to be headed back for another round of this smart screwball show. Dare I say it’s fun? Thank you Netflix for giving us another shot.” – Keri Russell, Executive Producer/“Kate Wyler”

    The first season involved Kate Wyler (Keri Russell) as the new US Ambassador to the United Kingdom. She was supposed to go to Afghanistan and will have to diffuse international crises, forge strategic alliances in London, and adjust to her new place in the spotlight — all while trying to survive her marriage to fellow career diplomat and political star Hal Wyler (Rufus Sewell).

    (This story originally appeared on Cinema Express)

  • Netflix acquires ‘Average Height, Average Build’  

    By Express News Service

    Netflix had previously partnered with filmmaker Adam McKay for his 2021 disaster comedy Don’t Look Up, which went on to score Oscar nominations. Now they are both teaming up again for a film titled Average Height, Average Build. Apart from directing it, McKay has also written the script for the film.

    The ensemble cast of the film includes Robert Pattinson, Amy Adams, Robert Downey Jr., Forest Whitaker and Danielle Deadwyler. Mckay will also be producing the film under his banner Hyperobject Industries.

    The film reportedly revolves around a serial killer who becomes a politician so he can enter the office and manipulate legislation to become more murder-friendly. Pattinson will play the serial killer in the film while Downey Jr will play a retired police officer who is hell-bent on capturing the killer.

    Netflix had previously partnered with filmmaker Adam McKay for his 2021 disaster comedy Don’t Look Up, which went on to score Oscar nominations. Now they are both teaming up again for a film titled Average Height, Average Build. Apart from directing it, McKay has also written the script for the film.

    The ensemble cast of the film includes Robert Pattinson, Amy Adams, Robert Downey Jr., Forest Whitaker and Danielle Deadwyler. Mckay will also be producing the film under his banner Hyperobject Industries.

    The film reportedly revolves around a serial killer who becomes a politician so he can enter the office and manipulate legislation to become more murder-friendly. Pattinson will play the serial killer in the film while Downey Jr will play a retired police officer who is hell-bent on capturing the killer.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

  • Adam Brody joins Kristen Bell in untitled Netflix comedy

    By Express News Service

    Earlier, we had reported that Kristen Bell has reunited with Netflix to headline an untitled new comedy series. The latest update is that Adam Brody has joined the cast of the series. The untitled series is created by Erin Foster and executive produced by Steven Levitan.

    According to the official logline, the series will be about, “The unlikely relationship between an irreverent, outspoken, agnostic woman (Bell) and an unconventional rabbi (Brody).” Apart from playing the agnostic woman, Bell will also serve as an executive producer of the show.

    While Kristen Bell’s most famous The Good Place streams on Netflix, this series will mark the second Netflix-produced series for her, after she starred in The Woman in the House Across the Street From the Girl in the Window last year.

    Brody’s breakthrough came with Seth Cohen’s popular TV series The O.C. He was last seen in the critically acclaimed series Fleishman Is in Trouble. He will next be seen alongside his wife Leighton Meester in a reboot of the classic film, River Wild. Disney’s 20th Television and Steven Levitan Productions will be backing this untitled Netflix series. 

    Earlier, we had reported that Kristen Bell has reunited with Netflix to headline an untitled new comedy series. The latest update is that Adam Brody has joined the cast of the series. The untitled series is created by Erin Foster and executive produced by Steven Levitan.

    According to the official logline, the series will be about, “The unlikely relationship between an irreverent, outspoken, agnostic woman (Bell) and an unconventional rabbi (Brody).” Apart from playing the agnostic woman, Bell will also serve as an executive producer of the show.

    While Kristen Bell’s most famous The Good Place streams on Netflix, this series will mark the second Netflix-produced series for her, after she starred in The Woman in the House Across the Street From the Girl in the Window last year.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    Brody’s breakthrough came with Seth Cohen’s popular TV series The O.C. He was last seen in the critically acclaimed series Fleishman Is in Trouble. He will next be seen alongside his wife Leighton Meester in a reboot of the classic film, River Wild. Disney’s 20th Television and Steven Levitan Productions will be backing this untitled Netflix series. 

  • First glimpses of Prince William and Kate Middleton from ‘The Crown’ revealed

    By ANI

    WASHINGTON: Popular series “The Crown’s” versions of Prince William and Kate Middleton have arrived.

    Netflix revealed the first images of Ed McVey, 23, as Prince William and Meg Bellamy, 19, as Kate Middleton on Thursday.

    As shown in the photos, the two are at St. Andrews during their university days.

    They met there in 2001, while Middleton was studying art history.

    “The Crown” Season 6 will be the final season of Netflix’s hit drama about the royal family.

    As reported by New York Post, the show has spanned decades so far, going back to the early days of Queen Elizabeth II. The final season will cover the ’90s, including the death of Princes Diana, which has already caused controversy.

    Imelda Staunton will return as Queen Elizabeth for Season 6, while Lesley Manville will play Princess Margaret, Jonathan Pryce will play Prince Philip, Dominic West will play Prince Charles, Olivia Williams will play Camilla Parker-Bowles, and Elizabeth Debicki will play Princess Diana.

    Creator Peter Morgan has previously said that the show won’t cover Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, and their various controversies.

    Netflix’s official description of the photos reads, “As The Crown enters a new decade, Prince William starts at University in St Andrew’s, determined to lead as normal a life as possible while he still can. Also beginning life as a University student, is Kate Middleton from Berkshire. As the pair meet for the first time on campus, a new romance and a new future for The Crown begins.”

    Netflix has not yet announced a premiere date for the final season. 

    WASHINGTON: Popular series “The Crown’s” versions of Prince William and Kate Middleton have arrived.

    Netflix revealed the first images of Ed McVey, 23, as Prince William and Meg Bellamy, 19, as Kate Middleton on Thursday.

    As shown in the photos, the two are at St. Andrews during their university days.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    They met there in 2001, while Middleton was studying art history.

    “The Crown” Season 6 will be the final season of Netflix’s hit drama about the royal family.

    As reported by New York Post, the show has spanned decades so far, going back to the early days of Queen Elizabeth II. The final season will cover the ’90s, including the death of Princes Diana, which has already caused controversy.

    Imelda Staunton will return as Queen Elizabeth for Season 6, while Lesley Manville will play Princess Margaret, Jonathan Pryce will play Prince Philip, Dominic West will play Prince Charles, Olivia Williams will play Camilla Parker-Bowles, and Elizabeth Debicki will play Princess Diana.

    Creator Peter Morgan has previously said that the show won’t cover Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, and their various controversies.

    Netflix’s official description of the photos reads, “As The Crown enters a new decade, Prince William starts at University in St Andrew’s, determined to lead as normal a life as possible while he still can. Also beginning life as a University student, is Kate Middleton from Berkshire. As the pair meet for the first time on campus, a new romance and a new future for The Crown begins.”

    Netflix has not yet announced a premiere date for the final season. 

  • Netflix to invest USD 2.5 billion in South Korean content

    By AFP

    SEOUL: Netflix will invest $2.5 billion in South Korean content over the next four years, the streaming giant’s CEO Ted Sarandos announced after meeting with the country’s President Yoon Suk Yeol in Washington.

    South Korea has cemented its status as a global cultural powerhouse in recent years, thanks in part to the explosive success of the Oscar-winning film “Parasite” and the hit Netflix series “Squid Game”.

    “Netflix is delighted to confirm that we will invest USD 2.5 billion in Korea including the creation of Korean series, films, and unscripted shows over the next four years,” Sarandos said in a statement given to AFP on Tuesday.

    “This investment plan is twice the total amount Netflix has invested in the Korean market since we started our service in Korea in 2016.”

    Sarandos said that Netflix had “great confidence” that South Korea’s creative industry would continue to tell great stories, pointing to the recent success of global hits such as “The Glory” and the reality show “Physical 100”.

    “It is incredible that the love towards Korean shows has led to a wider interest in Korea, thanks to the Korean creators’ compelling stories. Their stories are now at the heart of the global cultural zeitgeist,” he added.

    Over the last few years, South Korean content has taken the world by storm, with over 60 percent of Netflix viewers watching a show from the East Asian country in 2022, company data showed.

    Netflix, which spent more than 1 trillion won ($750 million) developing Korean content from 2015 to 2021, had previously said it would be expanding its South Korean show output, without giving details of spending plans.

    Yoon, who is on a six-day state visit, hailed what he described as a “very meaningful” meeting with Sarandos, according to a transcript shared with AFP by the president’s office.

    The president said the new investment “will be a great opportunity for the Korean content industry, creators, and Netflix. We sincerely welcome Netflix’s exceptional investment decision.”

    Yoon will meet US President Joe Biden on Wednesday.

    ‘Wise decision’

    Many of Netflix’s biggest global hits in recent years have been from South Korea, so the company is making a “wise decision” to double down financially, Regina Kim, an entertainment writer and expert on K-content based in New York City, told AFP.

    “Netflix has played a huge role in disseminating K-culture and K-content around the world.”

    The firm’s latest investment means viewers worldwide “will continue to witness Netflix’s Korean contents change the landscape of global screen culture”, Areum Jeong, a film expert and visiting scholar at Robert Morris University, told AFP.

    But the move could raise concern over “how big Netflix is becoming in Korea as local streamers struggle to keep up”, Jason Bechervaise, a Seoul-based film scholar, told AFP.

    Netflix is also one of the companies embroiled in a “usage fee” debate in South Korea.

    The country’s internet companies are seeking to force major data users — such as the streaming giant — to pay more for bandwidth, something Netflix has strongly pushed back against.

    SEOUL: Netflix will invest $2.5 billion in South Korean content over the next four years, the streaming giant’s CEO Ted Sarandos announced after meeting with the country’s President Yoon Suk Yeol in Washington.

    South Korea has cemented its status as a global cultural powerhouse in recent years, thanks in part to the explosive success of the Oscar-winning film “Parasite” and the hit Netflix series “Squid Game”.

    “Netflix is delighted to confirm that we will invest USD 2.5 billion in Korea including the creation of Korean series, films, and unscripted shows over the next four years,” Sarandos said in a statement given to AFP on Tuesday.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2′); });

    “This investment plan is twice the total amount Netflix has invested in the Korean market since we started our service in Korea in 2016.”

    Sarandos said that Netflix had “great confidence” that South Korea’s creative industry would continue to tell great stories, pointing to the recent success of global hits such as “The Glory” and the reality show “Physical 100”.

    “It is incredible that the love towards Korean shows has led to a wider interest in Korea, thanks to the Korean creators’ compelling stories. Their stories are now at the heart of the global cultural zeitgeist,” he added.

    Over the last few years, South Korean content has taken the world by storm, with over 60 percent of Netflix viewers watching a show from the East Asian country in 2022, company data showed.

    Netflix, which spent more than 1 trillion won ($750 million) developing Korean content from 2015 to 2021, had previously said it would be expanding its South Korean show output, without giving details of spending plans.

    Yoon, who is on a six-day state visit, hailed what he described as a “very meaningful” meeting with Sarandos, according to a transcript shared with AFP by the president’s office.

    The president said the new investment “will be a great opportunity for the Korean content industry, creators, and Netflix. We sincerely welcome Netflix’s exceptional investment decision.”

    Yoon will meet US President Joe Biden on Wednesday.

    ‘Wise decision’

    Many of Netflix’s biggest global hits in recent years have been from South Korea, so the company is making a “wise decision” to double down financially, Regina Kim, an entertainment writer and expert on K-content based in New York City, told AFP.

    “Netflix has played a huge role in disseminating K-culture and K-content around the world.”

    The firm’s latest investment means viewers worldwide “will continue to witness Netflix’s Korean contents change the landscape of global screen culture”, Areum Jeong, a film expert and visiting scholar at Robert Morris University, told AFP.

    But the move could raise concern over “how big Netflix is becoming in Korea as local streamers struggle to keep up”, Jason Bechervaise, a Seoul-based film scholar, told AFP.

    Netflix is also one of the companies embroiled in a “usage fee” debate in South Korea.

    The country’s internet companies are seeking to force major data users — such as the streaming giant — to pay more for bandwidth, something Netflix has strongly pushed back against.

  • Fans of Netflix series ‘Emily in Paris’ flock to Place de l’Estrapade

    By Associated Press

    PARIS: The immense success of the Netflix series “Emily in Paris” has transformed a quiet, untouched square in the French capital into a tourist magnet.

    In the historic Latin Quarter and just a short walk from the magnificent, domed Pantheon, tucked so deeply away that you could easily miss it, lies the Place de l’Estrapade. For diehard, beret-wearing fans of the show, this sliver of a neighborhood has become a landmark of its own.

    That’s because this is where the fictional character Emily Cooper, a 20-something American portrayed by Lily Collins, lives, dines and savors French pastries from the local bakery.

    The newfound attention can be disruptive for the real people who live and work here, but the show is also igniting a new passion for Paris — and even anti-Emily graffiti has become part of the attraction.

    The romantic comedy, whose third season was released in December, traces Emily’s adventures and misadventures in her Parisian career and love life.

    On a sunny weekday, the square bustles with tourists from the U.S. and far beyond, taking photos, video and selfies.

    It’s all here: Emily’s apartment building at 1 Place de d’Estrapade, where she lives next to would-be love interest Gabriel. The restaurant where Gabriel — portrayed by French actor Lucas Bravo — is the chef. And, of course, the bakery she loves.

    Dancer Riskya Octaviana from Jakarta, Indonesia, came directly to Paris after performing in Germany because of how much she loves the show. After twirling on the square, Emily-style, she said, “Emily is my big friend.”

    A woman walks past a graffiti reading “Emily Not Welcome” scrawled on part of the facade of the building where the fictional character Emily Cooper lives, at 1 Place de d’Estrapade, in Paris, Wednesday, April 19, 2023. (Photo | AP)

    Elizabeth and Ruben Mercado celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary in Paris and visited Emily’s neighborhood as part of their trip. Elizabeth Mercado said she prepared by binge-watching the show just before they left.

    “We’ve been trying to practice the small bits of French that we picked up during the show,” she said.

    Tourists make a point of stopping and snacking at Boulangerie Moderne, the Modern Bakery featured in the series. The tourist infusion has boosted profits, acknowledges owner Thierry Rabineau.

    But the flipside to fame has come in online comments. Some people, many posting anonymously, have slammed the quality of his bakery. Rabineau thinks the show has mistakenly given viewers the impression that he’s running a luxury pastry shop instead of a standard local bakery selling croissants at 1.30 euros ($1.43) each.

    “People are writing comments, saying it’s overpriced, it’s not good. It’s disgusting. This baffles me,” Rabineau said. “It’s a modern bakery, a small neighborhood bakery.”

    He’s aware how lucky he is that the show came along. “We are profiting from a current situation. … But in two or three years, there won’t be any more tourism and we will have to be here to survive,” he said.

    Stephanie Jamin, who lives on the square and crosses paths with the throngs of tourists on a daily basis, has had to adjust to residing in a go-to place on the tourist map. She says the people themselves aren’t a nuisance, but the crowds can be imposing.

    “We have become an ultra-touristy district, whereas it was a small square still a bit preserved from tourism,” she said.

    Another resident emerging from Emily’s apartment building said they were allergic to the show. “Emily Not Welcome” is even scrawled in red graffiti on part of the facade.

    But the graffiti, too, is drawing fans, with visitors taking pictures of themselves pointing to the disparaging remark. Among them was Abdullah Najarri, a medical internist from Berlin who calls the series “entertaining.”

    “I got to see a lot of Paris through that series, actually, and the lifestyle and and the clichés — partly true, partly not, so that it’s nice,” he said.

    People walk in the Place de d’Estrapade, in Paris, Friday, April 21, 2023. (Photo | AP)

    Croatian digital creator Sladana Grzincic, touring Paris wearing a white beret, sunglasses and a striped blue and white sweater, was photographed taking a jump and a twirl in front of Emily’s apartment.

    Seeing the real neighborhood makes her eager for the next season, which she said she will watch “a bit differently because I was here and on the same spots where she’s filming that.”

    Season four is in the works, but the release date remains unknown.

    Resident Jamin remains philosophical about the fascination with her neighborhood.

    “It is as ephemeral as the series is,” she said. After the Emily frenzy subsides, “there are people like all the shopkeepers of the district who will have benefited enormously from it, and it allowed them to start up again after COVID. They needed that.”

    “There will inevitably be an end. Emily is not Victor Hugo. She will not be inducted into the Pantheon,” Jamin said. “She will go home and everything will be fine.”

    PARIS: The immense success of the Netflix series “Emily in Paris” has transformed a quiet, untouched square in the French capital into a tourist magnet.

    In the historic Latin Quarter and just a short walk from the magnificent, domed Pantheon, tucked so deeply away that you could easily miss it, lies the Place de l’Estrapade. For diehard, beret-wearing fans of the show, this sliver of a neighborhood has become a landmark of its own.

    That’s because this is where the fictional character Emily Cooper, a 20-something American portrayed by Lily Collins, lives, dines and savors French pastries from the local bakery.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    The newfound attention can be disruptive for the real people who live and work here, but the show is also igniting a new passion for Paris — and even anti-Emily graffiti has become part of the attraction.

    The romantic comedy, whose third season was released in December, traces Emily’s adventures and misadventures in her Parisian career and love life.

    On a sunny weekday, the square bustles with tourists from the U.S. and far beyond, taking photos, video and selfies.

    It’s all here: Emily’s apartment building at 1 Place de d’Estrapade, where she lives next to would-be love interest Gabriel. The restaurant where Gabriel — portrayed by French actor Lucas Bravo — is the chef. And, of course, the bakery she loves.

    Dancer Riskya Octaviana from Jakarta, Indonesia, came directly to Paris after performing in Germany because of how much she loves the show. After twirling on the square, Emily-style, she said, “Emily is my big friend.”

    A woman walks past a graffiti reading “Emily Not Welcome” scrawled on part of the facade of the building where the fictional character Emily Cooper lives, at 1 Place de d’Estrapade, in Paris, Wednesday, April 19, 2023. (Photo | AP)

    Elizabeth and Ruben Mercado celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary in Paris and visited Emily’s neighborhood as part of their trip. Elizabeth Mercado said she prepared by binge-watching the show just before they left.

    “We’ve been trying to practice the small bits of French that we picked up during the show,” she said.

    Tourists make a point of stopping and snacking at Boulangerie Moderne, the Modern Bakery featured in the series. The tourist infusion has boosted profits, acknowledges owner Thierry Rabineau.

    But the flipside to fame has come in online comments. Some people, many posting anonymously, have slammed the quality of his bakery. Rabineau thinks the show has mistakenly given viewers the impression that he’s running a luxury pastry shop instead of a standard local bakery selling croissants at 1.30 euros ($1.43) each.

    “People are writing comments, saying it’s overpriced, it’s not good. It’s disgusting. This baffles me,” Rabineau said. “It’s a modern bakery, a small neighborhood bakery.”

    He’s aware how lucky he is that the show came along. “We are profiting from a current situation. … But in two or three years, there won’t be any more tourism and we will have to be here to survive,” he said.

    Stephanie Jamin, who lives on the square and crosses paths with the throngs of tourists on a daily basis, has had to adjust to residing in a go-to place on the tourist map. She says the people themselves aren’t a nuisance, but the crowds can be imposing.

    “We have become an ultra-touristy district, whereas it was a small square still a bit preserved from tourism,” she said.

    Another resident emerging from Emily’s apartment building said they were allergic to the show. “Emily Not Welcome” is even scrawled in red graffiti on part of the facade.

    But the graffiti, too, is drawing fans, with visitors taking pictures of themselves pointing to the disparaging remark. Among them was Abdullah Najarri, a medical internist from Berlin who calls the series “entertaining.”

    “I got to see a lot of Paris through that series, actually, and the lifestyle and and the clichés — partly true, partly not, so that it’s nice,” he said.

    People walk in the Place de d’Estrapade, in Paris, Friday, April 21, 2023. (Photo | AP)

    Croatian digital creator Sladana Grzincic, touring Paris wearing a white beret, sunglasses and a striped blue and white sweater, was photographed taking a jump and a twirl in front of Emily’s apartment.

    Seeing the real neighborhood makes her eager for the next season, which she said she will watch “a bit differently because I was here and on the same spots where she’s filming that.”

    Season four is in the works, but the release date remains unknown.

    Resident Jamin remains philosophical about the fascination with her neighborhood.

    “It is as ephemeral as the series is,” she said. After the Emily frenzy subsides, “there are people like all the shopkeepers of the district who will have benefited enormously from it, and it allowed them to start up again after COVID. They needed that.”

    “There will inevitably be an end. Emily is not Victor Hugo. She will not be inducted into the Pantheon,” Jamin said. “She will go home and everything will be fine.”

  • Kylie Minogue, Jane Curtin join Netflix’s ‘The Residence’  

    By Express News Service

    Kylie Minogue, Jane Curtin, James Babson, Paul Fitzgerald and Ros Gentle have been added to Shondaland and Netflix’s upcoming series The Residence. The makers previously announced that Uzo Aduba will be heading the series.

    The Residence is a whodunnit set in and around the White House, with 132 rooms, one dead body and 157 suspects. One wildly eccentric detective played by Uzo Aduba takes it upon himself to solve the crime.

    The previously announced cast members of The Residence are, Andre Braugher, Susan Kelechi Watson, Edwina Findley, Molly Griggs, Jason Lee, Ken Marino, Al Mitchell, Dan Perrault, Bronson Pinchot, Isiah Whitlock Jr., EL Losada, Matt Oberg, Ryan Farell, and Alexandra Siegel and Mary Wiseman.

    The Residence is executive produced by Paul William Davies. Shonda Rhimes and Betsy Beers executive produce on behalf of Shondaland via the company’s Netflix overall deal. Liza Johnson will direct the first four episodes. The series is currently in production.  

    Kylie Minogue, Jane Curtin, James Babson, Paul Fitzgerald and Ros Gentle have been added to Shondaland and Netflix’s upcoming series The Residence. The makers previously announced that Uzo Aduba will be heading the series.

    The Residence is a whodunnit set in and around the White House, with 132 rooms, one dead body and 157 suspects. One wildly eccentric detective played by Uzo Aduba takes it upon himself to solve the crime.

    The previously announced cast members of The Residence are, Andre Braugher, Susan Kelechi Watson, Edwina Findley, Molly Griggs, Jason Lee, Ken Marino, Al Mitchell, Dan Perrault, Bronson Pinchot, Isiah Whitlock Jr., EL Losada, Matt Oberg, Ryan Farell, and Alexandra Siegel and Mary Wiseman.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    The Residence is executive produced by Paul William Davies. Shonda Rhimes and Betsy Beers executive produce on behalf of Shondaland via the company’s Netflix overall deal. Liza Johnson will direct the first four episodes. The series is currently in production. 
     

  • Netflix orders ‘Stranger Things’ anime series

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES: Netflix is expanding the world of “Stranger Things” with an upcoming anime series.

    According to entertainment news outlet Variety, Netflix announced the show on Monday but didn’t provide any details of the project, including its title.

    The anime series comes from Eric Robles, who earlier created animated shows such as “Random! Cartoons”, “Fanboy & Chum Chum” and “Glitch Techs”.

    It is backed by Flying Bark Productions.

    “We’ve always dreamed of an animated ‘Stranger Things’ in the vein of the Saturday morning cartoons that we grew up loving, and to see this dream realised has been absolutely thrilling,” “Stranger Things” creators Matt and Ross Duffer said in a statement.

    “We couldn’t be more blown away by what Eric Robles and his team have come up with- the scripts and artwork are incredible, and we can’t wait to share more with you! The adventure continues…” they added.

    Since its debut in 2016, “Stranger Things” emerged as one of the top series from the streaming giant.

    Created by the Duffer Brothers, the show is set in the 1980s and takes a look at the fictional town of Hawkins, Indiana, where a secret government lab accidentally opens a door to another dimension referred to as the Upside Down.

    The show features an ensemble cast of Winona Ryder, Finn Wolfhard, Noah Schnapp, Millie Bobby Brown, David Harbour, Caleb McLaughlin, Gaten Matarazzo, Natalia Dyer, Charlie Heaton, Joe Keery and others.

    The show will conclude with its upcoming fifth season.

    LOS ANGELES: Netflix is expanding the world of “Stranger Things” with an upcoming anime series.

    According to entertainment news outlet Variety, Netflix announced the show on Monday but didn’t provide any details of the project, including its title.

    The anime series comes from Eric Robles, who earlier created animated shows such as “Random! Cartoons”, “Fanboy & Chum Chum” and “Glitch Techs”.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    It is backed by Flying Bark Productions.

    “We’ve always dreamed of an animated ‘Stranger Things’ in the vein of the Saturday morning cartoons that we grew up loving, and to see this dream realised has been absolutely thrilling,” “Stranger Things” creators Matt and Ross Duffer said in a statement.

    “We couldn’t be more blown away by what Eric Robles and his team have come up with- the scripts and artwork are incredible, and we can’t wait to share more with you! The adventure continues…” they added.

    Since its debut in 2016, “Stranger Things” emerged as one of the top series from the streaming giant.

    Created by the Duffer Brothers, the show is set in the 1980s and takes a look at the fictional town of Hawkins, Indiana, where a secret government lab accidentally opens a door to another dimension referred to as the Upside Down.

    The show features an ensemble cast of Winona Ryder, Finn Wolfhard, Noah Schnapp, Millie Bobby Brown, David Harbour, Caleb McLaughlin, Gaten Matarazzo, Natalia Dyer, Charlie Heaton, Joe Keery and others.

    The show will conclude with its upcoming fifth season.

  • ‘A whole generation of kids’ finds ‘Friends’ offensive: Jennifer Aniston

    By Online Desk

    “A whole generation of kids now finds Friends offensive”, said Jennifer Aniston who made her name in the smash-hit 90s sitcom. The actress was promoting her new Netflix film Murder Mystery 2, costarring Adam Sandler, when the topic came up.

    She has been starring in comedies for nearly 30 years from the launch of NBC’s Friends in 1994 to the upcoming release of her latest work Murder Mystery 2. 

    “Comedy has evolved, movies have evolved,” Aniston told AFP in Paris. She further mentioned how it’s a bit tricky these days to be funny.

    “Now it’s a little tricky because you have to be very careful, which makes it really hard for comedians, because the beauty of comedy is that we make fun of ourselves, make fun of life,” said Aniston.

    She also touched upon how much the culture has changed since Friends debuted in 1994.

    “There’s a whole generation of people, kids, who are now going back to episodes of Friends and find them offensive,” Aniston said. “There were things that were never intentional and others… well, we should have thought it through – but I don’t think there was a sensitivity like there is now.”

    She further added, “[In the past] you could joke about a bigot and have a laugh – that was hysterical. And it was about educating people on how ridiculous people were. And now we’re not allowed to do that.”

    Aniston concluded by saying, “Everybody needs funny! The world needs humour! We can’t take ourselves too seriously. Especially in the United States. Everyone is far too divided.”

    The TV series’ lack of diversity has been in the headlines for a while now. Cast member Lisa Kudrow once said that if the show ever returned or got rebooted “it would not be an all-white cast.”

    All six main characters on Friends were white, and it rarely featured actors of colour in prominent roles across 10 seasons and 236 episodes. Not just that, some of the jokes on the show are now seen to be homophobic or transphobic.

    Marta Kauffman, the sitcom’s co-creator, expressed remorse about the lack of diversity last year.

    She donated $4 million to create the Marta F. Kauffman ’78 Professorship in African and African American Studies at Brandeis University. The program will “support a distinguished scholar with a concentration in the study of the peoples and cultures of Africa and the African diaspora.”

    “Admitting and accepting guilt is not easy,” Kaufman told the Los Angeles Times. “It’s painful looking at yourself in the mirror. I’m embarrassed that I didn’t know better 25 years ago,” she added.

    “A whole generation of kids now finds Friends offensive”, said Jennifer Aniston who made her name in the smash-hit 90s sitcom. The actress was promoting her new Netflix film Murder Mystery 2, costarring Adam Sandler, when the topic came up.

    She has been starring in comedies for nearly 30 years from the launch of NBC’s Friends in 1994 to the upcoming release of her latest work Murder Mystery 2. 

    “Comedy has evolved, movies have evolved,” Aniston told AFP in Paris. She further mentioned how it’s a bit tricky these days to be funny.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2′); });

    “Now it’s a little tricky because you have to be very careful, which makes it really hard for comedians, because the beauty of comedy is that we make fun of ourselves, make fun of life,” said Aniston.

    She also touched upon how much the culture has changed since Friends debuted in 1994.

    “There’s a whole generation of people, kids, who are now going back to episodes of Friends and find them offensive,” Aniston said. “There were things that were never intentional and others… well, we should have thought it through – but I don’t think there was a sensitivity like there is now.”

    She further added, “[In the past] you could joke about a bigot and have a laugh – that was hysterical. And it was about educating people on how ridiculous people were. And now we’re not allowed to do that.”

    Aniston concluded by saying, “Everybody needs funny! The world needs humour! We can’t take ourselves too seriously. Especially in the United States. Everyone is far too divided.”

    The TV series’ lack of diversity has been in the headlines for a while now. Cast member Lisa Kudrow once said that if the show ever returned or got rebooted “it would not be an all-white cast.”

    All six main characters on Friends were white, and it rarely featured actors of colour in prominent roles across 10 seasons and 236 episodes. Not just that, some of the jokes on the show are now seen to be homophobic or transphobic.

    Marta Kauffman, the sitcom’s co-creator, expressed remorse about the lack of diversity last year.

    She donated $4 million to create the Marta F. Kauffman ’78 Professorship in African and African American Studies at Brandeis University. The program will “support a distinguished scholar with a concentration in the study of the peoples and cultures of Africa and the African diaspora.”

    “Admitting and accepting guilt is not easy,” Kaufman told the Los Angeles Times. “It’s painful looking at yourself in the mirror. I’m embarrassed that I didn’t know better 25 years ago,” she added.