‘Better Call Saul’ Season 5, Episode 6 Recap: A Modest Proposal
Kim would like to marry Jimmy if she doesn’t leave him. Lalo would like to destroy Gus if he doesn’t kill him. And Mike plays private eye. More
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in TelevisionKim would like to marry Jimmy if she doesn’t leave him. Lalo would like to destroy Gus if he doesn’t kill him. And Mike plays private eye. More
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The episode also sees Kenya leaving the filming site after being involved in huge argument with NeNe and Marlo Hampton last week with NeNe trying to spit on Kenya.
Mar 23, 2020
AceShowbiz – A lot was happening in the Sunday, March 22 episode of “The Real Housewives of Atlanta”. The episode saw Kenya Moore refusing to bury the hatchet with NeNe Leakes and Marlo Hampton after they were involved in a huge argument last week with NeNe trying to spit on Kenya.
Kenya seemingly had enough of them as she tried to leave the filming site. Kandi Burruss tried to stop her, saying, “Stop being a person that walks away. Stop it! Kenya, you can’t just say what you wanna say and then leave!”
“I told you don’t insult me, that’s my point,” Kenya clapped back. “I don’t have time for this s**t. The s**t I’m dealing with, I don’t have time for this s**t.”
In her confessional, Kandi shared, “I don’t even wanna do this. I knew this is not the time, Kenya was dealing with so much stuff at home and she doesn’t really have the fight in her right now.”
The next day, it was NeNe who threatened to leave the filming site. NeNe seemingly was offended with the other ladies playing “greek tragedy” in which they imitated each other. She excused herself to use the bathroom but the other Housewives thought that they had upset her.
That prompted one producer to intervene and try to stop her from storming out. NeNe, however, lashed out at him and said, “Don’t f**k with me, I’m for real.” It seems like viewers will find out why NeNe was so upset in next week’s episode.
Season 12 of “The Real Housewives of Atlanta” airs on Sundays at 8 P.M. on Bravo.
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‘RHOA’ Star Cynthia Bailey’s Daughter Noelle Confirms Romance With YouTuber Alexis Powell
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in Television“I would assign a dog a different word.” More
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in TelevisionWhat’s StreamingFREUD Stream on Netflix. There is plenty of dramatic material to be found in the life story of Sigmund Freud. He successfully pioneered the theory and practice of psychoanalysis despite widespread resistance from his colleagues in the medical community and pervasive anti-Semitic prejudice. He escaped the Nazis after Austria was annexed by Germany. And he battled cancer for the last decades of his life. But in this new German-language series from Marvin Kren, fiction supplements fact: The young Freud, played by Robert Finster, is an ambitious doctor drawn into a murder investigation alongside a psychic (Ella Rumpf) and a police inspector (Georg Friedrich).CRUMB (1995) Stream on the Criterion Channel. Before directing films like “Ghost World” (2001) and “Bad Santa” (2003), Terry Zwigoff made two documentaries. The first, “Louie Bluie” (1985), was about Howard (Louie Bluie) Armstrong, a country blues musician, visual artist and gifted storyteller. Zwigoff continued his investigation of eccentric American creators with this portrait of the underground cartoonist Robert Crumb. The documentary surveys Crumb’s career and highlights his most notable creations, including the comic “Keep on Truckin’” and the character Fritz the Cat. But it also includes material about his wife, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, herself an important cartoonist, and his troubled brothers Maxon and Charles. All three, plus Crumb’s two children, contributed to the life and work of one of the country’s greatest and most debated pop artists.MISS FISHER AND THE CRYPT OF TEARS Stream on Acorn TV. This feature film is an offshoot of the Australian TV series based on Kerry Greenwood’s novels about a female private detective working after World War I. Essie Davis (“The Babadook,” “Game of Thrones”) returns as Phryne Fisher in the first new installment since 2015, when the third and final season aired in Australia. Fisher travels to British-controlled territory in the Middle East to solve a mystery that revolves around “priceless emeralds” and “ancient curses.” Along the way she saves a young Bedouin girl (Izabella Yena), whose tribe’s history might be connected with the hexed gems.What’s on TVTHE ACCOUNTANT (2016) 8 p.m. on TNT. Ben Affleck stars as Christian Wolff, an autistic forensic accountant who helps criminal enterprises root out embezzlement and launder money, in this thriller directed by Gavin O’Connor. Chris, as he’s known, was submitted to brutal childhood training by his father, an army expert in psychological operations. This background, Stephen Holden wrote in his review for The Times, turned Chris into “a tormented loner” endowed with “prodigious abilities.” His relatively humdrum, hyper-ordered life is thrown into disarray when the United States Treasury Department tries to discover his identity. At the same time, an audit he undertakes for a legitimate client proves to be deeper and darker than he expected. By the end of the movie, Chris’s struggles in the present prove to be connected to his difficult familial past. More
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in TelevisionWhat’s StreamingFREUD Stream on Netflix. There is plenty of dramatic material to be found in the life story of Sigmund Freud. He successfully pioneered the theory and practice of psychoanalysis despite widespread resistance from his colleagues in the medical community and pervasive anti-Semitic prejudice. He escaped the Nazis after Austria was annexed by Germany. And he battled cancer for the last decades of his life. But in this new German-language series from Marvin Kren, fiction supplements fact: The young Freud, played by Robert Finster, is an ambitious doctor drawn into a murder investigation alongside a psychic (Ella Rumpf) and a police inspector (Georg Friedrich).CRUMB (1995) Stream on the Criterion Channel. Before directing films like “Ghost World” (2001) and “Bad Santa” (2003), Terry Zwigoff made two documentaries. The first, “Louie Bluie” (1985), was about Howard (Louie Bluie) Armstrong, a country blues musician, visual artist and gifted storyteller. Zwigoff continued his investigation of eccentric American creators with this portrait of the underground cartoonist Robert Crumb. The documentary surveys Crumb’s career and highlights his most notable creations, including the comic “Keep on Truckin’” and the character Fritz the Cat. But it also includes material about his wife, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, herself an important cartoonist, and his troubled brothers Maxon and Charles. All three, plus Crumb’s two children, contributed to the life and work of one of the country’s greatest and most debated pop artists.MISS FISHER AND THE CRYPT OF TEARS Stream on Acorn TV. This feature film is an offshoot of the Australian TV series based on Kerry Greenwood’s novels about a female private detective working after World War I. Essie Davis (“The Babadook,” “Game of Thrones”) returns as Phryne Fisher in the first new installment since 2015, when the third and final season aired in Australia. Fisher travels to British-controlled territory in the Middle East to solve a mystery that revolves around “priceless emeralds” and “ancient curses.” Along the way she saves a young Bedouin girl (Izabella Yena), whose tribe’s history might be connected with the hexed gems.What’s on TVTHE ACCOUNTANT (2016) 8 p.m. on TNT. Ben Affleck stars as Christian Wolff, an autistic forensic accountant who helps criminal enterprises root out embezzlement and launder money, in this thriller directed by Gavin O’Connor. Chris, as he’s known, was submitted to brutal childhood training by his father, an army expert in psychological operations. This background, Stephen Holden wrote in his review for The Times, turned Chris into “a tormented loner” endowed with “prodigious abilities.” His relatively humdrum, hyper-ordered life is thrown into disarray when the United States Treasury Department tries to discover his identity. At the same time, an audit he undertakes for a legitimate client proves to be deeper and darker than he expected. By the end of the movie, Chris’s struggles in the present prove to be connected to his difficult familial past. More
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The new episode of the NBC show sees the remaining contestants singing in duets with them choosing their own partner, though they still will be judged individually.
Mar 23, 2020
AceShowbiz – “American Idol” returned on Sunday, March 22 with a new episode featuring another night of Hollywood Week. The episode saw the remaining contestants singing in duets with them choosing their own partner. Despite going in a pair, they would be judged individually.
The first pair to sing before judges Katy Perry, Luke Bryan and Lionel Richie were Louis Knight and Francisco Martin. They opted to sing “Breakeven” by The Script but they didn’t kick it off perfectly as Francisco forgot some of the lyrics. Despite the struggle, both Louis and Francisco were moving onto the next round.
Following it up were Hannah Prestridge and Grace Leer, singing Miranda Lambert’s “Mama’s Broken Heart”. While Grace was sent to the next round, Hannah was eliminated. Singing “Someone You Loved” by Lewis Capaldi were Jimmy Levy and Nick Merico. The stunning performance convinced the judges to keep them in the competition.
Isa Pena and Olivia Ximines, meanwhile, offered an impressive performance of Pink’s “Try” that unsurprisingly sent them both to the next round. Madison Paige was paired with Peyton Aldridge but they didn’t have the best chemistry. That resulted in Peyton messing up the performance, though fortunately they were given another chance to continue being on the show. They were not the only couple who struggled. Zack Dobbins and Courtney Timmons’ performance of “Dangerous Woman” by Ariana Grande failed to impress the judges and they were eliminated.
Next up were Travis Finlay and Genavieve Linkowski, singing a beautiful rendition of “The Prayer”. The judges loved it and sent them to the next round. Real life couple, Kat Lopez and Alex Garrido, were later separated after the judges decided to only let Kat move to the next round following their duet of “You Say”.
Margie Mays and Jonny West then took the stage to sing “Like I’m Gonna Lose You” and they were barely moving on. Joining them in the next round were Cyniah Elise & Makayla Phillips and Lauren Spencer-Smith & Makayla Brownlee. Meanwhile, Tito Rey was eliminated though his partner Robert Taylor was moving on.
Concluding the night were Just Sam and Sheniel Masionet who put a solid performnce of Shawn Mendes’ “Mercy”. They were both moving to the next round.
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Britney Spears Encourages Self-Isolated Fans to Ask Her for Help Amid Coronavirus Crisis
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in TelevisionFans are excited for the update as one avid viewer says, ‘Yay Wendy! It’ll be nice to see you again… And have another distraction,’ while someone else is ‘looking forward to seeing you on YouTube.’
Mar 23, 2020
AceShowbiz – Wendy Williams is relocating her daytime TV show to YouTube amid the COVID-19 outbreak that requires everyone to practice social distancing. Wendy announced on her Sunday, March 22 Instagram post that she was planning to set up a YouTube video for “The Wendy Williams Show”.
“I’m trying to stay calm. I walked downstairs & stepped in throw up! I know EXACTLY who did it! Myway loves to play with rubber bands & there was a rubber band mix in which means she swallowed!” the 55-year-old wrote on the photo-sharing site alongside an illustration picture of her meditating. “I keep telling them this is not the time to act a fool. Btw I’m gonna start YouTube tmrw evening #socialdistancing #meditation #calm.”
Fans were excited for the update. “Yay Wendy! It’ll be nice to see you again… And have another distraction,” one commented. “Looking forward to seeing you on YouTube, missing you big time!” added another psyched fan.
“Yaaaaayyyy Wendy on Youtube!!!!! I will follow you anywhere Muva” someone else wrote in the comment section. Feeling extremely joyous with the idea of seeing a new episode of “The Wendy Williams Show”, a user said, “So excited! I need Wendy in my daily routine!”
During her appearance on “The Dr. Oz Show” on March 20, Wendy revealed that her popular talk show would be going on hiatus though she shared that she was willing to “risk it” all for her TV return. “I said, ‘But I can do it even with no audience. I don’t even have to have the staffers there because I did that for two days.’ But they said, ‘No. We need to have you home, indefinitely,’ ” she explained.
“There will be no more Wendy or any of the other people for a period of time, and I’m willing to risk it with one camera and a flashlight,” she went on to say to Dr. Oz.
Prior to this, Wendy decided to film episodes without live studio audience for an undetermined period of time.
A released statement from the 55-year-old’s show read, “Wendy values her co-hosts and their daily participation but in light of the current health climate, ‘The Wendy Williams Show’ will not have a live studio audience until further notice.” It further noted, “We will continue to produce a daily live talk show and look forward to welcoming the studio audience back when the time is right.”
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Tiffany Haddish Spills She and Common Are Quarantining Together
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in TelevisionThis interview includes spoilers for Sunday night’s episode of “The Walking Dead.”We find ourselves in an empty new world. People have retreated to their homes, and out in the streets the sight of some lone person shuffling toward you is cause for alarm — keeping your distance is crucial.Is this real life … or is it just “The Walking Dead”? The parallels are hard to overlook. With its ghost-town cities and post-apocalyptic mood, AMC’s popular zombie thriller is littered with references to the ruinous disease that ended the Time Before (“Clean Hands Protect Lives” reads a cautioning poster we see in Sunday’s episode of the show) that now seem familiar. And while the lead actress Danai Gurira, who plays the katana queen Michonne, didn’t want to trivialize the ongoing coronavirus crisis by connecting it to the dark fantasy of a TV show, she, too, is unsettled.“There’s nothing quite like facing a pandemic,” Gurira said in a recent interview. “I’ve never experienced anything like this moment in our time on earth, and we’re still in the middle of it, you know? It’s a real moment-by-moment situation, which does relate to our show’s themes — the struggles that people are having, the tragedies, and the ways that we move forward and get through this together, as a society.”The society we’ve been immersed in on “The Walking Dead” for the last decade is now losing one longtime member. In Sunday’s Season 10 episode, “What We Become,” Michonne takes her leave of the show, almost exactly eight years after her first appearance in the closing moments of Season 2. She was the mysterious hooded figure who rescued an endangered Andrea (Laurie Holden) by slicing through the undead as two docile “walker” pets stood behind her in chains — a startling entrance that signaled the arrival of a fierce warrior.Over the years, Michonne has become more complex: We’ve seen her vulnerable side, her romantic side, even her maternal side as she became the devoted mother of an adopted daughter, Judith, and her biological son RJ. That human dimension deepens further on Sunday’s show, in a sequence in which a tripping Michonne reimagines a series of events from her past, suggesting what her life might have been like if she’d joined Team Negan (led by Jeffrey Dean Morgan), before discovering concrete evidence that her former lover, Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) was still alive, and out there … somewhere.Michonne’s exit from “The Walking Dead” will leave her children in the care of Uncle Daryl (Norman Reedus), and could free the character to pursue and maybe eventually reunite with Grimes, whose story will be continuing in planned films. The character’s departure frees Gurira, who’s also an esteemed playwright, to devote more time to her literary career. She’s also the showrunner of HBO Max’s limited-series adaptation of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s novel “Amerikanah.”“It’s bittersweet,” Gurira said of leaving “The Walking Dead” after all these years. “But it’s time for me to go on other journeys.” During a phone interview, Gurira talked about Michonne’s alternative reality, the need for female leadership to be dramatized, and what she won’t miss about “The Walking Dead.” Here are edited excerpts from the conversation.What did you think about Michonne’s final episode, where we get to see the life she might have led if she’d never helped Andrea?That was new! It has a “Sliding Doors” component, doesn’t it? I never imagined stepping into this alternative reality for the character, going back to the beginning and remembering who she is and how that affects the choices she makes in the present day — right up to her last choice at the end of the episode. It was fascinating, playing those moments of who she could have so easily become. She was very dislocated from her humanity when she met Andrea, and there was something about Andrea that made her decide to not do what she does in this alternate scenario. It was trippy — in the literal and the storytelling sense.I think what I’ve enjoyed most about this job is that every year there’s stuff that you’ve never done before. Even back when Rick was gone, and then within the next episode, Michonne had a son. And that’s why I’m finding it hard to leave, because I always knew that year after year, there was going to be something challenging that would stretch me.They walked me through this last episode long before I got the script. But I wasn’t sure how it was going to work out until today, when I finally saw it. It was chilling to watch. And I don’t even know how they did some of that. I mean, all of the stuff where you see Michonne making a different choice, that’s new footage. But they blended old footage with new footage in an impressive way. I was quite amazed.Has there been any movement on the “Walking Dead” movies yet?Who told you anything about me in a movie?Well, Scott Gimple talked about the possibility of you participating during a podcast …Oh, really? What did he say?He was talking about the future of the franchise, and how your movie-star quality would be essential for any films.Well, all I’ll say is, I’ve been part of “The Walking Dead” franchise and the Marvel movie franchise, and I’ve been taught to not talk about things. I’m not saying it is or it isn’t happening. But I think it would be very cool to see this world open up in a way that you can do through a movie exploration. There are a lot of stories to tell that you can’t get to when you’re following a certain narrative in a TV show. But there are all these other narratives that are like, “Oh, wouldn’t that be interesting?” It’s extremely exciting.If she’s not continuing in the franchise films, this episode closes her chapter. And she’s inspired so many people.I think for all the women on our show, there’s been a lot of power. You’ve seen a lot of female characters grow into their power and leadership and their ability to hold their own in whatever circumstances. I don’t know how often you see that. I’m a feminist, and I advocate women’s leadership, and I loved that shaking up society results in unabashed female leadership, at least in our show. We would benefit from further exploring that in the real world. That’s something we have been deprived of, quite honestly.Michonne was very much someone I had to step up to, especially when she started to grow into herself and step away from her demons. When she became an item with Rick, Michonne was kind of more cool, and Rick was hot. The way she handles and assesses and comes to clarity about things — I’ve always said, she’s smarter than me, she’s faster than me, and she’s stronger than me. So I had to step into her agility and power. I always felt like I could learn from her as a woman, you know?When you were first learning how to be Michonne, didn’t you practice her sword moves on your theater colleagues during the production of your play “The Convert”?I was in the basement of the Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City, and I had a practice sword made of wood. So I would be talking about the language components of the play while learning how to move my body with the sword. It was on my mind all the time. I felt like I needed to become one with … not only with the character, but with how she moves and how her weapon moves in her hand. I create black female characters, and I’d never imagined a woman like this. So I wanted to give her my all, to do her justice. I would practice with the sword during every break, and I would constantly go back to the trainer to learn more. It was never, “Oh, I’m great at this now.” It was a constant learning curve.You’re about to face another learning curve as a first-time showrunner. What lessons will you take from “The Walking Dead” — any dos or don’ts?One of my goals is to show love and respect for the behind-the-scenes crew that most people don’t get to see. Everyone’s job on a show is so, so important. And I saw that attitude in action on “The Walking Dead.”What do I not want? I don’t want to do a tick check every night. I don’t miss the ticks. Or the Georgia heat. It’s such an important component of the show, to be in that environment, but we were literally sweating buckets and running through woods covered in gnats. There were times where it would be so hot, you’d be like, “Am I about to faint?” They were a little concerned, because I had been exerting myself, I was panting a little, and I had a new wig. But honestly, the heat of Georgia was a character in the show. There was nothing convenient about the world that those characters are in, you know?The dire circumstances are somewhat metaphorical.The show is metaphorically so many things — the situations that these characters are going through and the way their lives can be completely altered by things unforeseen. That’s something that definitely resonated for me. I created a play called “Eclipsed,” about Liberian women in a war zone, and all the things that happen to women in war zones — how it affected them and their humanity and how they couldn’t predict who they were going to become. And I started to connect it to “The Walking Dead” in the sense that Michonne felt like a woman in a war zone, and it raised the same question: Who did she have to become? It’s about the choices you make in dire circumstances, when your humanity is tested and you have to fight for it. That’s the core of the show — the fight for your soul. It definitely resonates with the myriad unimaginable things that happen to human beings. More
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