show-news.space - All about the world of show biz!

  • Celebrities
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Network
    • *** .SPACE NETWORK ***
      • art-news
      • eco-news
      • economic-news
      • family-news
      • job-news
      • motor-news
      • myhome-news
      • politic-news
      • realestate-news
      • scientific-news
      • show-news
      • technology-news
      • traveller-news
      • wellness-news
    • *** .CLOUD NETWORK ***
      • sportlife
      • calciolife
    • *** VENTIDI NETWORK ***
      • ventidinews
      • ventidisocieta
      • ventidispettacolo
      • ventidisport
      • ventidicronaca
      • ventidieconomia
      • ventidipolitica
    • *** MIX NETWORK ***
      • womenworld
      • sportlife
      • foodingnews
      • sportingnews
      • notiziealvino
Search
Login

show-news.space - All about the world of show biz!

Menu
Search

HOTTEST

  • @media (pointer: coarse) { .at-home-nav__outerContainer { overflow-x: scroll; -webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch; } } .at-home-nav__outerContainer { position: relative; display: flex; align-items: center; /* Fixes IE */ overflow-x: auto; box-shadow: -6px 0 white, 6px 0 white, 1px 3px 6px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.15); padding: 10px 1.25em 10px; transition: all 250ms; margin-bottom: 20px; -ms-overflow-style: none; /* IE 10+ */ […] More

  • As the popularity of electronic music at weddings grows, it’s out with the hotel ballrooms and in with the raves — grandparents included.When Stephen Le Duc posted on a Reddit forum proposing a meet-up at a music festival, he had no idea he would meet his future wife.In 2019, Mr. Le Duc, a mechanical engineer, was headed solo to the Electric Daisy Carnival in Las Vegas, an annual dance music festival. He met up with Olivia Le Duc, then Olivia Brents, who had responded to his post, and soon realized they shared not only a love of raves, but also swing dancing and retro culture. At the festival, they fell in love.Two years later, at that same festival, Mr. Le Duc, now 38, traded “kandi” — beaded bracelets typically exchanged at a rave — with Ms. Le Duc, a 28-year-old e-commerce merchandiser. The beads spelled out “marry me.”The couple, who live in Long Beach, Calif., knew from the start that they wanted an unconventional celebration; their families did not. When his wife’s grandmother suggested a church wedding, “I was like, ‘Oh, no, that can’t happen,’” Mr. Le Duc said, with a laugh.In recent years, many couples have swapped out more traditional receptions for raves and all night dance parties, prioritizing the music over (almost) all else. Celebrations can range from rave-themed after parties to million dollar, multiday productions that rival a music festival. On The Knot, a wedding planning site and vendor marketplace, searches for electronic dance music genre D.J.s jumped 156 percent in the first nine months of this year from the same period a year ago.“I think couples are really feeling empowered to reimagine tradition,” said Hannah Nowack, the senior weddings editor at the Knot. “Weddings aren’t one size fits all.” Décor like disco balls, neon lights and LED dance floors — things that make dancing “a focal point” — are popular, she said.At the Le Ducs’ wedding this March at the Ace Hotel in Palm Springs, Calif., a piano rendition of their favorite EDM song sound tracked the bride’s walk down the aisle. In addition to rings, they traded aquamarine- and garnet-studded kandi bracelets during the ceremony, which included a mention of “PLUR,” a mantra popular in the rave community that stands for “Peace, Love, Unity, Respect.”In addition to rings, the Le Ducs traded “kandi,” or beaded bracelets, that spelled out “PLUR,” a mantra popular in the rave community that stands for “Peace, Love, Unity, Respect.”Jeff ThatcherFor a certain demographic, a massive festival-like wedding has long been popular. “The average wedding I do has a $3 million budget,” said Vikas Sapra, a D.J. who works with 4AM, a management company for D.J.s and producers, in New York. “They are well-traveled, so they’re hitting all the international party spots: Ibiza, Mykonos, St Barts, St Tropez — that whole ecosystem. And obviously Burning Man, Coachella.”Many couples he has worked with host their weddings at estates in Mexico, Israel and Morocco where there are fewer limitations — often in deserts where they can “basically build structures from scratch to hold all the speakers and the lighting and the sound,” Mr. Sapras said. One wedding with more than 400 guests in Mexico that he D.J.’d went until 9:30 a.m. and involved pyrotechnics, a drone show and a replica of the Colosseum. “There’s also generally a lot of substances at some of these weddings — to go until 9 in the morning, to make it like a 15-hour day, it requires a little help,” Mr. Sapra said. “These days, psychedelics are much bigger.”In the United States, cities like Palm Springs are popular for more alternative outdoor weddings. Trish Jones, a wedding planner in Palm Springs, has organized parties with CO2 guns, cold sparklers and many neon lights. “I have friends that are planners in L.A. and Pasadena and Orange County and their weddings are all really basic,” she said. “They’re a lot of times in hotels, ballrooms — you can’t really modify those very much. You’re kind of working with the template. Out here, we have a lot more freedom.”For Michelle Phu, a wedding planner in Dallas with a primarily Asian American clientele, couples have requested EDM music for their receptions for years. “But lately it’s been like, hey, let’s just forget about the father-daughter dance, forget about all this stuff — it’s just a full-time rager from the beginning to the end,” she said.“I’m Asian myself, and I feel like we value our parents’ opinions a lot,” Ms. Phu said. “With that, you just want to make sure your parents are happy with it, listening to their guidance on how to plan your wedding. Lately, a lot of my clients are like, let’s just do what’s best for us versus what’s best for our parents — that’s the biggest shift I think so far.”“If you put on Pitbull, your laptop is being thrown into the Hudson,” said Alison Kalinowski.Rachel Rosenstein“For at least a few minutes,” she wanted her wedding to William Arendt, in suspenders, “to feel like a nightclub in Berlin,” she said.Rachel RosensteinAlison Kalinowski, 29, bought her first Tiësto CD when she was 10 — her brother and Polish parents exposed her to dance music early on. So when it was time for Ms. Kalinowski, who works in health tech, to plan her wedding to William Arendt, a 29-year-old engineer, music was the priority. She knew what she didn’t want: “If you put on Pitbull, your laptop is being thrown into the Hudson.”Ms. Kalinowski, however, acknowledged that “if I did four hours of straight rave music, no one will have fun except me.” So, for their April 15 wedding at Maritime Parc in Jersey City, N.J., she told the D.J. that “for at least a few minutes, I want my wedding to feel like a nightclub in Berlin.”Some couples go straight to the source by simply getting married at a dance music festival. Adrian Rudow, a 29-year-old accountant, and her husband, Adam Rudow, a 30-year-old games programmer, have attended E.D.C. in Las Vegas nine times together. In May, the couple, who also live in Long Beach, married at a chapel on the festival grounds in a ceremony that took 15 minutes.Ms. Rudow wore a custom sparkling outfit with platform heels and fluffy earrings, while her husband wore a white sequin suit. Her two younger sisters, who acted as her maids of honor, were each clad in rainbow print. “I feel like there’s no rule book anymore,” she said. When they held a larger reception in October, the music turned to “everything that we really like — trance, progressive house,” Ms. Rudow said. “Seeing my grandma dance to that was the funniest thing.”Adam and Adrian Rudow have attended the Electric Daisy Festival in Las Vegas nine times together. In May, they married on the festival grounds. “I feel like there’s no rule book anymore,” Ms. Rudow said. Cozza MediaAnd that is often the couples’ intention: to expose their broader communities to their passions. At the Le Ducs’ wedding reception in Palm Springs, Moses Samuel — a friend they had met at a rave who acted as officiant — performed a 30-minute fire spinning set. Ms. Le Duc danced with her LED hula hoop and Mr. Le Duc took out his light-up baton. They also handed out light-up crowns, mini-fiber optic whips and light sticks — party favors that even their parents’ friends enjoyed.“I was concerned about my mom because she’s in her 70s and this is not quite her cup of tea,” Mr. Le Duc said. But “she pulled me aside and she goes, ‘I’m having the most fun I’ve ever had.’” More

  • His biggest record, “Waterloo,” topped the country music chart for five weeks in 1959 and became a crossover hit.NASHVILLE — Stonewall Jackson, the honky-tonk singer who overcame an abusive, hardscrabble childhood and went on to enjoy a long, successful career in country music, including more than 60 years as a member of the cast of the Grand Ole Opry, died on Saturday in Nashville. He was 89.His death, after struggling with vascular dementia, was announced by the Opry. In the book “From the Bottom Up: The Stonewall Jackson Story as Told in His Own Words” (1991), Mr. Jackson said his stepfather, a short-tempered sharecropper named James Leviner, had often abused him, once hoisting him high above his head and dashing him against a rock.Another time, Mr. Jackson wrote, his stepfather beat him and left him lying senseless in a field after the boy accidentally spilled a bucket of water that he had been carrying.“The physical scars and pain of being abused don’t last long,” Mr. Jackson said, “but the mental part of it goes on and on and on.”Mr. Jackson’s 1962 recording “A Wound Time Can’t Erase,” a Top 10 country hit written by Bill D. Johnson, called to mind this early trauma.“Is it power you’ve won for the things that you’ve done? What you’ve gained I guess I’ll never see,” Mr. Jackson wonders aloud, his heartache set to the record’s chugging rhythms and uncluttered production.“A Wound Time Can’t Erase” was the 11th in a string of 23 consecutive singles that reached the country Top 40 for Mr. Jackson from 1958 to 1965. He later had a run of eight consecutive Top 40 country hits from 1966 to 1968, and ultimately placed 44 singles on the country charts before the hits stopped coming in 1973.“Waterloo,” a catchy ditty written by John D. Loudermilk and Marijohn Wilkin, was his biggest record, occupying the top spot on the country chart for five weeks in 1959 and crossing over to the pop Top 10. “B.J. the D.J.,” his other No. 1 country single, began its run up the charts toward the end of 1963.Most of Mr. Jackson’s recordings were made in the traditional style known as hard country: a lean, shuffling sound accented by keening fiddle and steel guitar. Eleven of his singles, including “Life to Go,” a prisoner’s lament written by George Jones, and “I Washed My Hands in Muddy Water,” a Top 20 pop hit for Johnny Rivers in 1966, reached the country Top 10.Mr. Jackson in 1999 performing at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. He was in the cast of the Grand Ole Opry for more than 60 years.Mark Humphrey/Associated PressStonewall Jackson was born on Nov. 6, 1932, in Tabor City, N.C. His biological father, a railroad engineer named Waymond David Jackson, wanted him to be named after Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson, the Confederate general from whom he claimed to have been descended, but he died of complications of a hernia before Stonewall, the third of his three boys, was born.Mr. Jackson’s mother, who was born Lulu Loraine Turner, remarried after his father died.Fearing for their safety, Mr. Jackson’s mother eventually left her sons’ abusive stepfather and moved the family to Georgia, where they lived in a shack on the farm of the boys’ paternal grandmother and her husband. Stonewall was working in the fields and cutting timber there before he reached the age of 10.Hoping to escape the drudgery of sharecropping, Mr. Jackson, who received only a limited education, lied about his age and joined the Army when he was 16. He was discharged as soon as the deception was discovered.The next year, he enlisted in the Navy, where he served on the submarine rescue vessel Kittiwake and began honing his skills as a guitar player and songwriter. Four years later, he returned to Georgia to farm a small plot before moving to Nashville to try his luck as a songwriter.His many hit records notwithstanding, Mr. Jackson’s biggest claim to fame was his six-decade run on the Grand Ole Opry. He remains the only singer to have been invited to join the Opry cast before releasing a record, much less having a hit.Mr. Jackson, who lived in Brentwood, Tenn., recalled that in 1956, during his first visit to Nashville, he presented himself unannounced at the offices of Acuff-Rose Music in hopes of securing a songwriting deal. Wesley Rose, the son of Fred Rose, the Acuff-Rose executive who gave Hank Williams his start, invited Mr. Jackson to make a demo recording and was impressed with the results.“He called WSM, the radio station that owns and operates the Grand Ole Opry, and told them about me,” Mr. Jackson was quoted as saying in the liner notes to the 1972 compilation “The World of Stonewall Jackson.” “He asked if they would set up an audition for me the next day and asked if I’d like to try out for the Opry.”In 2007, Mr. Jackson’s relationship with the show soured when he sued Gaylord Entertainment, the Opry’s parent company, for age discrimination after his appearances on the program were curtailed to make room for younger artists. The lawsuit was settled, for an undisclosed amount, in October 2008, and Mr. Jackson resumed performing on the show.His wife, Juanita Wair Jackson, died in 2019. Survivors include a son, Stonewall Jr., and two grandchildren. More

  • The songstress earns her cumulative 51 weeks at No. 1, tying Michael Jackson as they are only preceded by The Beatles (132 weeks), Elvis Presley (67 weeks) and Garth Brooks (52 weeks).

    Jan 11, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Taylor Swift’s latest album “Evermore” doesn’t stay away from No. 1 position on Billboard 200 chart for too long. The set reclaims the leading position on the chart for a third nonconsecutive week after earning 56,000 equivalent album units in the U.S. in the week ending January 7, according to MRC Data.
    Of the number, SEA units comprise 38,000 which equals to 50.43 million on-demand streams of the album’s songs. Meanwhile, album sales are 16,000 with 2,000 being in the form of TEA units. That means the “Cardigan” singer earns her cumulative 51 weeks at No. 1, tying Michael Jackson. The stars are only preceded by The Beatles (132 weeks), Elvis Presley (67 weeks) and Garth Brooks (52 weeks).
    Back to this week’s chart, Lil Durk’s “The Climb” ascends one spot from No. 3 to No. 2 in its third week on the list with 48,000 equivalent album units earned. Following it up is Pop Smoke’s “Shoot for the Stars, Aim for the Moon” that climbs up from No. 4 to No. 3 with 44,000 equivalent album units. Ariana Grande’s “Positions” also rises from No. 5 to No. 4 after earning 35,000 equivalent album units.

      See also…

    Meanwhile, last week’s leader Playboi Carti’s “Whole Lotta Red” plummets from No. 1 to No. 5 with 33,000 units earned. As for Megan Thee Stallion’s “Good News”, the album shifts from No. 7 to No. 6 with just over 32,000 units earned.
    Luke Combs’ “What You See Is What You Get” also rises one rang from No. 8 to No. 7 after earning 32,000 equivalent album units. The rest of Top 10 includes Bad Bunny’s “El Ultimo Tour del Mundo”, Juice WRLD’s “Legends Never Die” and Lil Baby’s “My Turn”. “El Ultimo Tour del Mundo” ascends from No. 9 to No. 8 with 31,000 units, while “Legends Never Die” bounces back to the Top 10 with 30,000 units. As for “My Turn”, it soars from No. 13 to No. 10 with 29,000 units earned.
    Top Ten Billboard 200:
    “Evermore” – Taylor Swift (56,000 units)
    “The Voice” – Lil Durk (48,000 units)
    “Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon” – Pop Smoke (44,000 units)
    “Positions” – Ariana Grande (35,000 units)
    “Whole Lotta Red” – Playboi Carti (33,000 units)
    “Good News” – Megan Thee Stallion) (just over 32,000 units)
    “What You See Is What You Get” – Luke Combs (32,000 units)
    “El Ultimo Tour del Mundo” – Bad Bunny (31,000 units)
    “Legends Never Die” – Juice WRLD (30,000 units)
    “My Turn” – Lil Baby (29,000 units)

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Lori Harvey and Michael B. Jordan Make Romance Instagram Official

    Related Posts More

  • He was a recording artist and songwriter himself, but he also played pivotal roles in the careers of Bob Dylan and Janis Joplin.Bob Neuwirth, who had credentials as a painter, recording artist, songwriter and filmmaker, but who also had an impact as a member of Bob Dylan’s inner circle and as a conduit for two of Janis Joplin’s best-known songs, died on Wednesday in Santa Monica, Calif. He was 82.His partner, Paula Batson, said the cause was heart failure.Mr. Neuwirth had a modest, eclectic string of albums to his credit, including his debut, simply titled “Bob Neuwirth,” in 1974, as well as a 1994 collaboration with John Cale called “Last Day on Earth” and a 2000 collaboration with the Cuban composer and pianist José María Vitier, “Havana Midnight.” But he was perhaps better known for the roles he played in the careers of others, beginning with Mr. Dylan.Mr. Neuwirth said that he first encountered Mr. Dylan at the Indian Neck Folk Festival in Connecticut in 1961. Mr. Dylan was still largely unknown but, Mr. Neuwirth said years later, the singer caught his eye “because he was the only other guy with a harmonica holder around his neck.”The two hit it off, and Mr. Neuwirth became a central figure in the circle that coalesced around Mr. Dylan as his fame grew. When Mr. Dylan held court at the Kettle of Fish bar in Greenwich Village in the early 1960s, Mr. Neuwirth was there. When Mr. Dylan toured England in 1965, Mr. Neuwirth went along. A decade later, when Mr. Dylan embarked on his Rolling Thunder Revue tour, Mr. Neuwirth was instrumental in putting the band together.Mr. Dylan’s contemporaries and biographers have described Mr. Neuwirth’s role in various ways.“Neuwirth was the eye of the storm, the center, the catalyst, the instigator,” Eric Von Schmidt, another folk singer active at the time, once said. “Wherever something important was happening, he was there, or he was on his way to it, or rumored to have been nearby enough to have had an effect on whatever it was that was in the works.”From left, Bob Dylan, Mick Ronson and Mr. Neuwirth performing in Toronto in 1975 as part of Mr. Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue tour, for which Mr. Neuwirth was instrumental in putting the band together.Frank Lennon/Toronto Star via Getty ImagesIt has often been suggested that as Mr. Dylan assembled his distinctive persona while climbing to international fame, he borrowed some of it, including a certain attitude and a caustic streak, from Mr. Neuwirth.“The whole hipster shuck and jive — that was pure Neuwirth,” Bob Spitz wrote in “Dylan: A Biography” (1989). “So were the deadly put-downs, the wipeout grins and innuendos. Neuwirth had mastered those little twists long before Bob Dylan made them famous and conveyed them to his best friend with altruistic grace.”Mr. Neuwirth, Mr. Spitz suggested, could have ridden those same qualities to Dylanesque fame.“Bobby Neuwirth was the Bob Most Likely to Succeed,” he wrote, “a wellspring of enormous potential. He possessed all the elements, except for one — nerve.”Mr. Dylan, in his book “Chronicles: Volume One” (2004), had his own description of Mr. Neuwirth.“Like Kerouac had immortalized Neal Cassady in ‘On the Road,’ somebody should have immortalized Neuwirth,” he wrote. “He was that kind of character. He could talk to anybody until they felt like all their intelligence was gone. With his tongue, he ripped and slashed and could make anybody uneasy, also could talk his way out of anything. Nobody knew what to make of him.”Ms. Joplin, too, benefited from Mr. Neuwirth’s influence. Holly George-Warren, whose books include “Janis: Her Life and Music” (2019), said that Mr. Neuwirth and Ms. Joplin met in 1963 and became fast friends.Mr. Neuwirth performing in Brooklyn in 1999. Hiroyuki Ito/Getty Images“In 1969, he taught her Kris Kristofferson’s ‘Me and Bobby McGee’ after he heard Gordon Lightfoot play the then-unknown song at manager Albert Grossman’s office,” Ms. George-Warren said by email. “He quickly learned it and took it to Janis at the Chelsea Hotel.”Her recording of the song hit No. 1 in 1971, but Ms. Joplin was not around to enjoy the success; she had died of a drug overdose the previous year.Mr. Neuwirth was also involved in “Mercedes Benz,” another well-known Joplin song that, like “Bobby McGee,” appeared on her 1971 album, “Pearl.” He was at a bar with her before a show she was doing at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, N.Y., in August 1970 when Ms. Joplin began riffing on a ditty that the poet Michael McClure would sing at gatherings with friends. Mr. Neuwirth began writing the lyrics the two of them came up with on a napkin.She sang the song at the show that night, and she later recorded it a cappella. She, Mr. McClure and Mr. Neuwirth are jointly credited as the writers of the song, which on the album is less than two minutes long.Ms. George-Warren said that this anecdote was revelatory: Mr. Neuwirth nudged along the careers of artists he admired, including Patti Smith, in whatever ways came to mind.“Though Bob was renowned for his acerbic wit — from his days as aide-de-camp to Dylan and Janis — when I met him 25 years ago, he epitomized kindness, mentorship and curiosity,” she said. “That is the unsung story of Bob Neuwirth.”Robert John Neuwirth was born on June 20, 1939, in Akron, Ohio. His father, also named Robert, was an engineer, and his mother, Clara Irene (Fischer) Neuwirth, was a design engineer.He studied art at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and dabbled in painting over the decades; in 2011 the Track 16 gallery in Santa Monica presented “Overs & Unders: Paintings by Bob Neuwirth, 1964-2009.”After two years at art school, he spent time in Paris before returning to the Boston area, where he began performing in coffee houses, singing and playing banjo and guitar.He appeared in D.A. Pennebaker’s 1967 Dylan documentary, “Dont Look Back,” as well as in “Eat the Document” (1972), a documentary of a later tour that was shot by Mr. Pennebaker and later edited by Mr. Dylan, who is credited as the director, and Mr. Dylan’s “Renaldo & Clara” (1978), most of which was filmed during the Rolling Thunder tour. He also appeared in “Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story,” the 2019 Martin Scorsese film.Mr. Neuwirth was a producer of “Down From the Mountain” (2000), a documentary, directed in part by Mr. Pennebaker, about a concert featuring the musical artists heard in the Coen Brothers’ movie “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”“It’s all about the same to me,” he said, “whether it’s writing a song or making a painting or doing a film. It’s all just storytelling.”Mr. Neuwirth, who lived in Santa Monica, is survived by Ms. Batson.Mr. Neuwirth could be self-deprecating about his own musical efforts. He called his collaboration with Mr. Vitier, the Cuban pianist, “Cubilly music.” But his music was often serious. The Cale collaboration was a sort of song cycle that, as Jon Pareles wrote in The New York Times when the two performed selections in concert in 1990, “added up to a shrug of the shoulders in the face of impending doom.”“Instead of breast-beating or simply wisecracking,” Mr. Pareles wrote of the work, “it found an emotional territory somewhere between fatalism and denial — still uneasy but not quite resigned.” More

Celebrities

  • Liam Gallagher’s son Gene swerves Oasis comparisons for his band’s Supersonic debut single

    Read More

  • Strictly hunk makes more money flogging racy pics than he did on show but with big cost

    Read More

  • BGT winner Sydnie Christmas eyeing up a starring role in very provocative show

    Read More

  • BBC boss Tim Davie warns there could be more scandals to come after MasterChef furore

    Read More

Television

  • in Television

    Test Yourself on These Cartoons and Comics Adapted for the Screen

    8 September 2025, 14:59

  • in Television

    Can You Ace Our Tennis Quiz?

    4 September 2025, 21:09

  • in Television

    Test Yourself on Popular Streaming TV Shows and the Books That Inspired Them

    11 August 2025, 15:00

  • in Television

    The Urban Design of Sesame Street

    28 July 2025, 09:00

  • in Television

    Jon Stewart Supports Friend Stephen Colbert Through CBS Cancellation

    22 July 2025, 07:15

  • in Television

    TV Show Helps Identify Mother and Child Found Dead in Rome Park, and a Suspect

    22 July 2025, 04:01

  • in Television

    Malcolm-Jamal Warner, Theo Huxtable on ‘The Cosby Show,’ Dead at 54 After Drowning

    21 July 2025, 23:09

  • in Television

    ‘Washington Black,’ Plus 7 Things to Watch on TV This Week

    21 July 2025, 05:00

  • in Television

    Canceling ‘The Late Show’ Is Bad News for Late-Night TV, not Stephen Colbert

    20 July 2025, 18:00

Movies

  • in Movies

    How Anime Took Over America: From Pokemon to Demon Slayer and Dragon Ball Z

    3 September 2025, 21:10

  • in Movies

    ‘Weapons’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    8 August 2025, 15:39

  • in Movies

    ‘Eddington’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    25 July 2025, 14:31

  • in Movies

    ‘Sunday Best’ Review: Ed Sullivan’s Really Big Impact

    22 July 2025, 11:00

  • in Movies

    Behind the Squirrel Scene That James Gunn, ‘Superman’ Director, Says Almost Got Cut

    22 July 2025, 09:02

  • in Movies

    In the Spirit of Labubus, Cute Sidekicks Are Taking Over Major Movies

    22 July 2025, 09:02

  • in Movies

    ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Directors Discuss the Film’s Rise and Chart-Topping Soundtrack

    21 July 2025, 09:01

  • in Movies

    The Kurosawa You May Never Have Heard Of

    19 July 2025, 09:01

  • in Movies

    What if Theme-Park Rides Were Based on Art-House Films?

    19 July 2025, 09:00

Music

  • Audience Report: Oasis Returns, in All Its Glory

  • 10 Tastemakers Pick Their Song of Summer 2025

  • Can ‘Messy’ Singer Lola Young Make It Big Without Breaking?

  • I Don’t Know if I Believe in God, but I Believe in Gospel Music

  • Is She Jazz? Is She Pop? She’s Laufey, and She’s a Phenomenon.

  • ‘Tosca’ Is the Boston Symphony’s Andris Nelsons at His Best

  • Justin Bieber’s Experimental ‘Swag’ Resurgence

Theater

  • After the Eaton Fire, the Aveson School of Leaders Built a Wonderland

  • ‘Joy’ Review: A Rags-to-QVC-Riches Story

  • Dolly Parton Musical’s Nashville Debut Draws Flocks of Fans

  • Martin Izquierdo Dead: Costume Designer Who Made Wings for ‘Angels in America’ Was 83

  • ‘The Weir’ Review: A Few Pints to Help the Ghost Stories Go Down Easy

  • The Moves That Make ‘Chicago’ and ‘A Chorus Line’ So Special

  • ‘A Chorus Line’ and ‘Chicago’ at 50: Who Won?

ABOUT

The QUATIO - web agency di Torino - is currently composed of 28 thematic-vertical online portals, which average about 2.300.000 pages per month per portal, each with an average visit time of 3:12 minutes and with about 2100 total news per day available for our readers of politics, economy, sports, gossip, entertainment, real estate, wellness, technology, ecology, society and much more themes ...

show-news.space is one of the portals of the network of:

Quatio di CAPASSO ROMANO - Web Agency di Torino
SEDE LEGALE: CORSO PESCHIERA, 211 - 10141 - ( TORINO )
P.IVA IT07957871218 - REA TO-1268614

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2015 - 2025 | Developed by: Quatio

ITALIAN LANGUAGE

calciolife.cloud | notiziealvino.it | sportingnews.it | sportlife.cloud | ventidicronaca.it | ventidieconomia.it | ventidinews.it | ventidipolitica.it | ventidisocieta.it | ventidispettacolo.it | ventidisport.it

ENGLISH LANGUAGE

art-news.space | eco-news.space | economic-news.space | family-news.space | job-news.space | motor-news.space | myhome-news.space | politic-news.space | realestate-news.space | scientific-news.space | show-news.space | sportlife.news | technology-news.space | traveller-news.space | wellness-news.space | womenworld.eu | foodingnews.it

This portal is not a newspaper as it is updated without periodicity. It cannot be considered an editorial product pursuant to law n. 62 of 7.03.2001. The author of the portal is not responsible for the content of comments to posts, the content of the linked sites. Some texts or images included in this portal are taken from the internet and, therefore, considered to be in the public domain; if their publication is violated, the copyright will be promptly communicated via e-mail. They will be immediately removed.

  • Home
  • Network
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Contact
Back to Top
Close
  • Celebrities
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Network
    • *** .SPACE NETWORK ***
      • art-news
      • eco-news
      • economic-news
      • family-news
      • job-news
      • motor-news
      • myhome-news
      • politic-news
      • realestate-news
      • scientific-news
      • show-news
      • technology-news
      • traveller-news
      • wellness-news
    • *** .CLOUD NETWORK ***
      • sportlife
      • calciolife
    • *** VENTIDI NETWORK ***
      • ventidinews
      • ventidisocieta
      • ventidispettacolo
      • ventidisport
      • ventidicronaca
      • ventidieconomia
      • ventidipolitica
    • *** MIX NETWORK ***
      • womenworld
      • sportlife
      • foodingnews
      • sportingnews
      • notiziealvino