Schitt’s Creek actor Noah Reid will make his Broadway debut next spring in Steppenwolf Theatre Company’s The Minutes, the Tracy Letts play that was in previews when the Covid pandemic shutdown was announced in March 2020. Reid will take the role of Mr. Peel, previously played by Armie Hammer, who withdrew from the production amidst
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Addison Rae, the influencer and aspiring movie star largely responsible for the mainstreaming of TikTok, was temporarily booted from the platform on Thursday night, according to a tweet she posted on her account. “Well time to get a job,” the 21-year-old influencer, who has 85 million followers, tweeted, accompanied by a screengrab of a notification
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Man, Billy Strings has some serious talent. Billy played at the Mempho Music Festival in Memphis, Tennessee earlier this month and brought out a classic, and I’d say underrated, song about the great city of Memphis. “Train, Train” was released by Blackfoot on their platinum 1979 album Strikes. And while Blackfoot’s version is the most popular rendition of the
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Realme has been growing its presence in India by launching new devices on a regular basis. The company owned by China’s BBK Electronics has a range of smartphones to take on the likes of Samsung and Xiaomi. Alongside phones, it also offers various connected devices including smartwatches and truly wireless stereo (TWS) earbuds. Realme also
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Halloween comes early as Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) and Michael Myers (Nick Castle and James Jude Courtney) return in Halloween Kills, now playing in theaters and streaming on Peacock. The new movie, a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 original and director David Gordon Green’s 40-years-later continuation Halloween, pits Laurie and the terrorized town of Haddonfield against the masked
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On the eve of 2018’s Halloween sequel Halloween Kills (now playing in theaters and streaming on Peacock), franchise star Jamie Lee Curtis recalls the original sequel scene that drives her “crazy” because it “makes no freaking sense.” In the first slasher sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 franchise starter, director Rick Rosenthal’s 1981 Halloween II, masked madman Michael Myers (Dick
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Do you remember the rush of seeing Halloween? No, not John Carpenter’s 1978 original, the Rosetta stone of modern horror and greatest man-meets-knife film ever. (And for the record, we don’t mean Rob Zombie’s 2007 love-letter-slash-living-wax-museum-exhibit to Carpenter’s slashsterpiece, either.) We’re talking about David Gorden Green’s 2018 version, which reset a long and winding franchise
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