As part of Saturday’s “Friends” Fan Experience, Nathan Sawaya will debut his life-size, 700-square-foot re-creation of the show’s Central Perk coffee shop that’s constructed entirely out of Lego bricks.
Entertainment Columns
Danny McBride returns to the pay channel that was the home of his comedies “Eastbound & Down” and “Vice Principals.”
Clark proves she’s just as adept at writing TV shows as she is at putting celebrity murder defendants behind bars.
If you’re a Dish Network subscriber inconvenienced by the impasse that’s kept HBO blacked out since Halloween, relax. Just find some young whippersnapper to steal it for you.
Matt Groening’s new animated comedy “Disenchantment” (Friday, Netflix) looks a lot like his legendary series “The Simpsons.”
It’s the biggest television event since the Super Bowl.
While “The Soup” is gone, Joel McHale is back to save a little piece of my sanity with something very “The Soup”-like: “The Joel McHale Show with Joel McHale.”
You know “A New Hope,” “The Empire Strikes Back” and “Return of the Jedi.”
Marvel vs. DC. It’s a battle that’s been waged for decades, but rarely this aggressively.
The best way to see “Cars 3” is through 3-D glasses. At times, the animation is so remarkable as to appear lifelike.
Why? I mean, the answer is obviously money. With the kind of moolah “Beauty and the Beast” is going to rake in, we could all have affordable — heck, probably even free — health care.
With outrageous roles in “22 Jump Street,” “Office Christmas Party” and this weekend’s “Fist Fight,” the Las Vegas native has made a career out of pushing boundaries.
Look, I don’t have anything against Harry Potter fans. They seem like a good-natured, if somewhat excitable, lot. I’ve just never had much in common with them. That’s why I’ve spent the past few months dreading the spinoff, “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.”
For the second episode of his motorcycle travelogue “Ride with Norman Reedus” the actor spent 24 hours riding around Las Vegas, with stops at Johnny Tocco’s Ringside Boxing Gym and Sosa Metalworks, among others.
Dory, the forgetful blue tang voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, returns, along with plenty of other familiar characters, in the long-awaited follow-up to 2003’s “Finding Nemo.”
If this action comedy isn’t Dwayne Johnson’s most satisfying big-screen performance, it’s a close second to 2013’s otherwise-forgettable “Pain & Gain.”
The first time I heard about plans for “The Real World,” it sounded insane. How could MTV possibly have found seven people who would agree to live in a house full of cameras and be filmed around the clock?