Now that Mufasa: The Lion King is coming out, Disney is working on the next live-action movie based on one of their animated movies. What is it going to be? Don’t get your hair in a knot because it is going to be Tangled.
According to Variety, Michael Gracey, who worked in The Greatest Showman, is in talks to direct, and Jennifer Kaytin Robinson, who wrote the upcoming I Know What You Did Last Summer sequel, penned the script for this reimaging.
Casting has not begun for the movie, so who do you think should star in it? I think Sabrina Carpenter and Felix Mallard would be great as Rapunzel and Flynn Rider. It’s a good thing grey-haired Zachary Levi aged out of the role. Moore has done the same, but she could be fun as Mother Gothel. She could be up for an Oscar if she did because how could someone so nice play someone so mean.
Hopefully, Snow White will be such a bomb that Disney will decide not to make this movie or any more animated live-action features.
Jim Carrey explains his return to playing Dr. Robotnik in “Sonic the Hedgehog 3”: “I bought a lot of stuff and I need the money, frankly.” pic.twitter.com/pIFJPuAyRM
Jim Carrey said he retired from acting after he made Sonic the Hedgehog 2. However, he was in the third movie.
Why did he come out of retirement so quickly? He explained to the Associated Press, “I came back to this universe because, first of all, I get to play a genius, which is a bit of a stretch. And, you know, it’s just, I bought a lot of stuff, and I need the money, frankly.”
You can’t get more real than that. You can see him play a fake genius in Sonic the Hedgehog 3 starting on December 2oth.
I don’t think I ever mentioned this before, but Carrey was the first actor I ever saw in Hollywood who has “It.” I didn’t get his appeal until I interviewed him, and then I was like, I get it. Before he even spoke, I could see his presence.
We know that Ryan Seacrest can host a singing show, like American Idol. And we also know that he cannot sing. But did you know that he can breakdance?
The other night on Wheel of Fortune, he showed off his dance moves after contestant Kamilah proved to him that she could Rap. So when she was done, he got on the floor and did a Back Spin.
It wasn’t the best, but it was better than I thought. Maybe he should do Dancing with the Stars in the fall. What else does he have going on?
If you asked most people to name any modern-day scientists, they would mention Neil deGrasse Tyson and Bill Nye the Science Guy. We think of them as the two of the smartest people alive. Maybe we were wrong.
The astrophysicist decided to challenge his friend to the Reflex Challenge to see who had better reflexes. The answer is the Pluto demoter. But he had an advantage; he and his brother used to play Slap Jack all the time. So, Bill and Neil decided to try to see who is better at that one. The answer was the same.
Watching these great minds do childhood challenges made me, for the first time, realize that deGrasse Tyson did have the same science teachers as me in junior high school because those are the smartest things I could ever do in science class.
In the ’90s, American daytime talk television changed for the worse with the likes of Montell Williams, Maury Povich, Jenny Jones, and Ricki Lake. However, the show that was most notable for trash TV was The Jerry Springer Show.
We watched the fights, the tears, the cursing, the fights (you have to mention it twice), and so much on our television sets. But did you ever wonder what really went on when the cameras weren’t rolling?
Netflix is going to show us that in Jerry Springer: Fights, Camera, Action.
This jaw-dropping, premium two-part series will tell the story of The Jerry Springer Show as it’s never been told before. Packed with extraordinary first-hand testimony and revelations from show insiders, the series explores how this daytime talk show became one of the biggest and most outrageous TV hits of the nineties. But behind the entertaining facade lay some darker truths. As we hear from the producers and ex-guests of The Jerry Springer Show, a murkier picture begins to emerge of the destruction it caused, raising renewed questions about who was responsible, and how far things should go in the name of entertainment.