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    HBO Max Gains Traction in a Crowded Field

    AT&T, HBO’s parent company, reported that HBO and the new streamer added 2.7 million subscribers in the first quarter.AT&T added 2.7 million new customers to HBO and HBO Max in the first quarter, a boost for the company’s new streaming effort in an increasingly crowded field.The company’s WarnerMedia division, which includes HBO, recorded $8.5 billion in revenue for the period, a 9.8 percent jump over last year, when theater sales and advertising revenue plummeted during the pandemic. Led by the chief executive Jason Kilar, WarnerMedia also includes the cable networks CNN and Turner and the Warner Bros. film studios.HBO is the cornerstone of AT&T’s media strategy, and the company sees HBO Max as a way to keep its mobile customers from fleeing, offering the streaming platform at a discount to its phone subscribers.In its report on the year’s first quarter, AT&T stopped disclosing the number of active HBO Max users, obscuring how many people are actually tuned into the new streaming service.Over all, AT&T counted 44.1 million subscribers to HBO and HBO Max in the United States at the end of March, a gain of 2.7 million from the previous quarter. Before it stopped breaking out the HBO Max subscriptions, in December, it said it had 41.5 million subscribers: 17.1 million for the streaming service, 20 million for HBO on cable and the rest from hotels or other deals.HBO Max most likely drove the gain in the quarter, which is notable given how competitive the streaming universe has become. HBO Max is also the most expensive of the major streaming platforms, at $15 a month. Netflix, which reported earnings on Tuesday, remains the leader, with 67 million customers in the United States and nearly 208 million in total.Netflix’s dominance has started to wane, in part because of newer entrants like HBO Max and Disney+. Netflix added four million new subscribers in the quarter, with a little more than 400,000 in the United States. Netflix chalked up the comparatively sluggish growth to the production slowdown when Hollywood studios largely stopped making shows and films during the pandemic. The company said it expected a more successful second half of the year, when returning favorites and highly anticipated films become available.HBO Max most likely got a boost from an unorthodox strategy championed by Mr. Kilar: The sibling company Warner Bros. plans to release its entire lineup of 2021 films on HBO Max on the same day they’re scheduled to appear in theaters. The announcement rumbled throughout Hollywood, angering agents and filmmakers who stood to lose out on crucial bonuses and commissions by short-circuiting the old theatrical release schedule.Mr. Kilar has said the company was likely to go back to a more traditional distribution plan next year. For the rest of 2021, he is counting on the film slate — which included the recent releases of “Zack Snyder’s Justice League” and “Godzilla vs. Kong,” as well as the Friday premiere of “Mortal Kombat” — to help drive people to HBO Max.The company also plans a global expansion of HBO Max starting in June, along with a lower-cost version of the service that will include commercials. The company has about 19.7 million HBO customers overseas who it hopes to convert into HBO Max subscribers. More

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    Review: ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ Cut in Half and Twice as Good

    Josh O’Connor and Jessie Buckley star as the star-crossed lovers in a compelling stage-film hybrid adaptation.What’s written in haste may be repaired in haste. Or so the fine and fleet new “Romeo and Juliet” from Britain’s National Theater, available here on PBS’s “Great Performances,” convinces me.At 90 minutes, it is even shorter than the “two hours’ traffic of our stage” promised in its first lines but rarely honored in performance. (The entire play normally takes about three hours.) Yet as directed by Simon Godwin, this emotionally satisfying and highly theatrical filmed version scores point after point while whizzing past, or outright cutting, the elements that can make you think it was written not by Shakespeare but by O. Henry on a bender.If the cutting merely left what remains with a much higher proportion of penetrating insight and powerful feeling, that would be enough; “Romeo and Juliet,” at its best, anticipates the great later works in which complexity and ambivalence are made real and gorgeous in language. But the speed serves another function here: telling a story that’s mostly about teenagers with a teenage intensity and recklessness.Not that the stars are anywhere near their adolescence. Though Romeo is 17 or so and Juliet, 13, Josh O’Connor, who played mopey young Prince Charles in “The Crown,” is 30, and Jessie Buckley, the mysterious star of “I’m Thinking of Ending Things,” 31. Still, there’s a reason they’re called actors: They can perform the acts a play requires of them. Onstage, at any rate, that would be sufficient.Under Simon Godwin’s direction, the masked ball in this “Romeo and Juliet” is closer to a rave.Rob YoungsonOn film, we need an extra push, which Godwin and Emily Burns, who adapted the text, provide by grounding us in a theatrical world before escorting us into a filmic one. The production begins unceremoniously with the cast in street clothes, entering a theater, unmasked and vulnerable, none more so than O’Connor, with the low-slung, “sticky-out” ears he says earned him his role on “The Crown.” Sitting on three sides of a small, square, scuffed playing space, the actors are barely past the greeting phase — O’Connor and Buckley smile shyly at one another, as if across a Veronese piazza — when the play leaps out of the gate.Purists not already offended will soon have plenty to set them off. The masked ball at which the lovers meet is not exactly courtly; it’s more like a rave, and Romeo is given just two lines (instead of 10) to fall for Juliet, who is moaning at the mic like Lana Del Rey.But impurists will be satisfied that the erotic intensity between them is so palpable, even when Godwin dissipates it by cutting away from the theatrical moment to a filmed montage in some other dimension. Similarly, the introduction of a passionate gay pairing among the supporting roles makes up in thematic coherence — the plot turns on forbidden love — what it lacks in textual fidelity.The trade-offs continue throughout. The most fascinating one finds Juliet’s parents inverted, Lady Capulet (Tamsin Greig) getting most of the lines Shakespeare wrote for her Lord (Lloyd Hutchinson). Greig, so funny on the Showtime series “Episodes,” is spectacularly entertaining as she explores what besides the habitual assertion of male power might motivate a parent to threaten a daughter with expulsion. Her interpretation, underlined by “evil” music, nevertheless denatures one key feature of the play, which now suggests that the Capulets are monsters when the really terrifying thing is that they’re not. They are upstanding citizens doing what’s expected.It is that atmosphere of immutable custom and inherited hatred that the lovers are desperate to escape. But Godwin’s staging makes clear by physical proximity and by judicious intercutting that these elements are related: Romeo and Juliet’s passion is as rash and irrational as the other characters’ repression and violence. As the outlines of their love are filled in, so is the hatred around them — and so are the set (by Soutra Gilmour) and props; swords that were simple wooden dowels in Act I by Act III are knives that look menacingly real. In youth, it seems, enmity precedes an enemy just as love precedes a lover.Tamsin Greig as Lady Capulet and Lloyd Hutchinson as Lord Capulet.Rob YoungsonAt every turn we are offered insights like that until, suddenly, we aren’t. Nothing Godwin can do to make the play rough and unfamiliar — whether by having Tybalt (David Judge) urinate on a wall or by excising greatest hits like “parting is such sweet sorrow” — can help it get past the place where the lovers’ ingenuity fails along with Shakespeare’s. The plot thread by which Juliet’s fake death prompts Romeo’s real one is so absurdly flimsy that adaptations have tried for centuries to fix it; Arthur Laurents’s workaround for “West Side Story” is especially strong.For me, though, no production of “Romeo and Juliet” survives the potions of Friar Laurence; they are a lot of magick to swallow in a play about such real and serious things. That Laurence is portrayed here (by Lucian Msamati) with great dignity, not as a nutty professor, helps, raising the profound if wishful idea that faith can correct for society’s failings. Even more movingly, Deborah Findlay, as Juliet’s fond nurse, is able to temper the role’s comic elements with an immutable loyalty to her mistress, and then temper that with something darker and arguably in fact disloyal. It’s a perfect trifold performance.That’s the thing about Shakespeare, at least for me: There comes a moment in many of his plays when only the actors can preserve the emotion the plot keeps leaking. Happily, that happens here: As the tragedy narrows, O’Connor and Buckley flood with feeling.Stars will do that. In the same way an enemy is just a receptacle for enmity that already exists, a starring role is whatever a star can pour ambient emotion into. O’Connor’s essence is a silent yearning — the kind that is not extinguished but fanned by satisfaction. (This is what made his otherwise insufferable Charles almost sympathetic in “The Crown” and the nearly silent young farmer in his breakthrough film, “God’s Own Country,” so expressive.) Buckley, whose face seems transparent at times, is more about wonder; her Juliet clearly wants Romeo but, more than that, is amazed by her good fortune in getting him.Even in a more conventional production — this one was meant to be performed live onstage but was retooled for the pandemic — you need that kind of incandescence to make the play make sense. Remember that Shakespeare was a young star, too, albeit 30 or so himself, when he wrote “Romeo and Juliet.” Indeed, it often seems that his title characters, in haste and passion, wrote it for him.Romeo & JulietThrough May 21; pbs.org/gperf More

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    ScHoolboy Q to Make Acting Debut in TV Adaptation of 'The Freak Brothers'

    WENN/Bizu

    Speaking about his participation in the animated show that is inspired by artist Gilbert Shelton’s 1960s stoner series, the ‘Floating’ rapper explains he ‘wanted to do something outside of rap, creatively.’

    Apr 22, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Rapper ScHoolboy Q is making his acting debut in the TV adaptation of cult comic book “The Freak Brothers”.

    The hip-hop star will voice a character based on himself in the animated show, inspired by artist Gilbert Shelton’s 1960s stoner series “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers”, which already boasts cast members like Woody Harrelson, John Goodman, Tiffany Haddish, and Pete Davidson.

    And ScHoolboy admits he took the premise of the series to heart while in the recording booth: “I love that I get to play myself,” he told Variety. “I don’t just mean playing ‘Q’ either, but the real me. I was high on ‘shrooms when I recorded my scenes.”

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    He added, “I wanted to do something outside of rap, creatively, and this was a great fit. It’s hilarious and it just ‘feels stoner’ like I am. The show is really about what it says it’s about. Working on my episode was laid back and fun, while still challenging creatively and pushing boundaries.”

    Also joining the project is Anthony “Top Dawg” Tiffith, the founder of Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE) – home to ScHoolboy and artists like Kendrick Lamar and SZA. He will serve as an executive producer on “The Freak Brothers”, and also produce the show’s theme tune, created by artist Ray Vaughn.

    Describing the show as “funny and perfect for modern times,” Tiffith added, “WTG’s [executive producers] Mark Canton and Courtney Solomon and [producer] Dorothy Canton were welcoming and great at working with our creative vision to ensure TDE was represented well.” Vaughn chimed in,”The stuff I’ve seen so far has been hilarious.”

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    Seth Meyers: Chauvin Verdict Confirms ‘What We Saw With Our Own Eyes’

    “As we’ve explained on this show many times before, the culture and system of policing in this country must be dismantled and reformed,” Meyers said on Wednesday.Welcome to Best of Late Night, a rundown of the previous night’s highlights that lets you sleep — and lets us get paid to watch comedy. We’re all stuck at home at the moment, so here are the 50 best movies on Netflix right now.Holding Out for Justice for AllOn Wednesday, as Derek Chauvin’s conviction in the killing of George Floyd continued to reverberate around the country, Seth Meyers said it was “at the very least a relief to have what we saw with our own eyes confirmed by a court of law, even if it’s still a sorrow moment for grief and mourning, because this one verdict alone does not mean justice is done.”“True justice would mean George Floyd would still be alive today. True justice would mean Black people no longer having to live in fear of being killed by police. But there was at least accountability, which is hopefully a comfort to George Floyd’s family, and all those mourning his death, and a first step toward true justice and the reform we so desperately need, because it is undeniably the case that this is not the end of the story. As we’ve explained on this show many times before, the culture and system of policing in this country must be dismantled and reformed.” — SETH MEYERSSamantha Bee and Stephen Colbert also described Chauvin’s conviction on all charges as just a step in the right direction on a long path to righting generations of injustice.“While yesterday’s guilty verdicts are a step toward justice, they don’t change the fact that a man was murdered and Black people are still being killed by police. We have a long way to go to make this a country that, I don’t know, actually treats everybody like human [expletive] beings?” — SAMANTHA BEE“Americans are still emotionally processing yesterday’s verdict by a Minnesota jury that found Derek Chauvin guilty on three counts in the murder of George Floyd. It brings up a lot of complex feelings, because no jury verdict can bring George Floyd back, but the news of this accountability was celebrated across the nation, in Minnesota, New York and across the street from the White House, in Black Lives Matter Plaza, where people were dancing and crying with relief. What a difference 11 months make: Last time they were crying from tear gas and rubber bullets.” — STEPHEN COLBERT“Now, the problem of police violence against people of color is still far from solved. While this is a welcome verdict, it’s like wiping up a spill on the Titanic: Good job, now let’s focus on the water pooling around our ankles.” — STEPHEN COLBERT“Yeah, it should not take nine minutes of damning video to get some accountability. There’s a reason the Pledge of Allegiance doesn’t say, ‘With liberty and justice for all who are being filmed on an iPhone. Otherwise, sucks to be you!’” — STEPHEN COLBERTThe Punchiest Punchlines (Misleaders Edition)“We can see the injustice with our own eyes, but there’s a whole industry of people, from police unions, to private prisons, to cable pundits, whose very lucrative job is to try to convince us that what we can see and hear with our own eyes and ears is not real. In fact, it’s worth going back and reading the initial police description of Floyd’s murder before the video came out to see just how deeply detached from reality it was. Here’s the official headline: ‘Man dies after medical incident during police interaction.’ It’s shocking. It’s hard to fathom. It’s like writing a book report about ‘Lord of the Flies’ called, ‘Kids successfully cooperate during tropical vacation, remain lifelong friends.’” — SETH MEYERS“Many Americans on Twitter, on various platforms, have spoken passionately, powerfully, about the verdicts and their significance yesterday, but none spoke less eloquently than Tucker Carlson of Fox News.” — JIMMY KIMMEL“After former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty yesterday, Fox News host Tucker Carlson claimed the jury was intimidated into the guilty verdict by the protests and the Black Lives Matter movement, which is frustrating for Carlson, because he put a lot of work into intimidating that jury.” — SETH MEYERSThe Bits Worth WatchingSamantha Bee made the case for federal legalization of marijuana on Wednesday’s “Full Frontal.”What We’re Excited About on Thursday NightThe Olympic champion gymnast Simone Biles will join Jimmy Fallon on Thursday’s “Tonight Show.”Also, Check This OutIn “Minari,” Steven Yeun, front, portrays a Korean immigrant who moves with his family to rural Arkansas in the 1980s; Lee Isaac Chung directed.David Bornfriend/A24With more female directors and people of color nominated for Oscars, the coronavirus pandemic seemed to have a positive effect on the diversity of this year’s Academy Awards. More

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    'The Masked Singer' Recap: The Crab and The Seashell Unmasked in Big Double Elimination

    FOX

    For the very first time in the series history, two contestants are eliminated during the two-hour episode that features singers from Group A and Group B performing.

    Apr 22, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    “The Masked Singer” returned with Super 8 episode on Wednesday, April 21. For the very first time in the series history, two contestants were eliminated during the two-hour episode. Performing that night was the remaining four singers from Group A (Robopine, Russian Dolls, Seashell and Yeti) and four singers from Group B (Black Swan, Chameleon, Piglet and Crab).

    Kicking off the night was the Piglet as he sang “The Pretender” by Foo Fighters. Guest judge Rita Wilson noted that the Piglet moved like he’s a rock star. Lance Bass, Chris Pine, Adam Levine, Eli and Peyton Manning were among the guesses for the Piglet.

    The next performance was from Robophine as he sang “Let’s Get It On” by Marvin Gaye. He shared that he always loved singing but his family would always yell, “Shut up!” to him, making him lose his confidence. The panelists thought that Robophine could be Terry Crews, Aaron Hall or Jamie Foxx.

    Chameleon then hit the stage to perform “Regulate” by Warren G featuring Nate Dogg. Among his clues were that his favorite food is fried bird and cricket cake. He also said that he’s always with his gang and he supports all the troops. Machine Gun Kelly, Kyrie Irving, G-Eazy and Waka Flocka Flame’s names were thrown into the mix for the guesses.

    Singing “Lonely” by Justin Bieber and Benny Blanco was the Yeti. In his clue package, there were men in black playing ring toss as well as “ABCD” which were held in his paws. The panelists guessed Sisqo, Todrick Hall, Justin Timberlake, Omarion and Mario.

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    Following it up was the Russian Dolls, who opted to sing “24K Magic” by Bruno Mars that night. Statue of Liberty, a road sign for Indiana Ave, “Made in Milwaukee,” the dolls in a subway and the busy streets of New York were included in their clue package. The judges thought Jonas Brothers, Hanson or Boyz II Men could be the ones under the mask.

    The Crab then performed “In the Air Tonight” by Phil Collins, while his clue package saw the Brooklyn Bridge, a rainbow, a violin and a Jack of clubs. Panelist thought he could be Ray Parker Jr., Flavor Flav or Keith Sweat. Later, the Seashell took the stage to sing Tiffany’s version of “I Think We’re Alone Now”. A turkey (or roasted chicken), a newscaster’s table, a Christmas tree and some TNT dynamite were among the clue package. The judges guessed Sarah Silverman, Tamera Mowry and Scout Willis.

    Black Swan concluded the night with a performance of “Use Somebody” by Kings of Leon. In her clue package, she included a “I’m Late” sign, a record player, gnomes and a Cinderella-themed glass slipper. The panel mentioned the names of Kesha (Ke$ha), Nelly Furtado, Demi Lovato, Becky G or JoJo.

    It was time to reveal which 6 singers advanced to the next round. Following virtual audience and panelists vote, the Crab was named the first contestant to be eliminated. Before he unmasked himself, Robin Thicke guessed Ray Parker, Jr. and Nicole Scherzinger named Keith Sweat. Meanwhile, Ken Jeong and Jenny McCarthy guessed Bobby Brown. The Crab was indeed Bobby Brown!

    The other singer who was sent home that night was the Seashell. Ken initially thought she was Kristin Chenoweth, but then changed it to Sarah Silverman. Nicole changed her guess from Hilary Duff to Tamera Mowry. As for Jenny, she stuck with Vanessa Hudgens, while Robin changed his guess from Ashley Judd to Haylie Duff. Seashell was Tamera Mowry!

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    Hilary Duff Looks Forward to Leading Cast of 'How I Met Your Mother' Spin-Off

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    ‘How I Met Your Father’ has got a straight-to-series order from Hulu, seven years after creators Isaac Aptaker and Elizabeth Berger first teased the series back in 2014.

    Apr 22, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Hilary Duff is set to lead the cast of a “How I Met Your Mother” spin-off, titled “How I Met Your Father”.

    Hulu has given the project a straight-to-series order, seven years after creators Isaac Aptaker and Elizabeth Berger first teased the series back in 2014 with a pilot starring Greta Gerwig and Drew Tarver.

    That show wasn’t picked up by bosses at CBS, where “How I Met Your Mother” aired.

    Another version of the series, written by Alison Bennett, also failed to take off in 2018, but now Aptaker and Berger are back behind the project, and it has been picked up for a 10-episode run.

    According to Deadline, Duff, who will also serve as a producer, will play a mum telling her son the story of how she met his father.

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    “We are beyond excited to be bringing ‘How I Met Your Father’ to Hulu,” Aptaker and Berger said in a joint statement. “The iconic original series revolutionized the half-hour comedy, and we are so honored to be carrying the torch forward for the next generation – and with Hilary Duff no less.”

    “We can’t wait for audiences to meet Sophie and her crew, and watch them come into their own and find love in modern-day New York City.”

    New mum Duff adds, “I’ve been incredibly lucky in my career to play some wonderful characters and I’m looking forward to taking on the role of Sophie… Isaac and Elizabeth are brilliant, and I can’t wait to work alongside them and all of their genius. Just fangirling over here… I realize these are big shoes to fill and I’m excited to slip my 6 ½’s in there.”

    “How I Met Your Mother” ran from 2005 to 2014 and re-runs are currently available on Hulu.

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    LeVar Burton Will Guest Host ‘Jeopardy!’ Fans Are Over the Rainbow.

    After a fervent online campaign to get the “Reading Rainbow” star a slot, it’s finally happening.This is “Jeopardy!” — with your host, LeVar Burton.After a social media campaign to get Burton, a star of “Reading Rainbow” and “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” into a guest-host slot on “Jeopardy!,” the show announced Wednesday that he would indeed step up in the last week of July.“Our goal has been to present a wide variety of guest hosts with different skill sets and backgrounds on our path to finding a permanent host,” the show’s executive producer, Mike Richards, said in a statement. “Our passionate fans are telling us what they like, and we are listening.”Fans were predictably thrilled.“Butterfly in the sky, I’m twice as high about the @levarburton news!” one Twitter post read.But there may have been one person even more excited than Burton’s fans: the actor himself.“THANK YOU… to all y’all for your passionate support!” he tweeted.Since the death of the show’s beloved former host Alex Trebek after a battle with pancreatic cancer last November, “Jeopardy!” has been cycling through a roster of guest hosts that has included celebrities like Katie Couric, Dr. Oz and Aaron Rodgers, and former champions like Ken Jennings.In addition to Burton, the final group will also include the “Good Morning America” anchors George Stephanopoulos and Robin Roberts; the former “Celebrity Jeopardy!” champion David Faber; and the sportscaster Joe Buck, the show announced Wednesday. Each will host a week of episodes this summer, and the show will make a donation in the amount of the cumulative winnings during that host’s week to a charity of their choice.“Jeopardy!” has not yet named a permanent replacement for Trebek, and Anderson Cooper is currently filling the role through the end of April. But Burton is many fans’ choice, and a Change.org petition backing him for the permanent job has more than 246,000 signatures.Burton hosted 21 seasons of the educational PBS series “Reading Rainbow,” from 1983 through 2006, in addition to serving as the program’s executive producer. He also starred as Lt. Cmdr. Geordi LaForge on “Star Trek: The Next Generation” and currently hosts the podcast “LeVar Burton Reads.”For some, Wednesday’s announcement was just the tip of the iceberg of what they hope will soon be even more good news.“We did it everybody!” one fan tweeted. “Now keep doing it until we’re all hearing ‘Welcome to Jeopardy! with your host LeVar Burton’ for the next few decades.” More

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    Report: Phaedra Parks to Return to 'RHOA' as Cast Is Changing

    Bravo/Charles Sykes

    An insider says of the ‘RHOA’ alum, ‘The hope is that having fan favorites like Phaedra come back will help the show rise back into the 2 million viewers-a-week arena.’

    Apr 22, 2021

    AceShowbiz – “The Real Housewives of Atlanta” may have a major cast shake-up in its upcoming season. If a new report is to be believed, the rating drops may prompt the producers to change the cast members for the next season, adding that Phaedra Parks may return to the show.
    ” ‘RHOA’ was once Bravo’s highest-rated housewives show but has lost its superiority over other shows in the franchise,” a source said to The Sun.”There’s going to be a big cast shake-up next season and some producers are mulling over asking Phaedra Parks to return.”
    The insider went on to say, “The hope is that having fan favorites like Phaedra come back will help the show rise back into the 2 million viewers-a-week arena.”
    It was reported that the premiere of “RHOA” dropped by almost half a million viewers. “Many insiders believe [NeNe Leakes] would help drive ratings, but her feud with producers seems to show no signs of letting up,” the source continued.

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    Back in June 2020, Phaedra reacted to fans who wished to see her back on the popular reality TV show. “Well, keep hope alive,” Phaedra said of rejoining the franchise. However, the 46-year-old mentioned at the time that she’s “trying to find love. I’m not trying to fight love.”
    Talking about her appearance on “Marriage Boot Camp: Hip Hop Edition”, Phaedra continued, “I’m in a different place right now, so that’s why you should tune into ‘Marriage Boot Camp’, so you can see me finding love and being in love versus fighting,” Parks said.
    Phaedra left “RHOA” in 2017 after spreading rumors about Kandi Burruss and her husband drugging and sexually assaulting Porsha Williams.
    Fans apparently were excited with the idea of Phaedra coming back to the show. “I stopped watching after she was kicked off. If she returns I might tune in,” one person stated in a comment. “Bring phae phae back,” one other added, with someone else echoing the sentiment, “Please bring Phaedra! The show needs some spice.”
    “lol that means kandi leaving,” one other predicted. Seemingly not gonna miss the Xscape singer, a user said, “Yes I’ll actually start watching the show again… Bye Kandi.”

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