The HBO drag reality series, “We’re Here”, has been cancelled after four influential seasons. The show, the fourth and final season of which aired from April this year through to May 31st, featured Sasha Velour, Priyanka, and Jaida Essence Hall as hosts, mentoring small-town residents in drag performance. HBO’s statement recognised the series’ contribution to […]
We’re Here: HBO Drag Series Cancelled After Four Seasons...
We’re Here: HBO Drag Series Cancelled After Four Seasons...
- 9/8/2024
- by Paul M
- MemorableTV
We’re Here will not be returning for a fifth season. HBO has cancelled the drag reality series, which premiered its fourth season in April and aired its finale on May 31st.
Sasha Velour, Priyanka, and Jaida Essence Hall hosted the series’ final season, which follows the trio as they travel the country and recruit small-town residents to participate in drag shows for a one-night-only performance.
Read More…...
Sasha Velour, Priyanka, and Jaida Essence Hall hosted the series’ final season, which follows the trio as they travel the country and recruit small-town residents to participate in drag shows for a one-night-only performance.
Read More…...
- 9/7/2024
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
HBO’s LGBTQ+ reality series We’re Here is sashaying away after four seasons.
On Friday (September 6), it was confirmed that the network would not be renewing the series, which first premiered in 2020.
The most recent season aired earlier this year starring Jaida Essence Hall, Priyanka, Sasha Velour and Latrice Royale. In it, the drag queens put on drag shows in small towns across the United States.
Keep reading to find out more…
Deadline confirmed that the series was coming to a close.
“We are honored to have brought four heartfelt and impactful seasons of We’re Here to viewers around the world, amidst ongoing hostility directed at drag performers and aggression towards the LGBTQ+ community at large,” a representative for HBO said in a statement shared with the outlet.
They continued, saying, “The two recent Emmy nominations, along with four previous Emmy wins, a Peabody Award, a Critics Choice Real TV and LGBTQ Award,...
On Friday (September 6), it was confirmed that the network would not be renewing the series, which first premiered in 2020.
The most recent season aired earlier this year starring Jaida Essence Hall, Priyanka, Sasha Velour and Latrice Royale. In it, the drag queens put on drag shows in small towns across the United States.
Keep reading to find out more…
Deadline confirmed that the series was coming to a close.
“We are honored to have brought four heartfelt and impactful seasons of We’re Here to viewers around the world, amidst ongoing hostility directed at drag performers and aggression towards the LGBTQ+ community at large,” a representative for HBO said in a statement shared with the outlet.
They continued, saying, “The two recent Emmy nominations, along with four previous Emmy wins, a Peabody Award, a Critics Choice Real TV and LGBTQ Award,...
- 9/6/2024
- by Just Jared
- Just Jared
Drag reality series We’re Here is ending after four seasons on HBO, Deadline has confirmed.
We’re Here followed the drag queens as they traveled across the U.S., recruiting small-town residents to participate in one-night-only drag shows.
“We are honored to have brought four heartfelt and impactful seasons of We’re Here to viewers around the world, amidst ongoing hostility directed at drag performers and aggression towards the LGBTQ+ community at large,” HBO said in a statement.
“The two recent Emmy nominations, along with four previous Emmy wins, a Peabody Award, a Critics Choice Real TV and LGBTQ Award, Television Academy Honors and three GLAAD Media Awards, fill us with enormous pride. After bringing the show to over 20 towns across America, the series’ journey has come to an end, with the fourth season being its final. We thank Johnnie Ingram, Steve Warren, Peter LoGreco, all of our fabulous queens and crew...
We’re Here followed the drag queens as they traveled across the U.S., recruiting small-town residents to participate in one-night-only drag shows.
“We are honored to have brought four heartfelt and impactful seasons of We’re Here to viewers around the world, amidst ongoing hostility directed at drag performers and aggression towards the LGBTQ+ community at large,” HBO said in a statement.
“The two recent Emmy nominations, along with four previous Emmy wins, a Peabody Award, a Critics Choice Real TV and LGBTQ Award, Television Academy Honors and three GLAAD Media Awards, fill us with enormous pride. After bringing the show to over 20 towns across America, the series’ journey has come to an end, with the fourth season being its final. We thank Johnnie Ingram, Steve Warren, Peter LoGreco, all of our fabulous queens and crew...
- 9/6/2024
- by Armando Tinoco
- Deadline Film + TV
“We’re Here” isn’t coming back for a fifth season. The HBO series about drag queens and their mission to help communities around the country has been canceled, TheWrap has learned.
“We are honored to have brought four heartfelt and impactful seasons of ‘We’re Here’ to viewers around the world, amidst ongoing hostility directed at drag performers and aggression towards the LGBTQ+ community at large,” a spokesperson for HBO said in a statement. “The two recent Emmy nominations, along with four previous Emmy wins, a Peabody Award, a Critics Choice Real TV and LGBTQ Award, Television Academy Honors and three GLAAD Media Awards, fill us with enormous pride. After bringing the show to over 20 towns across America, the series’ journey has come to an end, with the fourth season being its final. We thank Johnnie Ingram, Steve Warren, Peter LoGreco, all of our fabulous queens and crew for proving countless...
“We are honored to have brought four heartfelt and impactful seasons of ‘We’re Here’ to viewers around the world, amidst ongoing hostility directed at drag performers and aggression towards the LGBTQ+ community at large,” a spokesperson for HBO said in a statement. “The two recent Emmy nominations, along with four previous Emmy wins, a Peabody Award, a Critics Choice Real TV and LGBTQ Award, Television Academy Honors and three GLAAD Media Awards, fill us with enormous pride. After bringing the show to over 20 towns across America, the series’ journey has come to an end, with the fourth season being its final. We thank Johnnie Ingram, Steve Warren, Peter LoGreco, all of our fabulous queens and crew for proving countless...
- 9/6/2024
- by Kayla Cobb
- The Wrap
We’re Here is packing its bags and… not hitting the road. The HBO reality series will not return for a fifth season, TVLine has confirmed.
“Although the current run of our show has ended, We’re Here‘s message of love and acceptance has already made a lasting impact for 2Slgbtqia+ people across the country,” series creators Johnnie Ingram and Stephen Warren say in a statement. “Creating We’re Here was a dream come true and our hearts are overflowing with love. We are grateful to HBO for giving us this opportunity, to our fierce drag mothers and drag community, to our production team at Ipc,...
“Although the current run of our show has ended, We’re Here‘s message of love and acceptance has already made a lasting impact for 2Slgbtqia+ people across the country,” series creators Johnnie Ingram and Stephen Warren say in a statement. “Creating We’re Here was a dream come true and our hearts are overflowing with love. We are grateful to HBO for giving us this opportunity, to our fierce drag mothers and drag community, to our production team at Ipc,...
- 9/6/2024
- by Andy Swift
- TVLine.com
HBO’s drag reality show “We’re Here” has come to an end.
I can exclusively report that Season 4 was the final installment of the series.
“Although the current run of our show has ended, ‘We’re Here’s’ message of love and acceptance has already made a lasting impact for 2Slgbtqia+ people across the country,” seris co-creators Johnnie Ingram and Stephen Warren said in statement Friday morning. “Creating ‘We’re Here’ was a dream come true and our hearts are overflowing with love. We are grateful to HBO for giving us this opportunity, to our fierce drag mothers and drag community, to our production team at Ipc, and to all those that shared their hearts and stories with us.
“It took a lot of courage, sequins and sweat to make ‘We’re Here,’ and we are so proud to leave behind four Peabody, Critics Choice, GLAAD and Television Academy award winning seasons that are wildly entertaining,...
I can exclusively report that Season 4 was the final installment of the series.
“Although the current run of our show has ended, ‘We’re Here’s’ message of love and acceptance has already made a lasting impact for 2Slgbtqia+ people across the country,” seris co-creators Johnnie Ingram and Stephen Warren said in statement Friday morning. “Creating ‘We’re Here’ was a dream come true and our hearts are overflowing with love. We are grateful to HBO for giving us this opportunity, to our fierce drag mothers and drag community, to our production team at Ipc, and to all those that shared their hearts and stories with us.
“It took a lot of courage, sequins and sweat to make ‘We’re Here,’ and we are so proud to leave behind four Peabody, Critics Choice, GLAAD and Television Academy award winning seasons that are wildly entertaining,...
- 9/6/2024
- by Marc Malkin
- Variety Film + TV
We’re Here star Sasha Velour is starring in a new play at the La Jolla Playhouse.
Velour: A Drag Spectacular, described as a “sweeping, coming-of-age tale interwoven with the radical history of drag and queer expression,” is inspired by Velour’s own life.
In the latest season of We’re Here, the RuPaul’s Drag Race alum and her co-stars travel to Oklahoma and Tennessee to meet the local Lgbtqia+ community and put on drag shows. The show features the real stories of “ordinary people growing up queer in small town America” as Velour puts it. She also notes that is her own story.
“I try to focus on the glamour, and all the things that make me so unique in my mind, but truly I do have an ordinary story,” Velour tells The Hollywood Reporter. “There’s real power in that to help demystify, to bring people closer to these queer...
Velour: A Drag Spectacular, described as a “sweeping, coming-of-age tale interwoven with the radical history of drag and queer expression,” is inspired by Velour’s own life.
In the latest season of We’re Here, the RuPaul’s Drag Race alum and her co-stars travel to Oklahoma and Tennessee to meet the local Lgbtqia+ community and put on drag shows. The show features the real stories of “ordinary people growing up queer in small town America” as Velour puts it. She also notes that is her own story.
“I try to focus on the glamour, and all the things that make me so unique in my mind, but truly I do have an ordinary story,” Velour tells The Hollywood Reporter. “There’s real power in that to help demystify, to bring people closer to these queer...
- 8/21/2024
- by Nicole Fell
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Hello, and welcome to the Scene 2 Seen Podcast! Today, I’m chatting with Johnnie Ingram and Stephen Warren.
The duo have won an Emmy, Peabody Award, Television Academy Honor and three GLAAD Awards as creators and executive producers of the HBO docuseries We’re Here, whose fourth season premiered April 26.
Season 4 follows renowned drag queens Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall and Latrice Royale as they continue the show’s mission of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America. This season, the queens work with participants in Murfreesboro, Tn, and Tulsa, Ok, and surrounding towns and take an in-depth, immersive look at recent anti-lgbtq+ legislation and the effect it has had on the community.
Related: ‘We’re Here’ Season 4 Review: Drag As A Form Of Defiance And Dialogue
Ingram and Warren also created and executive produced the 2023 queer-inclusive romantic docuseries Swiping America, which follows a diverse group...
The duo have won an Emmy, Peabody Award, Television Academy Honor and three GLAAD Awards as creators and executive producers of the HBO docuseries We’re Here, whose fourth season premiered April 26.
Season 4 follows renowned drag queens Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall and Latrice Royale as they continue the show’s mission of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America. This season, the queens work with participants in Murfreesboro, Tn, and Tulsa, Ok, and surrounding towns and take an in-depth, immersive look at recent anti-lgbtq+ legislation and the effect it has had on the community.
Related: ‘We’re Here’ Season 4 Review: Drag As A Form Of Defiance And Dialogue
Ingram and Warren also created and executive produced the 2023 queer-inclusive romantic docuseries Swiping America, which follows a diverse group...
- 6/21/2024
- by Valerie Complex
- Deadline Film + TV
Since its inception, Max’s We’re Here has had a bold premise: Three real-life drag queens sashay out onto the streets across small-town America to coach ordinary people to perform in drag onstage, and hopefully foster some enlightenment and community along the way. For season four, the series underwent a complete overhaul, seeing the departure of the former trinity of Drag Race alums — Bob the Drag Queen, Shangela and Eureka O’Hara — for the fresh new faces of Jaida Essence Hall, Sasha Velour, Priyanka and Latrice Royale. The Hollywood Reporter caught up with the queenly quartet about their respective journeys on the show and the importance of visibly existing as queer people in conservative towns.
What was your relationship to the show entering filming?
Sasha Velour I immediately connected with the show, the drag performances that I would see clips of. That’s what I’m obsessed with, drag numbers...
What was your relationship to the show entering filming?
Sasha Velour I immediately connected with the show, the drag performances that I would see clips of. That’s what I’m obsessed with, drag numbers...
- 6/19/2024
- by Hilton Dresden
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
On Tuesday, June 18, 2024, GMA3: What You Need to Know welcomes chef Frances Tariga, comedian and actress Ms. Pat, and the cast of HBO’s “We’re Here,” including drag queens Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale. Frances Tariga, a 33-year-old executive sous chef at Catch NYC in New York City, will be […]
GMA3: What You Need to Know: Frances Tariga, Ms. Pat...
GMA3: What You Need to Know: Frances Tariga, Ms. Pat...
- 6/16/2024
- by Riley Avery
- MemorableTV
A drag show takes a village, especially those featured in HBO’s docuseries “We’re Here.” Hair, makeup, song selection, choreography, lighting, props, Red Bull — there’s no shortage of things needed to help give life to the art form.
But it all starts with a connection between two people. In the Emmy-winning series, well-known drag queens work with marginalized people in U.S. towns that don’t often embrace inclusivity. The queens help participants build a drag persona. Then, as a final send-off, the participants perform for their community, celebrating what often isolates them.
“It always comes down to the drag mom and the drag kid putting their heads together and figuring out what feels right and how to pull it off with the tools we have,” says Season 4 co-host Sasha Velour. “Every single number that we did on the show was a totally new process. It was like reinventing the wheel every time,...
But it all starts with a connection between two people. In the Emmy-winning series, well-known drag queens work with marginalized people in U.S. towns that don’t often embrace inclusivity. The queens help participants build a drag persona. Then, as a final send-off, the participants perform for their community, celebrating what often isolates them.
“It always comes down to the drag mom and the drag kid putting their heads together and figuring out what feels right and how to pull it off with the tools we have,” says Season 4 co-host Sasha Velour. “Every single number that we did on the show was a totally new process. It was like reinventing the wheel every time,...
- 6/14/2024
- by Hunter Ingram
- Variety Film + TV
Since 2008, the TV academy has honored the work of reality and competition series presenters with the Emmy Award for Best Reality/Competition Host. During this year’s first-round nominations voting period, academy members from eight branches must choose from 48 entrants, which is down from 2023’s total of 67 and keeps the number of available nomination slots at five.
Included on the 2024 ballot is reigning victor RuPaul Charles, who has prevailed on all eight of his consecutive bids for “RuPaul’s Drag Race.” Also seeking another win is Jeff Probst (“Survivor”), who dominated the category from 2008 to 2011 but has not been nominated since.
The peer groups allowed to vote for nominations in this category are casting directors, daytime programming, performers, producers, production executives, professional representatives, reality, and television executives. These voters have until June 24 to choose from the options listed below, and the lineup will be announced on July 17.
See 2024 Emmy nominations ballot:...
Included on the 2024 ballot is reigning victor RuPaul Charles, who has prevailed on all eight of his consecutive bids for “RuPaul’s Drag Race.” Also seeking another win is Jeff Probst (“Survivor”), who dominated the category from 2008 to 2011 but has not been nominated since.
The peer groups allowed to vote for nominations in this category are casting directors, daytime programming, performers, producers, production executives, professional representatives, reality, and television executives. These voters have until June 24 to choose from the options listed below, and the lineup will be announced on July 17.
See 2024 Emmy nominations ballot:...
- 6/14/2024
- by Matthew Stewart
- Gold Derby
The Critics Choice Association (Cca) presented the inaugural Celebration of LGBTQ+ Cinema & Television, hosted by Sherry Cola, during Pride Month on Friday, June 7, 2024 at the Fairmont Century Plaza in Los Angeles, CA. The show will stream on June 21st on HereTV, the first and largest LGBTQ+ TV and streaming service in the USA.
The celebration honored the finest achievements from the LGBTQ+ entertainment community, both in front of and behind the camera, as well as showcased emerging and established talent. This event marked the newest addition to the Cca’s series of Celebrations. The Celebrations aim to shine a light on work from historically underrepresented talent.
Sponsors of the event included: Delta Air Lines, Fairmont Century Plaza, Fiji Water, Here Media, Milagro Tequila, Nep Sweetwater, and Starz.
Who:
Host Sherry Cola; Honorees Abe Sylvia (Showrunner Award), Carl Clemons-Hopkins (Supporting Performance Award for Television – Series), Chris Perfetti (Breakthrough Performance Award for...
The celebration honored the finest achievements from the LGBTQ+ entertainment community, both in front of and behind the camera, as well as showcased emerging and established talent. This event marked the newest addition to the Cca’s series of Celebrations. The Celebrations aim to shine a light on work from historically underrepresented talent.
Sponsors of the event included: Delta Air Lines, Fairmont Century Plaza, Fiji Water, Here Media, Milagro Tequila, Nep Sweetwater, and Starz.
Who:
Host Sherry Cola; Honorees Abe Sylvia (Showrunner Award), Carl Clemons-Hopkins (Supporting Performance Award for Television – Series), Chris Perfetti (Breakthrough Performance Award for...
- 6/12/2024
- Look to the Stars
Since Stephen Warren and Johnnie Ingram created the series in 2020, along with the help of showrunner Peter LoGreco, We’re Here has won four Emmys and shined a light on the drag and LGBTQ communities in small towns around the U.S. With today’s political climate, especially in smaller conservative areas where Pride events are being canceled and hate is being directed towards the drag community, the trio decided that a format change was necessary for the fourth season to really get their message across: “There’s definitely a lot more love out there than hate.”
Season four of We’re Here breaks from the format of the first three seasons a bit, with four new queens – Priyanka, Sasha Velour, Jaida Essence Hall and Latrice Royale – and focusing on only two locations with three episodes in Tennessee and three episodes in Oklahoma. The series stills has the queens finding and connecting...
Season four of We’re Here breaks from the format of the first three seasons a bit, with four new queens – Priyanka, Sasha Velour, Jaida Essence Hall and Latrice Royale – and focusing on only two locations with three episodes in Tennessee and three episodes in Oklahoma. The series stills has the queens finding and connecting...
- 6/11/2024
- by Ryan Fleming
- Deadline Film + TV
Nathan Lane came out of the closet to his mother and two brothers at age 21, and says he marched in Pride parades as far back as the late 1970s. But it wasn’t until he started playing gay roles and saw his career explode thanks to Mike Nichols’ 1996 film The Birdcage that he experienced rampant speculation about his sexuality.
“I certainly wish I had been braver at the time,” Lane said while accepting a career achievement trophy during the LGBTQ+ Celebration of Cinema & Television at Fairmont Century Plaza on Friday. “Like when Oprah Winfrey on her show asked me why I was so good at all that girly stuff in The Birdcage. If I could go back in time, the answer I wish I had given is: The reason I’m good at all that stuff is because I’m a wonderful actor but if you’re asking me if I’m gay,...
“I certainly wish I had been braver at the time,” Lane said while accepting a career achievement trophy during the LGBTQ+ Celebration of Cinema & Television at Fairmont Century Plaza on Friday. “Like when Oprah Winfrey on her show asked me why I was so good at all that girly stuff in The Birdcage. If I could go back in time, the answer I wish I had given is: The reason I’m good at all that stuff is because I’m a wonderful actor but if you’re asking me if I’m gay,...
- 6/10/2024
- by Chris Gardner
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Starting this particular June weekend of Pride events off with a bang was Friday night’s first annual Critics Choice Association’s Celebration Of LGBTQ+ Cinema & Television, an awards gala that packed the main ballroom of L.A.’s Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel with each table’s settings sporting a rainbow pride flag among other festival decorations. The lively event brought out a host of honorees and starry presenters delivering lots of stirring and heartfelt remarks. Comedian and Actress Sherry Cola hosted the expertly paced presentation.
Sasha Velour, Stephen Warren, Jaida Essence Hall, guest, Charlize Theron, Johnnie Ingram, Priyanka, Latrice Royale and Peter LoGreco (Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association)
Among the previously announced honorees were Nathan Lane for Career Achievement; Star Trek legend George Takei (who is also leading Sunday’s L.A. Gay Pride parade) for the Social Justice Award; MIchaela Jae Rodriguez for...
Sasha Velour, Stephen Warren, Jaida Essence Hall, guest, Charlize Theron, Johnnie Ingram, Priyanka, Latrice Royale and Peter LoGreco (Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association)
Among the previously announced honorees were Nathan Lane for Career Achievement; Star Trek legend George Takei (who is also leading Sunday’s L.A. Gay Pride parade) for the Social Justice Award; MIchaela Jae Rodriguez for...
- 6/9/2024
- by Pete Hammond
- Deadline Film + TV
The Critics’ Choice Association kicked off Pride Month on Friday with its first-ever Celebration of LGBTQ+ Cinema & Television.
Hosted by Joy Ride and Good Trouble star Sherry Cola, the inaugural gala recognized the achievements of the LGBTQ entertainment community, with Nathan Lane, Michaela Jaé Rodriguez and RuPaul’s Drag Race among the honorees.
Lane was presented with the Career Achievement Award, following years of seminal onscreen roles in The Birdcage, The Lion King and Dicks: The Musical. Rodriguez earned the Vanguard Award for her performance on the Apple TV+ series Loot, and Rpdr was presented with the Trailblazer Award.
“It’s so special, celebrating the work and the resilience and the beauty of the LGBTQ+ community,” Cola told Cca on the red carpet. “That’s all I care about. When I wake up, that’s the mantra. Let’s keep fighting and make noise, and not settle for anything less than what we deserve.
Hosted by Joy Ride and Good Trouble star Sherry Cola, the inaugural gala recognized the achievements of the LGBTQ entertainment community, with Nathan Lane, Michaela Jaé Rodriguez and RuPaul’s Drag Race among the honorees.
Lane was presented with the Career Achievement Award, following years of seminal onscreen roles in The Birdcage, The Lion King and Dicks: The Musical. Rodriguez earned the Vanguard Award for her performance on the Apple TV+ series Loot, and Rpdr was presented with the Trailblazer Award.
“It’s so special, celebrating the work and the resilience and the beauty of the LGBTQ+ community,” Cola told Cca on the red carpet. “That’s all I care about. When I wake up, that’s the mantra. Let’s keep fighting and make noise, and not settle for anything less than what we deserve.
- 6/9/2024
- by Glenn Garner
- Deadline Film + TV
Chicago – When one of Chicago’s own critic/entertainment reporters is instrumental in achieving a LGBTQ+ celebration during Pride Month, it’s a cause for Our Pride. Jerry Nunn is that achiever, and he will oversee … as Co-Sponsor and Programmer … the Inaugural Critic’s Choice Celebration of LGBTQ+ Cinema & Television on June 7th, 2024, at the Los Angeles Fairmont Hotel. Besides the creme of presenters and honorees scheduled for the event, it is Jerry who spearheaded the effort to make this celebration happen.
Hosted by Sherry Cola, it will take place in honor of the finest achievements from the LGBTQ+ entertainment community, both in front of and behind the camera, as well as showcase emerging and established talent. Honorees include Abe Sylvia, Carl Clemons-Hopkins, Chris Perfetti, Fellow Travelers producers Ron Nyswaner, Matt Bomer, Daniel Minahan, and Robbie Rogers, Fernando Carsa, George Takei, Henry R. Muñoz III, Kristen Kish, Luke Gilford, Michaela Jaé Rodriguez,...
Hosted by Sherry Cola, it will take place in honor of the finest achievements from the LGBTQ+ entertainment community, both in front of and behind the camera, as well as showcase emerging and established talent. Honorees include Abe Sylvia, Carl Clemons-Hopkins, Chris Perfetti, Fellow Travelers producers Ron Nyswaner, Matt Bomer, Daniel Minahan, and Robbie Rogers, Fernando Carsa, George Takei, Henry R. Muñoz III, Kristen Kish, Luke Gilford, Michaela Jaé Rodriguez,...
- 6/6/2024
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
When Taylor Swift took over The AMC at The Grove to debut “The Eras Tour” last October, cars wrapped around the block. With the official kickoff event for what would become a $261.6 million box office hit filling auditoriums with celebrities — while outside hundreds of screaming fans swarmed the luxury mall’s towering parking deck and famed Cheesecake Factory Observational Deck — it seemed as though presidential motorcades had inconvenienced SoCal less than a single night at the movies with planet Earth’s favorite pop star.
No one is complaining about a visit from Taylor Swift, of course; least of all the film lovers who in 2023 rightly hailed her as a dark horse savior of cinema in a dire time. Still, when contrasted with Lady Gaga’s pared-down world premiere for HBO’s “Gaga Chromatica Ball” — a tidy event with an enthusiastic but small line on the sidewalk and a single-block road...
No one is complaining about a visit from Taylor Swift, of course; least of all the film lovers who in 2023 rightly hailed her as a dark horse savior of cinema in a dire time. Still, when contrasted with Lady Gaga’s pared-down world premiere for HBO’s “Gaga Chromatica Ball” — a tidy event with an enthusiastic but small line on the sidewalk and a single-block road...
- 5/25/2024
- by Alison Foreman
- Indiewire
The invitation stated the event was going to be standing room only. “Think dance party while watching the film.”
And that’s exactly what it was. On Thursday night, Lady Gaga brought a dance party to Nya studios in Hollywood to mark the world premiere of her film “Gaga Chromatica Ball.”
The evening kicked off with a Q&a moderated by Access Hollywood’s Scott Evans. “This was such a special time. This tour went on during a time that people didn’t think that you could. The stadiums were packed all, they were sold out and [people were] all dressed up, dancing and singing,” said Gaga in front of an audience of about 400 guests that included “RuPaul’s Drag Race” stars Gottmik, Sasha Velour and Violet Chachki.
Tonight. @ladygaga at the Gaga Ball.#justforvariety pic.twitter.com/52fopCocV9
— Marc Malkin (@marcmalkin) May 24, 2024
During the Q&a, Gaga confirmed she was hard at work...
And that’s exactly what it was. On Thursday night, Lady Gaga brought a dance party to Nya studios in Hollywood to mark the world premiere of her film “Gaga Chromatica Ball.”
The evening kicked off with a Q&a moderated by Access Hollywood’s Scott Evans. “This was such a special time. This tour went on during a time that people didn’t think that you could. The stadiums were packed all, they were sold out and [people were] all dressed up, dancing and singing,” said Gaga in front of an audience of about 400 guests that included “RuPaul’s Drag Race” stars Gottmik, Sasha Velour and Violet Chachki.
Tonight. @ladygaga at the Gaga Ball.#justforvariety pic.twitter.com/52fopCocV9
— Marc Malkin (@marcmalkin) May 24, 2024
During the Q&a, Gaga confirmed she was hard at work...
- 5/24/2024
- by Jazz Tangcay and Marc Malkin
- Variety Film + TV
The premise of the drag makeover show “We’re Here” is that queer liberation hasn’t extended as far as it could. For three seasons, a group of “RuPaul’s Drag Race” alumni have traveled to small towns throughout the country, helping members of the local LGBTQ community assert their identity and visibility through gender-bending performances. But even a project that deliberately targets places where gay and trans people might feel cut off from a sense of camaraderie — many locations are scattered throughout the South and Midwest, with occasional detours to California and Hawai’i — didn’t anticipate their own art form coming under such intense public scrutiny.
“I would never have predicted that, four seasons later, it’s actually harder to be out and proud,” Priyanka says in last month’s premiere. The “Canada’s Drag Race” winner is one of several new faces this season, which bids farewell to Bob the Drag Queen,...
“I would never have predicted that, four seasons later, it’s actually harder to be out and proud,” Priyanka says in last month’s premiere. The “Canada’s Drag Race” winner is one of several new faces this season, which bids farewell to Bob the Drag Queen,...
- 5/13/2024
- by Alison Herman
- Variety Film + TV
Ross Matthews wasn’t three words into his opening monologue at the 35th annual GLAAD Awards in New York City Saturday evening when a protester stood up from the audience to shout, “GLAAD is complicit in genocide.” The lone pro-Palestine advocate, blanketed by a wide-eyed room who let out a few jeers — “Who are you, you weirdo?” one donor shouted — was slowly, if not ceremoniously escorted from the room before she gave a final jab: “And so are all of you.”
“Thank you for your free speech. I’m so glad you have freedom,” Matthews, the evening’s host, said from the stage in an awkward attempt to recognize the protester. “Well, that was uncomfy for all of us, but we have to fight for everyone’s rights. Thank you for my opener,” he moved on, back on his feet.
And so set the tone for the evening. Each year in a star-studded ceremony,...
“Thank you for your free speech. I’m so glad you have freedom,” Matthews, the evening’s host, said from the stage in an awkward attempt to recognize the protester. “Well, that was uncomfy for all of us, but we have to fight for everyone’s rights. Thank you for my opener,” he moved on, back on his feet.
And so set the tone for the evening. Each year in a star-studded ceremony,...
- 5/12/2024
- by Michael Appler
- Variety Film + TV
Normally logistical issues like space rentals and permitting are meant to be invisible to the audience, left in the furthest background of any TV show. But Season 4 of “We’re Here” is as much about the struggles of making the series as it is about the drag performances the show’s queens put on in different parts of the United States. The HBO series not only introduced a new cast of queens this year but changed its filming approach so that it could go where it was needed most: the states imposing drag bans and making the pursuit of happiness difficult for their own LGBTQ communities.
The biggest shift, according to showrunner, director, and executive producer Peter LoGreco, was the amount of time that “We’re Here” spent in a given location. In past seasons, the series moved from state to state for each episode. But given how legislatively hostile the environments...
The biggest shift, according to showrunner, director, and executive producer Peter LoGreco, was the amount of time that “We’re Here” spent in a given location. In past seasons, the series moved from state to state for each episode. But given how legislatively hostile the environments...
- 4/30/2024
- by Sarah Shachat
- Indiewire
If television is a snapshot of our times, there are several moments in the fourth season of HBO’s groundbreaking reality docuseries “We’re Here” that should be a major wake-up call for anyone who believes in free speech, human rights, and artistic expression in the United States. After the events in season three, which saw the show face vocal opposition in visits to Florida and St. George, Utah, it’s hard to imagine things could get worse, but for many in small-town America, it’s reached an infection point.
Continue reading ‘We’re Here’: Sasha Velour & Latrice Royale Discover Fighting The Good Fight Is Harder Than Ever at The Playlist.
Continue reading ‘We’re Here’: Sasha Velour & Latrice Royale Discover Fighting The Good Fight Is Harder Than Ever at The Playlist.
- 4/29/2024
- by Gregory Ellwood
- The Playlist
In a world where the shadows of intolerance loom, the spectacle of We’re Here emerges not just as a beacon of light but as a bold declaration of presence. HBO’s groundbreaking series created by Stephen Warren and Johnnie Ingram, began in 2020, with Shangela, Bob the Drag Queen, and Eureka at the helm. This features drag icons Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, Sasha Velour, and Latrice Royale, takes the art of drag into Tennessee and Oklahoma, transforming not only stages but hearts and minds along the way.
At the outset of its fourth season, We’re Here sets a tone that connects deeply with current events. Amidst the backdrop of news clips announcing the banning of drag performances in Tennessee, the visual contrast of Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Sasha Velour preparing for their performances encapsulates a fight not just for the spotlight, but for life itself. The series dives into the...
At the outset of its fourth season, We’re Here sets a tone that connects deeply with current events. Amidst the backdrop of news clips announcing the banning of drag performances in Tennessee, the visual contrast of Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Sasha Velour preparing for their performances encapsulates a fight not just for the spotlight, but for life itself. The series dives into the...
- 4/26/2024
- by Valerie Complex
- Deadline Film + TV
HBO’s Emmy Award-winning docuseries “We're Here” is back on the road for Season 4 in “RuPaul's Drag Race” alums Jaida Essence Hall, Priyanka, Sasha Velour, and Latrice Royale take the wheel in the series’ fourth entry as the queens make pit stops in Tennessee and Oklahoma to take an in-depth look at recent LGBTQ+ legislation and spread love through drag. The first episode of “We’re Here” Season 4 will debut on HBO on Friday, April 26, at 9 p.m. Et and will be available to stream on Max. You can watch with a subscription to Max.
How to Watch ‘We're Here’ Season 4 Premiere When: Friday, April 26, 2024 Where: Max Stream: Watch with a subscription to Max. Sign Up$9.99+ / month Max.com About ‘We're Here’ Season 4 Premiere
World-renowned drag queens and fellow “RuPaul’s Drag Race” alums Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale take over for Bob the Drag Queen, Eureka O’Hara, and...
How to Watch ‘We're Here’ Season 4 Premiere When: Friday, April 26, 2024 Where: Max Stream: Watch with a subscription to Max. Sign Up$9.99+ / month Max.com About ‘We're Here’ Season 4 Premiere
World-renowned drag queens and fellow “RuPaul’s Drag Race” alums Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale take over for Bob the Drag Queen, Eureka O’Hara, and...
- 4/26/2024
- by Ashley Steves
- The Streamable
Get ready for another captivating episode of “We’re Here” airing on HBO this Friday, May 3, 2024, at 9:00 Pm. In the second part of “Tennessee,” the incomparable Sasha Velour takes center stage to discuss the significance of spreading drag culture to communities across the country.
As the show continues its journey through Tennessee, viewers can expect heartfelt moments, powerful performances, and profound conversations about the impact of drag on people’s lives. Sasha Velour, known for her creativity and advocacy within the drag community, shares her insights into why drag is such a vital and transformative art form.
With its message of acceptance, empowerment, and self-expression, “We’re Here” continues to inspire and uplift audiences as it showcases the transformative power of drag. Don’t miss out on this enlightening episode as Sasha Velour and the cast of “We’re Here” continue to shine a spotlight on the importance of inclusion and diversity.
As the show continues its journey through Tennessee, viewers can expect heartfelt moments, powerful performances, and profound conversations about the impact of drag on people’s lives. Sasha Velour, known for her creativity and advocacy within the drag community, shares her insights into why drag is such a vital and transformative art form.
With its message of acceptance, empowerment, and self-expression, “We’re Here” continues to inspire and uplift audiences as it showcases the transformative power of drag. Don’t miss out on this enlightening episode as Sasha Velour and the cast of “We’re Here” continue to shine a spotlight on the importance of inclusion and diversity.
- 4/26/2024
- by Jules Byrd
- TV Everyday
Season 4 of “We’re Here” sees new hosts Priyanka, Sasha Velour, Latrice Royale and Jaida Essence Hall travelling to red states Tennessee and Oklahoma, where safety had become a concern at times because of anti-lgbtq protests and threats. “It was frightening sometimes,” Jaida told me Wednesday night at the season premiere screening and party at the Avalon Hollywood. “It was eye-opening, imagining other people like myself who have to live in those spaces and see that every day. It’s just heartbreaking.”
Series co-creator Steve Warren said, “It’s surreal we had to think about our security. We are living in 2024. Ten years ago we were so hopeful. Marriage equality had just passed. We were living in a space where we thought we’re not going to have to fight the old battles.”
Even so, the new season continues to help its participants — and cast and crew, for that matter — heal.
Series co-creator Steve Warren said, “It’s surreal we had to think about our security. We are living in 2024. Ten years ago we were so hopeful. Marriage equality had just passed. We were living in a space where we thought we’re not going to have to fight the old battles.”
Even so, the new season continues to help its participants — and cast and crew, for that matter — heal.
- 4/26/2024
- by Marc Malkin
- Variety Film + TV
On Wednesday, April 24, HBO celebrated Season 4 of “We’re Here” with an exclusive red carpet premiere and afterparty at the Avalon Hollywood in Los Angeles. Gold Derby associate editor Latasha Ford and senior editor Marcus James Dixon were on the red carpet to interview stars Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall and Latrice Royale, as well as co-creators Stephen Warren and Johnnie Ingram, director Peter LoGreco and guest Heidi N Closet. Watch the exclusive red carpet interviews above.
Season 4 HBO’s GLAAD, Peabody and Emmy-winning unscripted series “We’re Here” comes back on April 26 and follows new renowned drag queens, Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale, as they continue the show’s mission of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.
See ‘Hacks’ Season 3 trailer: Deborah Vance is on top of the world [Watch]
This season, the queens work with participants in Murfreesboro, Tennessee and Tulsa,...
Season 4 HBO’s GLAAD, Peabody and Emmy-winning unscripted series “We’re Here” comes back on April 26 and follows new renowned drag queens, Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale, as they continue the show’s mission of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.
See ‘Hacks’ Season 3 trailer: Deborah Vance is on top of the world [Watch]
This season, the queens work with participants in Murfreesboro, Tennessee and Tulsa,...
- 4/25/2024
- by Latasha Ford, Marcus James Dixon and Denton Davidson
- Gold Derby
A wide-ranging list of honorees was announced today for the Critics Choice Association’s inaugural Celebration Of LGBTQ+ Cinema & Television, which will take place during Pride Month on Friday June 7, at the Fairmont Century Plaza in Los Angeles. The event will stream later on HereTV, the first and largest LGBTQ+ TV and streaming service in the U.S. Actress, writer and comedian Sherry Cola (Joy Ride) will host.
The celebration will honor the finest achievements from the LGBTQ+ entertainment community, both in front of and behind the camera, as well as showcase emerging and established talent. This event marks the newest addition to the Cca’s series, following its Celebration of Latino Cinema and Television, Celebration of Asian Pacific Cinema and Television and Celebration of Black Cinema and Television. The Celebrations aim to shine a light on work from historically underrepresented talent.
“I am extremely proud to be able to...
The celebration will honor the finest achievements from the LGBTQ+ entertainment community, both in front of and behind the camera, as well as showcase emerging and established talent. This event marks the newest addition to the Cca’s series, following its Celebration of Latino Cinema and Television, Celebration of Asian Pacific Cinema and Television and Celebration of Black Cinema and Television. The Celebrations aim to shine a light on work from historically underrepresented talent.
“I am extremely proud to be able to...
- 4/25/2024
- by Pete Hammond
- Deadline Film + TV
"We're Here" Season 4 Trailer Out Out Now
The multi-award-winning "We're Here” is ready to hit the road! HBO has released the trailer and key art for the upcoming fourth season of the drag-centric non-scripted series, which will return for six new episodes on Friday, April 26.
World-renowned drag queens Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale take the wheel as they continue the show’s mission of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America. In Season 4, the queens will center their work in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and Tulsa, Oklahoma, as well as in surrounding towns, and take an immersive look at recent anti-lgbtq+ legislation and its effect on the community.
Watch the trailer for “We’re Here” Season 4 below:
Season 3 of the series won the Emmy Awards for Outstanding Costumes For Variety, Nonfiction Or Reality Programming and Outstanding Hairstyling For A Variety, Nonfiction Or Reality Program...
The multi-award-winning "We're Here” is ready to hit the road! HBO has released the trailer and key art for the upcoming fourth season of the drag-centric non-scripted series, which will return for six new episodes on Friday, April 26.
World-renowned drag queens Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale take the wheel as they continue the show’s mission of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America. In Season 4, the queens will center their work in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and Tulsa, Oklahoma, as well as in surrounding towns, and take an immersive look at recent anti-lgbtq+ legislation and its effect on the community.
Watch the trailer for “We’re Here” Season 4 below:
Season 3 of the series won the Emmy Awards for Outstanding Costumes For Variety, Nonfiction Or Reality Programming and Outstanding Hairstyling For A Variety, Nonfiction Or Reality Program...
- 4/11/2024
- by Ashley Steves
- The Streamable
HBO has released the official trailer and key art for the six-episode fourth season of the Emmy, Peabody, and GLAAD award-winning unscripted series We’re Here.
The series returns on Friday, April 26 (9:00-10:00 p.m. Et/Pt) on HBO and will be available to stream on Max. New episodes will debut weekly.
Season four of We’re Here follows renowned drag queens Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale as they continue the show’s mission of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.
This season, the queens work with participants in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and Tulsa, Oklahoma, as well as in surrounding towns, and take an in-depth, immersive look at recent anti-lgbtq+ legislation and its effect on the community.
The critically acclaimed third season of We’re Here won two Emmy Awards, a third GLAAD Award for “Outstanding Reality Programming,” a Peabody Award, and received Television Academy Honors.
The series returns on Friday, April 26 (9:00-10:00 p.m. Et/Pt) on HBO and will be available to stream on Max. New episodes will debut weekly.
Season four of We’re Here follows renowned drag queens Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall, and Latrice Royale as they continue the show’s mission of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.
This season, the queens work with participants in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and Tulsa, Oklahoma, as well as in surrounding towns, and take an in-depth, immersive look at recent anti-lgbtq+ legislation and its effect on the community.
The critically acclaimed third season of We’re Here won two Emmy Awards, a third GLAAD Award for “Outstanding Reality Programming,” a Peabody Award, and received Television Academy Honors.
- 4/9/2024
- by Mirko Parlevliet
- Vital Thrills
Four new queens are about to drag some strangers out of their comfort zones. We’re Here has released its official Season 4 trailer, giving fans a first look at the reality series’ entirely revamped cast, ahead of its Friday, April 26 (9/8c) premiere on HBO. New episodes will also be available to stream on Max.
As previously reported, We’re Here now follows Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall and Latrice Royale as they traverse the country, “spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.”
More from TVLineGame of Thrones Prequel A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Finds Its...
As previously reported, We’re Here now follows Sasha Velour, Priyanka, Jaida Essence Hall and Latrice Royale as they traverse the country, “spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.”
More from TVLineGame of Thrones Prequel A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Finds Its...
- 4/9/2024
- by Andy Swift
- TVLine.com
It's a new month, and HBO and Max will be showering their subscribers with gifts all April long! This month, the Wbd properties will welcome the arrival of unscripted projects like the premiere of Conan O’Brien’s new travel comedy series “Conan O’Brien Must Go” and the fourth season of the Emmy Award-winning drag-centric “We're Here.” Plus, Park Chan-wook and A24’s “The Sympathizer” limited series and the highly anticipated continuation of “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst” will all be available to stream throughout the month.
Find out everything coming to Max this April, including The Streamable’s top picks to add to your watch list!
Sign Up $9.99+ / month Max.com What are the 5 Best Shows and Movies Coming to Max in April 2024? “Alex Edelman: Just For Us” | Saturday, April 6
Filmed in front of a live audience at Broadway’s Hudson Theatre in August 2023, Alex Edelman brings his solo special,...
Find out everything coming to Max this April, including The Streamable’s top picks to add to your watch list!
Sign Up $9.99+ / month Max.com What are the 5 Best Shows and Movies Coming to Max in April 2024? “Alex Edelman: Just For Us” | Saturday, April 6
Filmed in front of a live audience at Broadway’s Hudson Theatre in August 2023, Alex Edelman brings his solo special,...
- 4/1/2024
- by Ashley Steves
- The Streamable
Mhi’ya Iman Le’Paige may not be the best Cher impersonator, but after Friday’s episode of RuPaul’s Drag Race, we can confidently call her the lip sync assassin of Season 16.
Following a lackluster performance in this week’s Wednesday-themed design challenge, which found the contestants channeling their inner goths on the runway, the self-proclaimed Queen of Flips once again landed in the bottom two. For those keeping score at home (aka all of us), this marked Mhi’ya’s third time having to lip sync for her life, resulting in a humbling experience for the Miami-based entertainer.
More...
Following a lackluster performance in this week’s Wednesday-themed design challenge, which found the contestants channeling their inner goths on the runway, the self-proclaimed Queen of Flips once again landed in the bottom two. For those keeping score at home (aka all of us), this marked Mhi’ya’s third time having to lip sync for her life, resulting in a humbling experience for the Miami-based entertainer.
More...
- 3/2/2024
- by Andy Swift
- TVLine.com
Showtime is heading back to The Chi.
The second half of the drama’s sixth season will kick off Friday, May 10, on Paramount+ With Showtime and on demand, before making its on-air debut Sunday, May 12 at 9/8c on Showtime.
More from TVLineRonna McDaniel Out at NBC News in Wake of On-Air BacklashThe Regime Director Declares the Message of Kate Winslet's HBO Show Is 'Don't Vote for Trump'Quiet on Set Follow-Up to Feature Interviews With Drake Bell and 'New Voices' - Get Release Date
Per the official synopsis, “danger lies in wait” as “no one is safe and everyone will...
The second half of the drama’s sixth season will kick off Friday, May 10, on Paramount+ With Showtime and on demand, before making its on-air debut Sunday, May 12 at 9/8c on Showtime.
More from TVLineRonna McDaniel Out at NBC News in Wake of On-Air BacklashThe Regime Director Declares the Message of Kate Winslet's HBO Show Is 'Don't Vote for Trump'Quiet on Set Follow-Up to Feature Interviews With Drake Bell and 'New Voices' - Get Release Date
Per the official synopsis, “danger lies in wait” as “no one is safe and everyone will...
- 2/8/2024
- by Vlada Gelman
- TVLine.com
The fifth episode of “True Detective: Night Country” will be available to stream early on Max beginning Feb. 9 at 9 p.m. Et/ 6 p.m. Pt, in order to avoid the Sunday night streamroller that is the Super Bowl. The show will still get its HBO linear premiere on Feb. 11 at 9 p.m. Et/Pt, opposite the Big Game.
Jodie Foster, Kali Reis, Finn Bennett and Fiona Shaw star in the series, with Christopher Eccleston, Isabella Star Lablanc and John Hawkes rounding out the cast. Anna Lambe, Aka Niviâna and Joel D. Montgrand are guest stars.
Issa López serves as showrunner, writer and director. Foster executive produces alongside Mari Jo Winkler, Barry Jenkins, Adele Romanski and Mark Ceryak for Pastel. Chris Mundy, Alan Page Arriaga, Steve Golin, Richard Brown, Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson, Cary Joji Fukunaga and Nic Pizzolatto also executive produce.
First Looks
Hulu has unveiled the trailer for the...
Jodie Foster, Kali Reis, Finn Bennett and Fiona Shaw star in the series, with Christopher Eccleston, Isabella Star Lablanc and John Hawkes rounding out the cast. Anna Lambe, Aka Niviâna and Joel D. Montgrand are guest stars.
Issa López serves as showrunner, writer and director. Foster executive produces alongside Mari Jo Winkler, Barry Jenkins, Adele Romanski and Mark Ceryak for Pastel. Chris Mundy, Alan Page Arriaga, Steve Golin, Richard Brown, Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson, Cary Joji Fukunaga and Nic Pizzolatto also executive produce.
First Looks
Hulu has unveiled the trailer for the...
- 2/5/2024
- by Caroline Brew
- Variety Film + TV
All credit to Mark Russell, the founding artistic director of the Under the Radar Festival. After the Public Theater, which has produced the international and experimental theater festival since 2006, dropped Under the Radar from its annual programming, Russell rapidly rebuilt. With no central home this season, the festival’s shows now crop up over a greater radius of the city, from smaller downtown venues like the Abrons Arts Center and Performance Space New York to major entities like Bam and Theater for a New Audience.
In its new iteration, Under the Radar, which runs through January 21, hasn’t missed a step. In fact, since so many disparate venues have programmed and produced shows this year, Under the Radar seems poised to introduce festival-wide fans to the curated tastes of theaters across New York, potentially growing year-round audiences too. There’s also the sense that the festival, partnering with producing theaters...
In its new iteration, Under the Radar, which runs through January 21, hasn’t missed a step. In fact, since so many disparate venues have programmed and produced shows this year, Under the Radar seems poised to introduce festival-wide fans to the curated tastes of theaters across New York, potentially growing year-round audiences too. There’s also the sense that the festival, partnering with producing theaters...
- 1/20/2024
- by Dan Rubins
- Slant Magazine
Another acquisition has been pulled from The CW’s schedule.
The network has removed Bump, an Australian dramedy about a pregnant 17-year-old, from its Monday lineup, replacing it with repeats of Whose Line Is It Anyway? at 9:30 pm, TVLine has confirmed. Remaining episodes of the show, which was in the middle of airing its second season, will be made available on the CW app and Cwtv.com.
More from TVLineNCIS Day: Get Exclusive Details and Promo for CBS' 20th Anniversary Celebration - Mini-Marathon and Bandium Fun Included!New Goosebumps Series Set to Premiere on Disney+, Hulu and Freeform - First...
The network has removed Bump, an Australian dramedy about a pregnant 17-year-old, from its Monday lineup, replacing it with repeats of Whose Line Is It Anyway? at 9:30 pm, TVLine has confirmed. Remaining episodes of the show, which was in the middle of airing its second season, will be made available on the CW app and Cwtv.com.
More from TVLineNCIS Day: Get Exclusive Details and Promo for CBS' 20th Anniversary Celebration - Mini-Marathon and Bandium Fun Included!New Goosebumps Series Set to Premiere on Disney+, Hulu and Freeform - First...
- 9/6/2023
- by Vlada Gelman
- TVLine.com
HBO’s drag makeover series “We’re Here” is getting a “large and in charge” addition.
Latrice Royale will join previously announced new hosts Jaida Essence Hall, Priyanka and Sasha Velour for Season 4, TheWrap has learned.
Production on the upcoming season began in July. The new queens will continue the goal of the series to spread love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America. This season will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq legislation and opposition and their effect on the LGBTQ community.
Latrice Royale, the self-proclaimed “large and in charge, chunky yet funky” fan-favorite from “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” first competed in Season 4, where she was named Miss Congeniality after placing fourth.
She later appeared in “RuPaul’s Drag Race: All-Stars” Seasons 1 and 4, where she placed seventh/eighth and fifth,...
Latrice Royale will join previously announced new hosts Jaida Essence Hall, Priyanka and Sasha Velour for Season 4, TheWrap has learned.
Production on the upcoming season began in July. The new queens will continue the goal of the series to spread love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America. This season will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq legislation and opposition and their effect on the LGBTQ community.
Latrice Royale, the self-proclaimed “large and in charge, chunky yet funky” fan-favorite from “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” first competed in Season 4, where she was named Miss Congeniality after placing fourth.
She later appeared in “RuPaul’s Drag Race: All-Stars” Seasons 1 and 4, where she placed seventh/eighth and fifth,...
- 9/6/2023
- by Lawrence Yee
- The Wrap
Get a grip, girl! Latrice Royale is officially joining the Season 4 cast of HBO’s “We’re Here,” Variety can exclusively reveal.
Latrice Royale joins fellow drag artists Priyanka, Sasha Velour and Jaida Essence Hall in leading the new season. “We’re Here” Season 4 will notably see a shift from its original format, which previously saw the queens traveling to new cities in each episode to further share the artform of drag. Now, they will tackle two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the queer community.
Season 4 marks the first season that Latrice Royale, Priyanka, Sasha Velour and Jaida Essence Hall will take over for Bob the Drag Queen, Eureka O’Hara and Shangela, who previously led the series in its first three seasons.
“We’re Here” was created by Stephen Warren...
Latrice Royale joins fellow drag artists Priyanka, Sasha Velour and Jaida Essence Hall in leading the new season. “We’re Here” Season 4 will notably see a shift from its original format, which previously saw the queens traveling to new cities in each episode to further share the artform of drag. Now, they will tackle two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the queer community.
Season 4 marks the first season that Latrice Royale, Priyanka, Sasha Velour and Jaida Essence Hall will take over for Bob the Drag Queen, Eureka O’Hara and Shangela, who previously led the series in its first three seasons.
“We’re Here” was created by Stephen Warren...
- 9/6/2023
- by McKinley Franklin
- Variety Film + TV
Disney+ revealed the official trailer for the fourth and final season of “High School Musical: The Musical: The Series.” All episodes premiere Aug. 9 when the Wildcats return to East High, where they prepare a stage production of “High School Musical 3: Senior Year.” The fourth season stars Joshua Bassett, Sofia Wylie, Dara Reneé, Julia Lester, and Frankie Rodriguez, among others.
Catch the Final Season Trailer of ‘High School Musical: The Musical: The Series’: Sign Up Now $7.99+ / month disneyplus.com
Get Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ for just $12.99 a month ($13 savings).
Apple TV+ released the third and final trailer of the 10-part dark comedy series “Physical,” starring and executive produced by Rose Byrne. It premieres on Aug. 2 and co-stars Rory Scovel, Dierdre Friel, Paul Sparks, and Zooey Deschanel. The show is set in the 1980s in San Diego and follows Sheila (Byrne) as she journeys from unhappy housewife to fitness entrepreneur.
Catch the Final Season Trailer of ‘High School Musical: The Musical: The Series’: Sign Up Now $7.99+ / month disneyplus.com
Get Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ for just $12.99 a month ($13 savings).
Apple TV+ released the third and final trailer of the 10-part dark comedy series “Physical,” starring and executive produced by Rose Byrne. It premieres on Aug. 2 and co-stars Rory Scovel, Dierdre Friel, Paul Sparks, and Zooey Deschanel. The show is set in the 1980s in San Diego and follows Sheila (Byrne) as she journeys from unhappy housewife to fitness entrepreneur.
- 7/14/2023
- by Fern Siegel
- The Streamable
We’re Here is returning for a fourth season. HBO has renewed the drag series, but it will now feature three new drag queens as hosts. Sasha Velour, Priyanka, and Jaida Essence Hall replace Bob the Drag Queen, D.J. "Shangela" Pierce, and Eureka O'Hara in the series. Season four will follow the journey of the new arrivals as they travel through small towns in America.
revealed more about the renewal in a press release.
HBO has renewed the Emmy(R), Peabody and GLAAD award-winning unscripted series We're Here for a fourth season. Created by Johnnie Ingram and Stephen Warren, the series concluded its six-episode third season on December 30, 2022 and will begin production on its fourth season later this month. The first three seasons are available to stream now on Max.
Season four of...
revealed more about the renewal in a press release.
HBO has renewed the Emmy(R), Peabody and GLAAD award-winning unscripted series We're Here for a fourth season. Created by Johnnie Ingram and Stephen Warren, the series concluded its six-episode third season on December 30, 2022 and will begin production on its fourth season later this month. The first three seasons are available to stream now on Max.
Season four of...
- 7/13/2023
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
HBO has renewed its docuseries We’re Here for a fourth season, with a new trio of drag queens starring.
Former RuPaul’s Drag Race champions Sasha Velour and Jaida Essence Hall and Canada’s Drag Race winner Priyanka will front season four, which is set to begin filming later this month. The coming season will follow the trio to two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community as Sasha, Jaida and Priyanka work to spread love and connection through the art of drag.
The new hosts replace Bob the Drag Queen, D.J. “Shangela” Pierce and Eureka O’Hara on We’re Here. The change comes two months after a former production assistant on the series, Daniel McGarrigle, filed a civil suit against Pierce...
Former RuPaul’s Drag Race champions Sasha Velour and Jaida Essence Hall and Canada’s Drag Race winner Priyanka will front season four, which is set to begin filming later this month. The coming season will follow the trio to two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community as Sasha, Jaida and Priyanka work to spread love and connection through the art of drag.
The new hosts replace Bob the Drag Queen, D.J. “Shangela” Pierce and Eureka O’Hara on We’re Here. The change comes two months after a former production assistant on the series, Daniel McGarrigle, filed a civil suit against Pierce...
- 7/12/2023
- by Rick Porter
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
We’re Here is getting a revamp. HBO announced today it has renewed the reality series for a fourth season with new hosts Drag Race Season 9 winner Sasha Velour, Canada’s Drag Race Season 1 winner Priyanka and Drag Race Season 12 champ Jaida Essence Hall. They will replace Bob the Drag Queen, D.J. “Shangela” Pierce and Eureka O’Hara, who starred in the first three seasons. Production is slated to begin on Season 4 later this month.
Created and executive produced by Stephen Warren and Johnnie Ingram, Season 4 will follow Velour, Priyanka and Hall, as they continue the goal of the series to spread love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.
This season will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community.
Created and executive produced by Stephen Warren and Johnnie Ingram, Season 4 will follow Velour, Priyanka and Hall, as they continue the goal of the series to spread love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.
This season will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community.
- 7/12/2023
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
“RuPaul’s Drag Race” alums Jaida Essence Hall, Priyanka and Sasha Velour were named the new hosts of HBO’s drag makeover show “We’re Here,” the network announced Wednesday.
Hall and Velour won Season 12 and 9 of “Drag Race,” respectively, while Priyanka won the inaugural season of “Drag Race Canada.”
The trio will make their debut in Season 4, which begins production later this month. Season 4 will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community.
Also Read:
‘Drag Race’ Judge Michelle Visage Calls Out Ron DeSantis, Anti-Drag Legislators: ‘There Is no Indoctrination’
Hall, Priyanka and Velour will continue the series’ goal of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.
“We have been so inspired by the stories and important...
Hall and Velour won Season 12 and 9 of “Drag Race,” respectively, while Priyanka won the inaugural season of “Drag Race Canada.”
The trio will make their debut in Season 4, which begins production later this month. Season 4 will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community.
Also Read:
‘Drag Race’ Judge Michelle Visage Calls Out Ron DeSantis, Anti-Drag Legislators: ‘There Is no Indoctrination’
Hall, Priyanka and Velour will continue the series’ goal of spreading love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America.
“We have been so inspired by the stories and important...
- 7/12/2023
- by Lawrence Yee
- The Wrap
HBO has renewed “We’re Here” for Season 4 and introduced a new cast after the first three seasons were led by Bob the Drag Queen, Eureka O’Hara and Shangela.
Season 4 of the unscripted series will follow Sasha Velour, Priyanka and Jaida Essence Hall, as they continue the goal of the series to spread love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America. This season will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community.
“We’re Here” is created by Stephen Warren and Johnnie Ingram and directed by Peter LoGreco. Executive producers include Warren, Ingram, LoGreco, Eli Holzman, Aaron Saidman and Erin Gamble for Sony Pictures Television’s Intellectual Property Corporation (Ipc).
“With the ongoing aggression towards the LGBTQ+ community, and the...
Season 4 of the unscripted series will follow Sasha Velour, Priyanka and Jaida Essence Hall, as they continue the goal of the series to spread love and connection through the art of drag across small-town America. This season will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community.
“We’re Here” is created by Stephen Warren and Johnnie Ingram and directed by Peter LoGreco. Executive producers include Warren, Ingram, LoGreco, Eli Holzman, Aaron Saidman and Erin Gamble for Sony Pictures Television’s Intellectual Property Corporation (Ipc).
“With the ongoing aggression towards the LGBTQ+ community, and the...
- 7/12/2023
- by Selome Hailu
- Variety Film + TV
HBO’s drag makeover docuseries We’re Here is getting a revamp of its own: Hosts Shangela, Eureka and Bob the Drag Queen are all being replaced ahead of the show’s upcoming fourth season, TVLine has confirmed.
Stepping in for Season 4 are RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 9 winner Sasha Velour, Season 12 winner Jaida Essence Hall and Canada’s Drag Race Season 1 winner Priyanka. The season will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, “taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community,...
Stepping in for Season 4 are RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 9 winner Sasha Velour, Season 12 winner Jaida Essence Hall and Canada’s Drag Race Season 1 winner Priyanka. The season will focus on two U.S. towns over the course of six episodes, “taking an in-depth and more immersive look at the local political systems and participants, anti-lgbtq+ legislation and opposition, and their effect on the LGBTQ+ community,...
- 7/12/2023
- by Nick Caruso
- TVLine.com
GLAAD, the world’s largest lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) media advocacy organization, today announced that more than 250 LGBTQ and ally actors, notables, and other leaders signed a public letter created by GLAAD and the Human Rights Campaign (Hrc) calling on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and Twitter to better enforce hate speech, harassment, misinformation, and other existing content policies aimed at protecting transgender, nonbinary, and gender non-conforming users and all LGBTQ people.
The full letter and list of signatories can be found here.
The celebrities, influencers, and prominent public figures include: Alyssa Milano, Alan Cumming, Alok, Amber Ruffin, Amy Landecker, Amy Schumer, Angelica Ross, Annaleigh Ashford, Ariana Grande, Arisce Wanzer, Avan Jogia, Barbie Ferreira, Bebe Rexha, Bella Ramsey, Ben Barnes, Benito Skinner, Bethany Cosentino, Billy Eichner, Billy Porter, Bobby Berk, Bretman Rock, Brian Michael Smith, Busy Philipps, Camila Cabello, Cara Delevingne, Chella Man, Cheyenne Jackson, Christa Miller, Chris Perfetti,...
The full letter and list of signatories can be found here.
The celebrities, influencers, and prominent public figures include: Alyssa Milano, Alan Cumming, Alok, Amber Ruffin, Amy Landecker, Amy Schumer, Angelica Ross, Annaleigh Ashford, Ariana Grande, Arisce Wanzer, Avan Jogia, Barbie Ferreira, Bebe Rexha, Bella Ramsey, Ben Barnes, Benito Skinner, Bethany Cosentino, Billy Eichner, Billy Porter, Bobby Berk, Bretman Rock, Brian Michael Smith, Busy Philipps, Camila Cabello, Cara Delevingne, Chella Man, Cheyenne Jackson, Christa Miller, Chris Perfetti,...
- 6/28/2023
- Look to the Stars
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.