Call it a cynical copy of The Traitors all you like, but The Fortune Hotel makes for entertaining reality game fluff. In it, couples stay in a luxury resort in the Caribbean where each day they must compete in a physical challenge and an indoor “room service” challenge to win better odds in the game of pass-the-parcel that is part of the elimination process in the Lady Luck Bar. Information is power, allegiances are key and if you’re good in a dinghy you’ve got an advantage.
Presenter Stephen Mangan is no Claudia Winkleman but he’s charming and affable.
The show airs every evening Monday-Thursday and Thursday’s ep ended with quite the cliffhanger. Secrets and lies are about to be exposed and one of the favourite couples is about to be sent home, smashing the competition wide open. There’s no new ep til monday so here...
Presenter Stephen Mangan is no Claudia Winkleman but he’s charming and affable.
The show airs every evening Monday-Thursday and Thursday’s ep ended with quite the cliffhanger. Secrets and lies are about to be exposed and one of the favourite couples is about to be sent home, smashing the competition wide open. There’s no new ep til monday so here...
- 5/17/2024
- by Rosie Fletcher
- Den of Geek
The BFI and BAFTA have unveiled the 2024 intake for its 10th BFI Flare x BAFTA professional development program, supporting six emerging Lgbtqia+ creatives working on their debuts in film and TV.
They comprise writer and performer Travis Alabanza, creative producer Isabella Bassett, actor and writer Zak Ghazi-Torbati, filmmaker Cherish Oteka, writer and actor Miles Sloman and screenwriter and director Charlie Tidmas. (see full bios below)
The participants benefit from industry mentorship, bespoke events and workshops at BAFTA and BFI as well as wellbeing and career coaching and access to BAFTA Connect, the academy’s membership programme for emerging and mid-level talent.
They will also be given networking opportunities during the BFI Flare: London Lgbtqia+ Film Festival, running from March 13 to 24 March.
BFI and BAFTA noted that the festival’s opening night film, Layla, was created by two alumni of the scheme.
“The BFI Flare x BAFTA mentorship had a profound impact on my career and,...
They comprise writer and performer Travis Alabanza, creative producer Isabella Bassett, actor and writer Zak Ghazi-Torbati, filmmaker Cherish Oteka, writer and actor Miles Sloman and screenwriter and director Charlie Tidmas. (see full bios below)
The participants benefit from industry mentorship, bespoke events and workshops at BAFTA and BFI as well as wellbeing and career coaching and access to BAFTA Connect, the academy’s membership programme for emerging and mid-level talent.
They will also be given networking opportunities during the BFI Flare: London Lgbtqia+ Film Festival, running from March 13 to 24 March.
BFI and BAFTA noted that the festival’s opening night film, Layla, was created by two alumni of the scheme.
“The BFI Flare x BAFTA mentorship had a profound impact on my career and,...
- 3/12/2024
- by Melanie Goodfellow
- Deadline Film + TV
Pat Sajak stepped in to help a contestant in what may have been a first on Wheel of Fortune.
When a contestant named Cherish took her turn spinning the wheel, a blunder with the wheel wedge caused a bit of a debacle on stage.
Pat instructed Cherish to pick up the Million Dollar wedge on the wheel, but as she bent over to pick it up, she had trouble getting it to dislodge.
That’s when host Pat Sajak intervened.
As Cherish fiddled with the wedge, he began to ask her to turn it around so that everyone could see it but got distracted when he realized she was struggling with picking it up.
“Ope, no, you’re ripping it to shreds,” Pat joked as Cherish tried to free the wedge from the wheel.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Wheel of Fortune (@wheeloffortune)
“Here, let me,...
When a contestant named Cherish took her turn spinning the wheel, a blunder with the wheel wedge caused a bit of a debacle on stage.
Pat instructed Cherish to pick up the Million Dollar wedge on the wheel, but as she bent over to pick it up, she had trouble getting it to dislodge.
That’s when host Pat Sajak intervened.
As Cherish fiddled with the wedge, he began to ask her to turn it around so that everyone could see it but got distracted when he realized she was struggling with picking it up.
“Ope, no, you’re ripping it to shreds,” Pat joked as Cherish tried to free the wedge from the wheel.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Wheel of Fortune (@wheeloffortune)
“Here, let me,...
- 2/21/2024
- by Mona Wexler
- Monsters and Critics
When Tate McRae broke through in 2020 with the brooding bedroom pop of her debut single “You Broke Me First,” the then-17 year-old Canadian singer stormed TikTok with such an innate understanding of how other teenagers were consuming music that RCA Records didn’t just sign her, they restructured their marketing strategy around her. But the formula behind that initial success— a combination of original dances, trend participation, and teaser snippets — hasn’t always worked for her. “She’s All I Wanna Be,” the should-have-been-hit from her 2022 debut album I Used...
- 12/8/2023
- by Larisha Paul
- Rollingstone.com
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