Olitz is on the fritz. #Gladiators, I’m not sure how you spent the nearly three-month hiatus of Scandal, but much of my time was focused on starting my new charity called “Jesus Be Some Wig Glue,” which is devoted to repairing the hairlines of watchers of Shonda Rhimes’s TV shows, who, week after week, get their wigs snatched after some crazy plot twist has gone down. So far, I have fixed 27 people’s scalps, and I’m pretty much waiting on the MacArthur grant to recognize my genius and give me an award.
The medical comedy’s cast and creator reflect on its legacy of zaniness and warmth. Photo-Illustration: Vulture and Photo by Getty Images Photo-Illustration: Vulture and Photo by Getty Images Until recently, the cast and creator of Scrubs hadn’t all been in a room together since the series wrapped in 2010. That changed at Vulture Festival in Los Angeles, where Scrubs creator and writer Bill Lawrence joined the principal cast for a reunion panel to talk about the legacy of the beloved medical comedy that aired for nine progressively weirder seasons on two different networks.
Renée Elise Goldsberry (center) as Prospero. This is not a review of The Tempest.
Well, no, it is. It can’t help it. But I’d like to take an airy spirit’s-eye view for a moment and, before boarding the king’s ship, pause. Because to talk about this Tempest, one must first talk about the larger project to which it is in service. And the play is — despite the ebullient production’s focus on themes of breaking free from various bonds — in service.
Rules (Hunter Schafer and Zendaya). The teens at Euphoria High have endured their fair share of drama, but even that doesn’t compare to the chaos ensuing off-screen. As the second season of HBO’s first teenage-coming-of-age series has progressed, fans have become increasingly divided on the direction of its story lines, from the love triangle between Rue (Zendaya), Jules (Hunter Schafer), and newcomer Elliot (Dominic Fike) to Kat’s (Barbie Ferreira) nonexistent arc.
Donald might have been too busy to get his wife a birthday present yesterday, but thankfully, during last night’s The Opposition, Citizen Journalists Aaron Jackson and Josh Sharp stepped in to provide the birthday gift and wishes for Melania that her husband couldn’t be bothered to give. That gift is a good one: a completely new covers-only magazine called Plead the Fifth that allows Melania to finally be featured on a cover without having to worry about the whole “in-depth interview” part of it.
Last month it was reported that the Onion, ClickHole, and the A.V. Club were bracing for layoffs as Univision, which has owned a controlling stake in Onion Inc. since 2016, moved to make budget cuts. Thanks to Onion Inc.’s vote to unionize earlier this year, the Onion union secured voluntary buyouts for several full-time staffers that included 18 weeks of severance pay and benefits. Several days later, on August 6, a handful of ClickHole’s freelance contributors were let go.
In the first epsiode, audiences will rejoin the ensemble in the middle of a “life-changing experience for one - which affects them all”.In the second show, Edina sets her sights on changing the career of someone described by the BBC as “a very big fish indeed”.In the concluding episode, Eddy and Patsy play their own part in the 2012 London Olympics. Cult classic Absolutely Fabulous is coming back, if but briefly, for three new specials that will lead up to the London Olympics.
Axl Rose and Angus Young of AC/DC perform during their Rock or Bust World Tour in London. Over its 43-year career, AC/DC has been called intentionally lowbrow, basic, repetitive, misogynist, Satanic, just plain bad. And you’d have to be a blindered diehard to seriously argue that at least one or two of those terms don’t apply. (The band’s pulverizing music has also been used as torture, but that’s not its fault.
casting call Oct. 31, 2023 The Gilded Age Summons Broadway to Fifth AvenueCasting directors Bernie Telsey and Adam Caldwell explain how they fill the show with oh so many Tony nominees. By Jackson McHenry
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last night on late night Feb. 20, 2013 Michelle Williams Plays Games on the PressPlus: Working with Adam Levine is like watching Magic Mike, per Andy Samberg, and more, on our daily late-night roundup. By Caroline Shin
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