Amazon’s critically acclaimed comedy “Transparent” returns for its second season on Friday.
Entertainment Columns
If nothing else, “Scrooged” should have taught Bill Murray the hazards of producing a live TV special on Christmas Eve.
For all the noise we make on New Year’s Eve, Las Vegas doesn’t have much in the way of Christmas traditions.
AMC abandoned its original moniker, American Movie Classics, long before it started churning out some of TV’s finest dramas.
“Wicked City” is the next-to-last of the networks’ new fall shows to debut, and the final confirmation that this is, yet again, another underwhelming crop of series.
Bringing a production crew to a hospital to capture footage of a family member grieving just may be Keeping Up with the Kardashians’ most stomach-churning moment yet.
Some of Las Vegas’s best chefs are once again stepping out of their kitchens and into food trucks for the second season of “Late Nite Chef Fight.”
If you were to lead a locations tour of Las Vegas’ custom car reality shows, you wouldn’t need to use a bus.
Just in time for Halloween, Showtime is unleashing one of the creepiest, most depraved characters you’ll ever see on television: Warren Steed Jeffs.
“You know, plenty of shows out there are, like, ‘Here’s the kid with cancer; now give me an Emmy.’ We’re a show that’s here to show you a hell of a good time for 45 minutes each and every week. That’s our job.”
We’ve reached the point where there are almost as many people making TV shows as there are watching them. Here’s a look at the 22 new series the networks are trotting out this fall. And, as always, dates and times are subject to change.
Here’s a look at some of the original cable and streaming shows — including new seasons of “The Walking Dead” and “Homeland” and new series “Ash vs. Evil Dead” and “Marvel’s Jessica Jones” — that you can expect to see this fall.
As titles go, “Fear the Walking Dead” isn’t just underwhelming, it’s a little deceptive. Then again, “Expressing a Feeling That Begins as Mild Curiosity but Eventually Grows to Encompass a Moderate Amount of Concern About the Walking Dead” doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue.
Despite years of rumors and speculation, Las Vegas never got its own screaming, slapping, Champagne-flinging “Housewives” spinoff. Instead, we’re getting the screamier, slappier, Champagne-flingier “Hotwives” spinoff.
If other networks and cable channels seem like businesses — CBS, for instance, comes across like a procedural factory, cranking out the same series, over and over, with different casts — FX feels more like a family.