Category: Entertainment

  • Kristen Bell Shares Secret Pre-Show Rituals for Awards Show Hosting Gigs

    Kristen Bell Shares Secret Pre-Show Rituals for Awards Show Hosting Gigs

    It’s guild season! While Kumail Nanjiani already has his hosting gig for the DGA Awards under his belt, Kristen Bell, Atsuko Okatsuka and Roy Wood Jr. are currently gearing up for their entertaining duties. Bell will host the Actor Awards (formerly SAG Awards) on March 1, while Okatsuka is hosting the L.A. show of the Writers Guild Awards and Wood is hosting the New York show on March 8. The three hosts divulge their preshow rituals, if they still get jitters and how much rehearsal is involved.

    What’s your preshow ritual?

    KRISTEN BELL Beta blockers.

    ROY WOOD JR. This is my third time hosting the Writers Guild Awards and the second time I’m doing it back-to-back. I did it once before, before COVID, and I learned a lot from that first time before COVID. There’s no real preshow ritual. My day is pretty normal. If it’s my custody week with my son, I do dad stuff till the babysitter arrives and I get to the hotel in time for rehearsal. I usually get to the hotel about an hour before a rehearsal just to meet the crew and speak to all the people. I like to just talk and see what their perspective is on the world and what they think. I more so have a postshow ritual. I’ve hosted the Webbys a couple of times, and I really enjoyed just sitting and looking at everybody. After the show ends, you can mingle and hang and everybody’s happy and you’re just a fly on the wall.

    ATSUKO OKATSUKA For hosting or presenting, I’m mostly going over the words and jokes out loud to myself beforehand. Getting this language that is not my first going on in my mouth!

    Have you been watching other awards shows to prepare?

    OKATSUKA Yes. What’s cool is that awards shows are hosted by my fellow comedian buddies. So to know them personally and watch how they deliver the jokes, what they chose to joke on, has been really cool. I just saw Conan O’Brien workshop some of the Oscars jokes the other night, too, and it’s just so inspiring to know we can bring our own personalities to a night of celebration and bring levity to what actually could be a stiff, nerve-racking night for many.

    WOOD I don’t really watch other awards shows. I’ve learned over the years that you really can’t learn anything from watching other people because they’re just doing their version of themselves. You can learn a little bit from watching someone host the same award show as you. For the Correspondents’ Dinner [that I hosted in 2023], I probably watched 15 years’ worth of performances before me. For Writers Guild, I watched one or two. But honestly, once you’re up there, it’s just you. You’re just being yourself.

    Growing up, would you watch awards shows and say, “I’d love to host one of these?”

    OKATSUKA Growing up, I did not have that self-esteem. I’m still learning to find it, but it makes it all the more special that me, an immigrant kid who was never supposed to be in the U.S., who lived in a garage undocumented with her mom and grandma, would be hosting the WGA Awards. Thank you to all those who believed and continue to believe in me.

    WOOD I never watched an awards show and thought that I’d never host one.

    How many writers do you plan on working with? Or if you’re already deep in prep, how many writers are you working with?

    BELL I’ve been working with my dear friend Monica Padman. She knows how to write for my voice better than anyone.

    WOOD Well, for previous Writers Guild award shows, I think we’ve had about eight to 10 people. For Correspondents’ Dinner, I had six writers. For the 2025 MLB Awards, I had two. For last year’s Peabody Awards, I had two.

    OKATSUKA I’m working with Sophie Buddle. She’s an incredible comedian and friend and worked at After Midnight as the head monologue writer.

    How much rehearsal is involved?

    BELL A lot. Like … a lot a lot. We rehearse the scripts, the beats, the walk-ups, the walk-aways, the camera marks. I practice reading a teleprompter, I practice pretending to not read a teleprompter even though I absolutely am. By show day, it’s basically muscle memory.

    OKATSUKA I’m currently in the process of it. Currently starting to gather the jokes and will be starting to workshop jokes at local lineups in Los Angeles. When I’m prepping for something, I will repeat the jokes to myself at home to my trees on the porch for a while before I go out to try it out in front of people.

    WOOD We’ve already started ideating, and that happened at the end of January. We were already having preliminary thoughts on what the topics would be, but the actual performance on the day, you rehearse it on that day, but by then, you know the jokes like the back of your hand.

    Are you going to do a song and dance?

    BELL I always try to incorporate music when I can, so you’ll have to tune in to find out.

    WOOD No, no, no, no. Though I did rap last year at the MLB Awards. I don’t think I’ll rap this year.

    OKATSUKA I am known to dance … but there’s also something to be said about stillness. And letting the jokes do their thing.

    Nikki Glaser rehearsed her jokes at stand-up sets ahead of her Globes hosting gig — on whom do you rehearse your jokes?

    BELL My kids. If a joke survives that room, it can survive anything.

    WOOD I run the jokes with the writers. I’ve done enough monologues at enough awards shows now, and I’ve done enough hosting to know whether or not this joke is going to work.

    OKATSUKA To the gorgeous trees outside of my house, my amazing assistant Zoe, my husband at home first. … I like to workshop in the privacy of my own place first before I try it out in front of a crowd. I’m very wary of performing in public with notes in hand. I want to give the best version of myself every time I’m on a stage because people made the effort to come out and see a show.

    Where do you draw the line in terms of poking fun at nominees?

    BELL I don’t roast people. I want to keep it happy and fun. If I’m going to roast anybody, it’s going to be me.

    WOOD My comedy in general, I don’t talk about people, so I don’t really plan to poke fun at nominees. I never have. And if I do, the joke is a reverse show-of-respect type thing, but I’m not out there to insult anybody.

    OKATSUKA Just punch up. Always punch up. Be silly-forward, not entitled, and talk about what you genuinely would laugh about, which for me is absurdist, existential and relatable everyday stuff, so I’m good. There’s no “line” I’m afraid I’d cross, at least.

    What is the most stressful part about hosting?

    WOOD Remembering the jokes, not going too fast. And then, sometimes, there are curveballs on the day where this person’s supposed to be coming, but they aren’t. But that’s what makes it exciting is when you have a presenter who wants to do a joke or do something silly with you, that’s always a load off because it’s a place to get a free joke.

    OKATSUKA This is my first time hosting an awards show. But as I prep, the most “stressful” aspect would probably be having to make jokes about current events, being up to date with the zeitgeist at the same time you’re trying to bring fresh, unique, unheard takes.

    This story appeared in the Feb. 23 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

  • A24 Horror Movie ‘Backrooms,’ Adapting Kane Parsons’ YouTube Series, Gets Ominous First Trailer

    A24 Horror Movie ‘Backrooms,’ Adapting Kane Parsons’ YouTube Series, Gets Ominous First Trailer

    Backrooms revealed its spooky first footage for the horror feature that adapts Kane Parsons’ YouTube series.

    A24 releases director Parsons’ film theatrically May 29. The project stars Chiwetel Ejiofor, Renate Reinsve, Mark Duplass, Finn Bennett, Lukita Maxwell and Avan Jogia.

    Backrooms centers on two people who find a mysterious door in the basement of a furniture showroom.

    “I found something,” Ejiofor says in voiceover during the teaser trailer. “I found a place. It’s massive in there and just goes on and on and on. All these rooms — this place builds them. Actually, more like it remembers them, and the more times it remembers something, the less it does.”

    Parsons helmed the movie from a script by Will Soodik. A24 and The North Road Company’s Chernin Entertainment co-financed the movie and serve as co-studios for the film that counts 21 Laps Entertainment and Atomic Monster as producers.

    Kori Adelson, Dan Cohen, Chris Ferguson, Dan Levine, Shawn Levy and James Wan serve as producers.

    Backrooms is inspired by Parsons’ viral YouTube horror series that has amassed more than 190 million views. The 20-year-old Parsons becomes the youngest filmmaker in A24’s history.

    The movie’s release follows the recent success of Iron Lung, an indie horror film that filmmaker and YouTube content creator Markiplier self-distributed theatrically earlier this year, with the video game adaptation having surpassed $43 million at the global box office. During a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Markiplier explained that numerous studios and distributors had rejected his project.

    “There still is a stigma against YouTube,” Markiplier said. “It’s not like I’m going to topple the mountain by myself. It has to be toppled and then toppled again, until it becomes normalized. Once it becomes normalized, then it can become boring, and it’s like, ‘Of course a YouTuber can do this,’ and there’s nothing to question about it.”

  • ‘Scrubs’ Season 10 Review: Zach Braff, Donald Faison and Company Return With Familiar Hijinks, for Better or Worse

    ‘Scrubs’ Season 10 Review: Zach Braff, Donald Faison and Company Return With Familiar Hijinks, for Better or Worse

    Fine. I’ll be the guy who defends the ninth season of ABC’s Scrubs (2009-2010).

    No, it isn’t a perfect season, but let’s not pretend it’s some reputation-destroying embarrassment, best ignored or discussed with sad-faced pity. It isn’t the Netflix seasons of Arrested Development.

    Scrubs

    The Bottom Line

    Nothing has changed, if that’s what you crave.

    Airdate: 8 p.m. Wednesday, February 25 (ABC)
    Cast: Zach Braff, Donald Faison, Sarah Chalke, Judy Reyes
    Creator: Bill Lawrence

    What it represented was an attempt for the Scrubs brand to move forward without (for the most part) Zach Braff‘s J.D., an effort to mature and evolve and adapt. The writing didn’t necessarily have a purposeful driving imperative, but the show’s new cast was exceptional, and there were worse things to do than watch Kerry Bishé, Eliza Coupe, Dave Franco and Michael Mosley executing Bill Lawrence’s dialogue and wild tonal shifts. It felt like a fresh start, even if it wound up being an end.

    This, then, becomes the prism through which one must view the tenth season of Scrubs, or the first season of the reboot of Scrubs, premiering on ABC on Wednesday (February 25).

    If you want Scrubs back, but want it back the way it existed through its first eight seasons — with acknowledgement of the passage of time, but no real maturation — then the first four episodes of the reboot deliver roughly what you want. Definitely not more. But probably not less.

    If, however, you thought the way Scrubs concluded after eight seasons was close to ideal, and that the need for a major paradigm shift was the reason the ninth season remained valid, then the reboot feels like a regression — a creative step backwards.

    And again, this revival isn’t a Netflix-seasons-of-Arrested-Development-level embarrassment. It’s just a museum piece: still funny in bursts, still boosted by the chemistry of the core cast, but hampered by all the elements that frequently tripped the show up in its closing seasons — or at least the biggest offending element, namely that J.D. keeps treading water and slowing down everybody and everything in the show that’s trying to grow.

    ABC wants critics to treat some silly plot points as secretive, which hardly matters in the long run. The only thing that matters is that through some set of circumstances, J.D. (Braff), Turk (Donald Faison), Elliot (Sarah Chalke) and Carla (Judy Reyes) are reunited at Sacred Heart; that Dr. Cox (John C. McGinley) is in the first of four episodes sent to critics; that Hooch (Phill Lewis) and The Todd (Robert Maschio) pop up occasionally; and that nobody acknowledges anything related to the ninth season.

    We find out very early on the status of J.D. and Elliot’s marriage, as well as the state of Turk and Carla’s relationship. Some things have changed. Other things haven’t. I’m not going to pretend that the specifics matter.

    There are some absent faces from the past, but plenty of new faces to give the impression that the practice of medicine goes on at Sacred Heart. Vanessa Bayer plays Sibby, who is in HR or mental health or some amalgamation of elements that let her be a general wet blanket, restricting some of the same old behaviors — Todd’s sexism, Cox’s abuse, J.D.’s everything — as if to suggest that society hasn’t changed, but one smiling administrator has.

    Joel Kim Booster plays Dr. Eric Park, a surgeon who immediately becomes J.D.’s adversary, even though Dr. Park is correct about absolutely everything and J.D. is wrong about absolutely everything. That’s kinda the way Scrubs has always worked, and there’s no evidence that the show is aware that Park is right about everything and J.D. is wrong about everything.

    Then there are a bunch of fresh-faced young doctors, including Asher (Jacob Dudman), who is so thoroughly a sitcom version of Whitaker from The Pitt that my notes just call him “Huckleberry” throughout. Then we’ve got Dr. Tosh (Ava Bunn), whom everybody makes fun of because she uses social media a lot; Blake (David Gridley), who’s very attractive; and surgical interns Dashana (Amanda Morrow) and Amara (Layla Mohammadi).

    The first episode hinges primarily on machinations to bring J.D. back into the fold at the hospital, a process that’s bafflingly ill-considered. Scrubs is a show that needed barely any contrivances at all, and yet they’ve chosen to lean into details that are frustratingly dumb and not in a “I can let it go because it’s a sitcom so there’s no requirement that the medical stuff make sense” kind of way. It’s dumb in a “This makes no sense and everything that follows makes no sense, and I’m now rooting for all the adversarial characters because they’re clearly right (even if they aren’t written well enough to be rooted for)” kind of way. It isn’t just Dr. Park who gets swiftly annoyed at J.D. for reasons that he’s right about. Elliot, Turk and several other characters spend the four episodes I’ve seen being exasperated at J.D.; they, like Dr. Park, are completely correct, and the show doesn’t understand why.

    And if you’re saying, “So nu? Isn’t that what the show has always been?” Yes! But in giving the voiceover narration to Bishé’s Lucy, the ninth season — whether you liked it or not — endeavored to explore what was universal about breaking into the medical profession, presenting a version of naïveté that was recognizable, but not recognizably J.D. Restoring the narrative to J.D.’s perspective, only limitedly matured over 25 years, is a bore. If J.D. was a man-child when the show started, back in 2001, what is he now if his privilege has allowed him to skate through live generally unweathered?

    Faison, Chalke and McGinley all have truly effective dramatic beats as we see the strain their lives have suffered over these three decades. Nothing impacting them adjusts the stakes in a way that is inappropriately melancholic or melodramatic. They’re just grown-ups. I was so impressed, especially with Faison, that it became vaguely depressing watching the next three episodes and being reminded that, even if you can hope that a half-hour here or there will give the other cast members deserved opportunities, the show is not and never has been an ensemble. It’s Braff’s show. He even directs the pilot. The show’s gravity pulls everything toward him and negates the necessity to follow through with anybody else.

    The cutaway fantasy sequences are as amusingly whimsical as they’ve always been, but they again show that J.D.’s version of the fantastical remains exactly what it always was. The substance and execution of the fantasy sequences were both fairly innovative for a broadcast sitcom in 2001, and largely remain so. What has changed is that the rest of the Bill Lawrence sensibility, which he kept in the broadcast space for so long, has moved to Apple and Netflix and across the streaming landscape, capitalizing on expanded running time and loosened tonal restrictions to become the dominant voice of the half-hour (or more) comic format. Shows like Ted Lasso and Shrinking have proven how, with five to 10 extra minutes per episode, zaniness and seriousness can go hand-in-hand. In this new season of Scrubs, the seriousness goes back to being an occasional condiment.

    Was the medical material in Scrubs ever good? I would argue that it really was fine at the show’s peak. I don’t require all medical comedies to be somewhat pointed satires, but there’s a newfound toothlessness when Scrubs tries to tackle the high cost of prescription drugs or … actually, nothing else. None of the medical plots stick.

    Whatever my complaints or disappointments, I still love Faison, Chalke and the little bit of McGinley we’re treated to. The new stars are all fine, with Morrow, Mohammadi and Dudman the standouts. Bayer is always good at playing characters who are so chipper you assume there’s something wrong with them, and these episodes are beginning to show the cracks in her cheery veneer.

    And it isn’t exactly Braff’s fault that I don’t find J.D.’s hijinks as funny at 50 as they were at 25, because Braff is still participating gamely in the silliness.

    In the original series, Cox took to calling J.D. “Bambi,” because he seemed so wide-eyed, wobbly and unformed. Sticking with the Disney references, J.D. has become more of a Peter Pan figure, and the show around him, which looked ready to move forward 15 years ago, is back to refusing to grow up.

    If that’s what you want from Scrubs, you’ll be pleased.

  • Ed Skrein Cast as Baldur in Prime Video’s ‘God of War’

    God of War has found its Baldur.

    Prime Video‘s big-budget adaptation of PlayStation’s hit mythology-themed game has cast Jurassic World Rebirth star Ed Skrein as the show’s major villain.

    Skrein will play opposite the previously announced Ryan Hurst (Sons of Anarchy), who plays the show’s protagonist, the Spartan warrior Kratos. Skrein’s credits also include Deadpool and Rebel Moon.

    Here’s the official description of Skrein’s character: “Baldur may be the youngest son of Odin, but he’s his father’s most dangerous weapon. Charismatic, unpredictable and armed with a razor-sharp tongue, Baldur lives by his own rules. As a boy, Baldur was cursed; this curse denied him the ability to feel pleasure and physical sensation. This fuels an insatiable anger and bloodlust in Baldur, who favors a brawling fighting style that blends his immense power with the raw impact of his fists. Above all else, he longs for an opponent that can truly match his prowess in battle. An opponent that can finally make him feel something.”

    God of War already has a two-season commitment with Ronald D. Moore (Battlestar Galactica) serving as showrunner and Emmy-winning director Frederick E.O. Toye (Shōgun) directing the first two episodes.

    Other previously announced cast includes Callum Vinson as Atreus, Max Parker as Heimdall, Ólafur Darri Ólafsson as Thor, Teresa Palmer as Sif, Alastair Duncan as Mimir, Jeff Gulka as Sindri, Danny Woodburn as Brok and Mandy Patinkin as Odin.

    The series will follow the storyline of the two most recent God of War games, which introduced Kratos’ 10-year-old son, Atreus. The two will “embark on a journey to spread the ashes of their wife and mother, Faye,” the show’s logline reads. “Through their adventures, Kratos tries to teach his son to be a better god, while Atreus tries to teach his father how to be a better human.”

    Moore, who has an overall deal at Sony, executive produces with Maril Davis, Cory Barlog, Naren Shankar, Matthew Graham, Asad Qizilbash, Jeff Ketcham, Hermen Hulst, Roy Lee and Brad Van Arragon. Joe Menosky, Marc Bernardin, Tania Lotia and Ben McGinnis are co-EPs. Sony and Amazon MGM are producing God of War with PlayStation Productions and Moore’s Tall Ship Productions.

  • Rachel Reid’s Next Novel ‘Unrivaled’ Pushed to 2027: “This Book Will Be Worth the Wait”

    Rachel Reid’s Next Novel ‘Unrivaled’ Pushed to 2027: “This Book Will Be Worth the Wait”

    Unrivaled, the next novel by Rachel Reid, has been moved to 2027, the author said Tuesday.

    Reid, the New York Times best-selling author of Heated Rivalry, announced earlier this year that she’s releasing the seventh book in her Game Changers series. The book series serves as the source material of the wildly popular Crave-HBO Max, Heated Rivalry.

    In a video posted to Instagram, Reid explained Unrivaled would need to move to June 2027 from its original September 2026 release date. The Canadian author started by sharing her gratitude for the last few months. “I can’t really put into words what any of this feels like for an author,” Reid said in the video.

    “My life has gotten very different in the last couple months, and although it’s all good, it’s also taken away my ability to have quality time to write,” she added. “There’s nothing more important to me than Unrivaled being the best book it can possibly be.”

    Reid has been open about being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. “I think when good things happen, sometimes the universe hands you some worse stuff to balance it out. For me, that’s been that my Parkinson’s symptoms have gotten a bit worse, and it’s made it difficult physically to write,” she said.

    “I’m definitely a lot slower. And that’s just something I need to learn how to navigate and kind of face instead of ignoring,” Reid added. The author said to fans in the video that she hopes it’s not too much of a wait. Comments under Reid’s post reassured the author that everyone is fine with waiting a bit longer.

    Reid reassured fans that she’s excited about the book. “Ultimately, it’s gonna be a much better book and that’s the most important thing to me. It’ll be better for the readers, and it’ll be better for the characters,” she said. The author also teased some announcements that fans have been waiting for later this week that’ll hopefully “soften the blow” of Unrivaled being pushed.

    Unrivaled will be a sequel to Heated Rivalry and The Long Game, which both focus on hockey players Shane Hollander and Ilya Rozanov, rival professional players turned lovers (sorry, Shane).

    Spoiler alert for any show-only fans ahead, but Unrivaled will pick up following the events of Heated Rivalry’s sequel The Long Game, which found Shane and Ilya, earnestly in a relationship, dealing with their relationship becoming public, their marriage and the news that Shane would be joining Ilya on his hometown team, the Ottawa Centaurs.

    “For the first time in their professional hockey careers, Ilya Rozanov and Shane Hollander have nothing to hide. For more than a decade, they kept their love a secret, but now they’re out, married and even playing on the same team. The support is incredible. Most of the time,” the book’s official synopsis reads.

    The synopsis continues: “They’ve gotten a lot of love from fans who are thrilled for them. But some people in the hockey world are still reeling from their relationship reveal, and the backlash — led by popular hockey podcast Top Shelf and the #TakeBackHockey movement — is getting louder. Ilya and Shane are finally able to stand together in the light, the way they’d always wanted. And now they might be facing their biggest challenge yet.”

    Reid’s novels received a massive bump in popularity following the released of Heated Rivalry, the Crave-produced series, which airs on HBO Max in the U.S. Heated Rivalry and The Long Game recently became New York Times best sellers, several years after their initial publication. Game Changers, the first book in the series, was featured during episode three of the series.

    Crave renewed Heated Rivalry, starring Hudson Williams as Shane and Connor Storrie as Ilya, for a second season, and HBO Max confirmed it will continue to air the series. Tierney, who wrote and directed the show’s entire first season, has confirmed that he’ll return to direct the series, but told THR ahead of Heated Rivalry’s finale that he was considering the possibility “that other writers will come in to help” him out but that he wasn’t sure yet.

  • Next ‘Heated Rivalry’ Book Delayed to 2027, Author Says Parkinson’s Disease Has Worsened and ‘Made It Difficult Physically to Write’

    Next ‘Heated Rivalry’ Book Delayed to 2027, Author Says Parkinson’s Disease Has Worsened and ‘Made It Difficult Physically to Write’

    Author Rachel Reid is asking fans of Ilya Rozanov and Shane Hollander to hold on just a little longer.

    The author behind the “Game Changers” hockey romance series announced Tuesday that “Unrivaled,” the seventh installment in the franchise and third chapter in Shane and Ilya’s arc, has been pushed from its planned Sept. 29 release date to June 1, 2027. Reid shared the news in a video posted to Instagram, citing both the seismic life changes that followed the runaway success of the “Heated Rivalry” television adaptation and a worsening of her Parkinson’s disease symptoms.

    “It’s been absolutely incredible. I can’t really put into words what any of this feels like for an author,” Reid said in the video. “It’s beyond a dream come true.” But she was candid about the toll that newfound fame has taken. “It’s also been very, very busy and overwhelming. My life has gotten very different in the last couple of months, and although it’s all good, it’s also taken away my ability to have quality time to write.”

    Reid was equally open about her health. “When good things happen, sometimes the universe hands you some worse stuff to balance it out,” she said. “For me, that’s been that my Parkinson’s symptoms have gotten a bit worse, and it’s made it difficult physically to write. So I’m definitely a lot slower, and that’s just something I need to learn how to navigate.”

    However, she was quick to reassure fans that the book itself is progressing. “The writing is going well,” Reid said. “I just need a little more time.” Pre-orders, she noted, will not be canceled.

    The delay comes as the literary universe Reid built over the last eight years has exploded into mainstream interest. “Heated Rivalry,” the Crave original series that brought Shane (Hudson Williams) and Ilya (Connor Storrie) to the screen, became a phenomenon after its release on HBO Max, earning a Season 2 renewal in December and sending its two leads to the Golden Globes and Fashion Week. Williams has since been named a friend of the house at Balenciaga and is set to star in an upcoming Crave original, “Yaga.” Storrie, meanwhile, is hosting “Saturday Night Live” this weekend and is attached to star in A24’s upcoming comedy “Peaked.”

    Season 2 of “Heated Rivalry” is expected to begin production later this year, with a 2027 premiere planned — meaning the show and “Unrivaled” may land in the same calendar year.

    “Unrivaled” picks up with Ilya and Shane newly married and publicly out, navigating a homophobic backlash in the professional hockey world led by a podcast called Top Shelf and a movement called #TakeBackHockey. It will be the first new book in the Shane-and-Ilya universe since “The Long Game” in 2022, and it’s the seventh entry in the broader “Game Changers” series, which includes “Game Changer,” “Heated Rivalry,” “Tough Guy,” “Common Goal,” “Role Model.”

    “There’s nothing more important to me than ‘Unrivaled’ being the best book it can possibly be,” Reid said. “I think it’ll be better for the readers and it’ll be better for the characters.”

    She also hinted at an upside coming soon, teasing that “some announcements” would be made later this week “about some things that I think people have been hoping for.”

  • Disney+ Latin America Taps Daniel Burman as Head of Original Content

    Disney+ Latin America Taps Daniel Burman as Head of Original Content

    The Walt Disney Company has tapped Argentine filmmaker Daniel Burman as head of original content, Disney+ LATAM.

    Burman, who will report directly to Eric Schrier, president Disney Television Studios & Global Original Television Strategy, joins Disney from The Mediapro Studio which he joined through his production banner, Oficina Burman, in 2017.

    Alongside Martín Iraola, president, The Walt Disney Company, LATAM and the senior leadership team, he will zero in on bolstering the scope, quality and ambition of Disney LATAM’s original productions in Latin America, leading creative development, fostering new talent and integrating more Latin American stories in Disney’s international lineup.

    Burman’s appointment comes soon after Leonardo Aranguibel stepped down Feb. 22 from his position of VP and head of production, operations & strategy at The Walt Disney Company Latin America. The Walt Disney Company has also reverted to more centralized operations, with territories now reporting directly to Burbank.  

    “Daniel’s career reflects an extraordinary combination of artistic excellence and strategic vision,” said Eric Schrier. “He has a proven ability to tell deeply local stories that travel globally.  His experience building creative organizations and delivering internationally recognized productions uniquely positions him to grow our local slate and elevate our original content in Latin America in ways that complement our global portfolio.”

    “The region is rich with compelling stories, and Daniel is the right leader to bring them to audiences around the world. He has a strong track record of creating local content and positioning it for success on the global stage,” concurred Martín Iraola, president, The Walt Disney Company, LATAM.

    While at The Mediapro Studio, Burman performed similar duties as well as creating, developing, producing and directing high‑profile scripted content for prominent platforms, including “Victoria Small”—nominated for an International Emmy and winner of the Rose d’Or for best TV series; “Yosi, the Regretful Spy,” which garnered three International Emmy nominations across its two seasons and the feature film “Transmitzvah.”

    Most recently, for The Mediapro Studio, Burman developed and created the series “Maledictions,” “Cometierra” and a new title, an ironic semi-autobiographical male crisis dramedy “So Far So Good,” presented last week at the Berlinale Series Market.

    “I am deeply excited about this opportunity. Working alongside the teams at The Walt Disney Company, where storytelling has always been a distinguishing feature, is hugely inspiring, and I hope to promote opportunities for the creative community in Latin America to develop vibrant, relevant stories that are an authentic reflection of our region,” added Burman.

    While an independent filmmaker, Burman directed 12 feature films, scoring wins and debuting at major international festivals including Berlin, Sundance, Tribeca and Cannes.

  • Salt-N-Pepa and DJ Spinderella to Be Inducted Into NAACP Image Awards Hall of Fame

    Salt-N-Pepa and DJ Spinderella to Be Inducted Into NAACP Image Awards Hall of Fame

    Legendary rap group Salt-N-Pepa and DJ Spinderella will be inducted into the NAACP Image Awards Hall of Fame during this year’s Image Awards ceremony.

    Cheryl “Salt” James, Sandra “Pepa” Denton, and Deidra “DJ Spinderella” Roper will receive the special honor during the 57th NAACP Image Awards telecast on Saturday, Feb. 28. It’s the latest award for the rap trailblazers who were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last fall.

    “As pioneers of hip-hop, Salt-N-Pepa and DJ Spinderella rewrote the rules and boldly claimed space in a genre that forever changed because of their voices, style, and undeniable talent,” said NAACP president and CEO Derrick Johnson. “Inducting them into the NAACP Image Awards Hall of Fame is a celebration of more than an iconic career – it’s a tribute to trailblazers who opened doors, and inspired generations in a way that still resonates today.”

    The Hall of Fame Award is presented to “individuals or groups who have been pioneers in their respective fields and whose influence continues to shape their industry for generations.” Past inductees include New Edition, Eddie Murphy, Oprah Winfrey, Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin, Spike Lee and Earth, Wind and Fire. Last year, the Wayans family received the special honor.

    “Salt-N-Pepa and DJ Spinderella have built a legacy defined by confidence, authenticity, and cultural influence,” said Connie Orlando, executive VP of specials, music programming & music strategy at BET. “They reshaped how women are seen and heard in music, creating space for bold self-expression and empowerment. Inducting them into the NAACP Image Awards Hall of Fame honors a career that continues to strengthen community, elevate culture, and connect generations.”

    The NAACP also announced the lineup of presenters for the ceremony, including “Sinners” filmmaker Ryan Coogler and stars Delroy Lindo and Miles Caton; “One Battle After Another” duo Chase Infiniti and Regina Hall; “You, Me & Tuscany” stars Halle Bailey and Regé-Jean Page; Janelle James; Nicole Beharie; Ryan Michelle Bathé; Sterling K. Brown; and the cast of Tyler Perry’s “Sistas.” NAACP president & CEO Derrick Johnson and NAACP chairman Leon W. Russell will also present during the ceremony, with Colman Domingo set to be recognized with the President’s Award and Viola Davis to accept the Chairman’s Award.

    Other special honorees during this year’s NAACP Image Awards week include A$AP Rocky, who will receive the Vanguard Award for fashion; and Rev. Dr. Jamal-Harrison Bryant, who will receive the prestigious Mildred Bond Roxborough Social Justice Impact Award.

    Deon Cole returns to host the 57th NAACP Image Awards, broadcast live from the Pasadena Civic Auditorium at 8 p.m. ET/PT on BET, CBS and across Paramount networks. Kyla Pratt and Terrence J. have been tapped to host the live red carpet pre-show, beginning at 3 p.m. PT on BET.com.

  • ‘God of War’ Live-Action Series Casts Ed Skrein as Baldur

    ‘God of War’ Live-Action Series Casts Ed Skrein as Baldur

    Ed Skrein is the latest addition to the live-action “God of War” TV series at Amazon Prime Video.

    Skrein will star as Baldur in the series, which is currently in pre-production in Vancouver. He will appear alongside series leads Ryan Hurst (Kratos) and Callum Vinson (Atreus), as well as cast members Max Parker as Heimdall, Ólafur Darri Ólafsson as Thor, Mandy Patinkin as Odin, Alastair Duncan as Mimir, and Danny Woodburn and Jeff Gulka as as brothers Brok and Sindri.

    As previously reported, the series will pick up with the story of the two most recent “God of War” games, in which Kratos must raise his ten-year old son Atreus while battling god of the Norse pantheon. Per the logline, “Father and son Kratos and Atreus embark on a journey to spread the ashes of their wife and mother, Faye. Through their adventures, Kratos tries to teach his son to be a better god, while Atreus tries to teach his father how to be a better human.”

    The official character description for Baldur states:

    “Baldur may be the youngest son of Odin, but he’s his father’s most dangerous weapon. Charismatic, unpredictable and armed with a razor-sharp tongue, Baldur lives by his own rules. As a boy, Baldur was cursed; this curse denied him the ability to feel pleasure and physical sensation. This fuels an insatiable anger and bloodlust in Baldur, who favors a brawling fighting style that blends his immense power with the raw impact of his fists. Above all else, he longs for an opponent that can truly match his prowess in battle. An opponent that can finally make him feel something.”

    Skrein’s TV credits include “Game of Thrones” and “All the Light We Cannot See.” He is best known for his film roles, including starring in the first “Deadpool” movie as the villainous Francis/Ajax as well as features like Zack Snyder’s “Rebel Moon,” “Jurassic World Rebirth,” and “Alita: Battle Angel.”

    He is repped by WME, 42, and Johnson Shapiro Slewett & Kole.

    “God of War” has received a two-season order at Amazon. Ronald D. Moore is the writer, executive producer, and showrunner on “God of War” under his Tall Ship Productions banner.

    Frederick E.O. Toye will direct the first two episodes of “God of War.” Maril Davis of Tall Ship also executive produces alongside Cory Barlog, Naren Shankar, Matthew Graham, Asad Qizilbash, Jeff Ketcham, Hermen Hulst, Roy Lee, and Brad Van Arragon. Joe Menosky, Marc Bernardin, Tania Lotia, and Ben McGinnis serve as co-executive producers on the series. The series is co-produced by Sony Pictures Television and Amazon MGM Studios in association with PlayStation Productions and Tall Ship Productions. Tall Ship is under an overall deal at Sony TV.

  • ‘First Time Caller’ Movie in the Works From ‘Tell Me Lies’ Producer, A Cup of Happy Productions (EXCLUSIVE)

    ‘First Time Caller’ Movie in the Works From ‘Tell Me Lies’ Producer, A Cup of Happy Productions (EXCLUSIVE)

    A movie based on B.K. Borison’s hit 2025 romance novel “First Time Caller” is in the works.

    The film rights to the book, which follows a hopeless romantic who meets a jaded radio host in a “Sleepless in Seattle”–inspired love story, have been optioned by Daryl Steiger’s romance-focused A Cup of Happy Productions.

    “Tell Me Lies” executive producer Laura Lewis is set to produce the project and Amy Huckabay will write the screenplay. Borison is an executive producer.

    Per the official synopsis for the “First Time Caller” book, which is the second installment in Borison’s “Heartstrings” trilogy, “Aiden Valentine has a secret: he’s fallen out of love with love. And as the host of Baltimore’s romance hotline, that’s a bit of a problem. But when a young girl calls in to the station asking for dating advice for her mom, the interview goes viral, thrusting Aiden and Heartstrings into the limelight. Lucie Stone thought she was doing just fine. She has a good job; an incredible family; and a smart, slightly devious kid. But when all of Baltimore is suddenly scrutinizing her love life—or lack thereof—she begins to question if she’s as happy as she believed. Maybe a little more romance wouldn’t be such a bad thing. Everyone wants Lucie to find her happy ending…even the handsome, temperamental man calling the shots. But when sparks start to fly behind the scenes, Lucie must make the final decision between the radio-sponsored happily ever after or the man in the headphones next to her.”

    “This story is so special to me, and I’m thrilled to be partnering with A Cup of Happy Productions to bring these characters to life,” Borison said. “I wrote this book as a love letter to love and I simply can’t wait to see it on the screen.”

    Borison is repped by Kim Lionetti at BookEnds for her literary work and Lucy Stille at Lucy Stille Literary for film and TV.

    Huckabay is repped by Chris Coggins at Heroes and Villains Entertainment.