Tonight at 8:30p on CBS, it is time to party with the Ghosts. That is because Sam (Rose McIver) and Jay (Utkarsh Ambudkar) are going to have a whiskey tasting at their B&B. There is only one little issue. Jay forgot to get a liquor license.
Even though they have been doing it for months, Sam is on the fence about doing it. But she gives in. What could go wrong? The lady from the liquor license shows up just as the tasting starts. What is the couple going to do so they don’t get caught?
While they are doing that? Trevor (Asher Grodman) and Isaac (Brandon Scott Jones) decide to start a fraternity with the other Ghosts. By doing so, we learn more about them, and the brotherhood that they have with Pete (Richie Moriarty), Flower (Sheila Carrasco), Alberta (Danielle Pinnock), Thor (Devan Chandler Long), Hetty (Rebecca Wisocky), and Sass (Román Zaragoza).
All of this leads to a reveal at the end that you don’t want to miss. But then again, why would you want to miss a single second of the show that everyone who watches falls in love with?
See James Olson as a brooding hitman… then Randy Mantooth as a young bon vivant in a spectacular paisley shirt! This was a few years prior to his debut on Emergency! of course. Catch the whole episode of McCLOUD this Saturday at 8AM/7C. pic.twitter.com/a4SdezjKLQ
Before Randolph Mantooth had to work as a paramedic on Emergency, he didn’t need a job on McCloud. He looks the same now as he did when he was 26 in that 1971 episode.
Meghan Trainor did a podcast with Penn Badgley, and afterward, they did a dance. Not just any dance but the choreography she created for Made You Look.
And I can’t stop looking at the You star. He is shockingly good at it. Maybe, he should do it more often with her. Or anyone else would wants to do it with him.
In 2009, we fell in love with Glee. And 13 years later, we are obsessed with the awful things that happened to the cast since its debut.
No one is more infatuated with their demise than ID, so they are bringing us The Price of Glee on January 16th.
The special will look at how “In May 2009, 10 young actors made their TV debut on Glee. By 2020, all of them would be famous. And three of them would be dead.”
What a fucking tagline. But so fucking true. One overdosed, one committed suicide while being investigated for child pornography, and one died saving her son.
So you have to wonder, is this show cursed? Because what other scripted series had a cast with so many controversies as this one? None.
Therefore, I can’t wait to hear what they found out when the 3-part limited series.
On Tuesday, there was a report that there was going to be a sequel to The Holiday, but Nancy Meyers, who wrote and directed the film, quickly denied it.
Yesterday, she went on Today and explained why it is not going to happen. “I’ve been asked to make a sequel a couple of times, you know. And I think about it. And I think it is good just the way it is. I don’t know how I won’t disappoint,” she said. “It was just a moment in time for all of them. And for me.”
So if you are disappointed by the news that there won’t be a sequel, you have to ask yourself, is it better not to have a sequel or have a sequel that never should’ve been made?
And that brings us to Rush Hour 4. Jackie Chan revealed today at the Red Sea International Film Festival in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, that he and Chris Tucker are in talks to make a fourth movie, according to Variety.
Before Reese Witherspoon was Legally Blonde, she would do anything to win an Election. However, she can win a sequel at Paramount+. The Hollywood Reporter says that the streaming service is in talks to make Tracy Flick Can’t Win, a sequel to the movie based on the book that came out this year.
I think if they had a vote to see if we wanted this movie, it would’ve been as popular as Kim Kardashian’s ex-husband was when he ran for President.
And finally, there is Wonder Woman 3. Yesterday, there was a report that James Gunn passed on making a third Wonder Woman film with Gal Gadot and Patty Jenkins, and today he addressed the rumors.
“So. As for the story yesterday in the Hollywood Reporter, some of it is true, some of it is half-true, some of it is not true, & some of it we haven’t decided yet whether it’s true or not,” he wrote. “Although this first month at DC has been fruitful, building the next ten years of story takes time & we’re still just beginning. Peter & I chose to helm DC Studios knowing we were coming into a fractious environment, both in the stories being told & in the audience itself & there would be an unavoidable transitional period as we moved into telling a cohesive story across film, TV, animation, and gaming. But, in the end, the drawbacks of that transitional period were dwarfed by the creative possibilities & the opportunity to build upon what has worked in DC so far & to help rectify what has not. But, in the end, the drawbacks of that transitional period were dwarfed by the creative possibilities & the opportunity to build upon what has worked in DC so far & to help rectify what has not. We know we are not going to make every single person happy every step of the way, but we can promise everything we do is done in the service of the STORY & in the service of the DC CHARACTERS we know you cherish and we have cherished our whole lives. As for more answers about the future of the DCU, I will sadly have to ask you to wait. We are giving these characters & the stories the time & attention they deserve & we ourselves still have a lot more questions to ask & answer.”
Let’s be honest. DC Studios needs to rework its strategy because its movies are not as good as Marvel’s pictures. They are too dark, both visually and thematically.