ReportWire

Tag: Quinta Brunson

  • The Best Red Carpet Looks at the 2026 Critics’ Choice Awards

    [ad_1]

    Ariana Grande. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    A mere four days into the new year, and the first awards show of 2026 is upon us. Tonight, the Critics’ Choice Awards celebrate the best in film and television, recognizing the finest actors, directors, writers, costume designers, editors and more in the industry.

    Along with the usual categories, the 31st Critics’ Choice Awards will include four new honors, for Best Variety Series, Best Sound, Best Stunt Design and Best Casting and Ensemble. Chelsea Handler is hosting the awards show for the fourth year in a row, and the ceremony will once again take place at the Barker Hangar at the Santa Monica Airport in Santa Monica, California.

    It’s always an A-list guest list; this evening’s presenters include Ali Larter, Alicia Silverstone, Allison Janney, Arden Cho, Ava DuVernay, Bradley Whitford, Billy Bob Thornton, Colman Domingo, Diego Luna, Ejae, Hannah Einbinder, Jeff Goldblum, Jessica Williams, Justin Hartley, Justin Sylvester, Kaley Cuoco, Keltie Knight, Marcello Hernández, Mckenna Grace, Michelle Randolph, Noah Schnapp, Owen Cooper, Quinta Brunson, Regina Hall, Rhea Seehorn, Sebastian Maniscalco and William H. Macy.

    Sinners leads the film pack with a staggering 17 nods, followed by One Battle After Another‘s still-impressive 14, while Netflix’s limited series, Adolescence, scored the most for television with six, followed by another Netflix show, Nobody Wants This, with five.

    Before the awards are handed out, however, the stars will walk the red carpet in the first major fashion moment of 2026. Last year’s show brought us standout looks like Margaret Qualley in ethereal Chanel, Colman Domingo in a brown leather Hugo Boss ensemble, Cynthia Erivo in black peplum Armani Privé and Mikey Madison in vintage Giorgio Armani, so we’re just going to have to wait with bated breath to see what this season’s nominees bring to the table. Below, see the best red carpet fashion moments from the 2026 Critics’ Choice Awards.

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Leighton Meester and Adam Brody. Getty Images

    Leighton Meester and Adam Brody

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Jessica Biel. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Jessica Biel

    in Lanvin 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Jacob Elordi. Getty Images

    Jacob Elordi

    in Bottega Veneta 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Elle Fanning. WWD via Getty Images

    Elle Fanning

    in Ralph Lauren 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Ariana Grande. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Ariana Grande

    in Alberta Ferretti 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Chase Infiniti. WireImage

    Chase Infiniti

    in Louis Vuitton

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Amanda Seyfried. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Amanda Seyfried

    in Valentino

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Natasha Lyonne. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Natasha Lyonne

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Britt Lower. Getty Images

    Britt Lower

    in Bottega Veneta 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Michael B. Jordan. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Cri

    Michael B. Jordan

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Jessica Williams. WWD via Getty Images

    Jessica Williams

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Keri Russell. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Keri Russell

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Meghann Fahy. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Meghann Fahy

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Adam Sandler and Jackie Sandler. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Adam Sandler and Jackie Sandler

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Jessie Buckley. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Jessie Buckley

    in Dior 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Rose Byrne. Getty Images

    Rose Byrne

    in Valentino 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Ego Nwodim. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Ego Nwodim

    in Carolina Herrera 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Kristen Bell. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Kristen Bell

    in Elie Saab 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Michelle Randolph. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Michelle Randolph

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Ethan Hawke. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Ethan Hawke

    in Bode 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Sarah Snook. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Sarah Snook

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Paul Mescal. WireImage

    Paul Mescal

    in Gucci 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Emily Mortimer. Getty Images

    Emily Mortimer

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Mckenna Grace. Getty Images

    Mckenna Grace

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Quinta Brunson. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Quinta Brunson

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Renate Reinsve. WireImage

    Renate Reinsve

    in The Row 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Mia Goth. WWD via Getty Images

    Mia Goth

    in Dior 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Ginnifer Goodwin. WireImage

    Ginnifer Goodwin

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Kaley Cuoco. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Kaley Cuoco

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Noah Schnapp. WWD via Getty Images

    Noah Schnapp

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Chloé Zhao. Getty Images

    Chloé Zhao

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Chase Sui Wonders. WireImage

    Chase Sui Wonders

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Justine Lupe. Getty Images

    Justine Lupe

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Odessa A’zion. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Odessa A’zion

    in Ott Dubai 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Chelsea Handler. Getty Images

    Chelsea Handler

    in Monique Lhuillier

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Sara Foster. WWD via Getty Images

    Sara Foster

    in Monique Lhuillier

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Erin Foster. Getty Images

    Erin Foster

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Bella Ramsey. WireImage

    Bella Ramsey

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Alicia Silverstone. Getty Images

    Alicia Silverstone

    in Stella McCartney 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Erin Doherty. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Erin Doherty

    in Louis Vuitton

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Ali Larter. Getty Images

    Ali Larter

    in Nina Ricci 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Sheryl Lee Ralph. Getty Images

    Sheryl Lee Ralph

    in Tony Ward Couture 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Jackie Tohn. Getty Images

    Jackie Tohn

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Rose McIver. Getty Images

    Rose McIver

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Danielle Brooks. Getty Images

    Danielle Brooks

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Hannah Einbinder. Variety via Getty Images

    Hannah Einbinder

    in Louis Vuitton 

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Ejae. Getty Images

    Ejae

    The Best Red Carpet Looks at the 2026 Critics’ Choice Awards

    [ad_2]

    Morgan Halberg

    Source link

  • It’s Always Sunny Takes a Field Trip to Abbott Elementary

    It’s Always Sunny Takes a Field Trip to Abbott Elementary

    [ad_1]

    Photo-Illustration: ABC/FX via Everett Collection

    After 16 seasons of absolute mayhem, the It’s Always Sunny gang truly has no business being around children. However, they’ll be taking a field trip to Willard R. Abbott Elementary School soon.

    October 3: Abbott Elementary mastermind Quinta Brunson posted a photo with Charlie Day and Rob McElhenney on set, seemingly teasing that a highly anticipated crossover was finally in the works. However, the testing only lasted for so long. An ABC rep confirmed to Vulture that there is a crossover episode this upcoming Abbott season. It makes sense for the two to collab; both shows are owned by Disney (Abbott through ABC, and Sunny through FX) and set in Philadelphia. Hell, both of them had Jason Kelce pop in for a cameo. It was only a matter of time. There’s no details about what the episode could entail, but we have some guesses about what the gang could get up to while at school:

    The Gang Breaks Into an Elementary School.
    The Gang Gets Their Degree.
    The Gang Tries to Empower the Youth.
    The Gang Goes to Career Day.

    October 9: A lot of NSFW improv is hitting the cutting-room floor as the Abbott Elementary crew shapes their crossover episode with It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia. “When we were shooting last week, Rob [McElhenney] had this improv in this one scene with Ava that I did not know was … coming; he just thought about it extemporaneously,” Patrick Schumacker told The Wrap. “It made me spit out my coffee, and then wish that we had just an episode that was like a gag reel of all the stuff that we can’t use.” Apparently, there is a lot they can’t use. As the Sunny/Abbott crossover was masterminded by the shows’ stars, the BTS producers are now struggling to make it make sense within the worlds of the TV shows. “When Quinta first brought it to me and Pat, I was like, ‘I don’t know how the fuck this is going to work … how are we going to marry these two tones but each show stay true to their own show?’” Abbott EP Justin Halpern said. “It was incredibly fun to do.” The Abbott folks added that McElhenney and Charlie Day spent time in the writers’ room to make it work. No word yet on when the crossover ep will air.

    October 26: This gives Disney Channel epic “That’s So Suite Life of Hannah Montana” crossover vibes. Instead of just the Gang barging into Abbott Elementary, the teachers will also be having a drink at Patty’s Pub. Variety confirmed that the crossover would be the ninth episode of the season for Abbott, but it’s not stated when the Always Sunny episode will air, as they have just begun production and will film with the cast in a “few weeks,” per Kaitlin Olsen. However, the Abbott episode will have a heavy “Charlie” (Charlie Day) storyline. Maybe Gregory’s Garden Goofballs will have some flowers for him.

    [ad_2]

    Alejandra Gularte

    Source link

  • Quinta Brunson, Ayo Edebiri & History-Making Sofia Vergara Land Emmy Nominations

    Quinta Brunson, Ayo Edebiri & History-Making Sofia Vergara Land Emmy Nominations

    [ad_1]

    This year’s Emmy nominations have been announced!

    Source: Michael Kovac / Getty

    The 76th annual Emmy Awards are set to kick off at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Sunday, September 15. With the big night only a couple of months away, Sheryl Lee Ralph and Tony Hale got together to announce the nominees live from the El Capitan Theatre on July 17.

    Following its Season 3 release, The Bear dominated nominations along with new fan-favorite, Shōgun. The Chicago-based food series even set a record for nominations in a single year in the comedy category with 23, a record previously held by 30 Rock with 22 nominations in 2009. Shōgun led the pack in the Drama category with 25 nominations.

     

    Ayo Edebiri is just one of the reasons The Bear racked up so many nods, earning a nomination for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series. Though she won Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for The Bear last year, this is her first time competing in the lead category.

    Abbott Elementary star and creator Quinta Brunson is going up against Edebiri to win Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series, competing alongside Jean Smart in Hacks, Kristen Wiig in Palm Royale, Maya Rudolph in Loot, and Selena Gomez in Only Murders in the Building.

    The series also earned nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series, Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series for Tyler James Williams, and Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for Sheryl Lee Ralph and Janelle James.

    Sofia Vergara’s portrayal of drug queenpin Griselda Blanco earned not only her fifth Emmy Award nomination but made her become the first Latina in history to be nominated for Lead Actress in a Limited Series.

    Check out the full list of 2024 Emmy nominations below:

    Outstanding Comedy Series

    Abbott Elementary

    The Bear

    Curb Your Enthusiasm

    Hacks

    Only Murders in the Building

    Palm Royale

    Reservation Dogs

    What We Do in the Shadows

     

    Outstanding Drama Series

    The Crown

    Fallout

    The Gilded Age

    The Morning Show

    Mr. and Mrs. Smith

    Shōgun

    Slow Horses

    3 Body Problem

    Outstanding Limited Series

    Baby Reindeer

    Fargo

    Lessons in Chemistry

    Ripley

    True Detective: Night Country

    Outstanding Actor in a Comedy Series

    D’Pharaoh Woon-a-Tai, Reservation Dogs

    Jeremy Allen White, The Bear

    Larry David, Curb Your Enthusiasm

    Matt Berry, What We Do in the Shadows

    Martin Short, Only Murders in the Building

    Steve Martin, Only Murders in the Building

     

    Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series

    Ayo Edebiri, The Bear

    Jean Smart, Hacks

    Kristen Wiig, Palm Royale

    Maya Rudolph, Loot

    Quinta Brunson, Abbott Elementary

    Selena Gomez, Only Murders in the Building

     

    Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

    Bowen Yang, Saturday Night Live

    Ebon Moss-Bachrach, The Bear

    Lionel Boyce, The Bear

    Paul Rudd, Only Murders in the Building

    Tyler James Williams, Abbott Elementary

     

    Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

    Carol Burnett, Palm Royale

    Hannah Einbinder, Hacks

    Janelle James, Abbott Elementary

    Liza Colon-Zayas, The Bear

    Meryl Streep, Only Murders in the Building

    Sheryl Lee Ralph, Abbott Elementary

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series

    Dominic West, The Crown

    Donald Glover, Mr. and Mrs. Smith

    Gary Oldman, Slow Horses

    Hiroyuki Sanada, Shōgun

    Idris Elba, Hijack

    Walton Goggins, Fallout

     

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series

    Anna Sawai, Shōgun

    Carrie Coon, The Gilded Age

    Imelda Staunton, The Crown

    Jennifer Aniston, The Morning Show

    Maya Erskine, Mr. and Mrs. Smith

    Reese Witherspoon, The Morning Show

     

    Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

    Billy Crudup, The Morning Show

    Jack Lowden, Slow Horses

    Jon Hamm, The Morning Show

    Jonathan Pryce, The Crown

    Mark Duplass, The Morning Show

    Tadanobu Asano, Shōgun

    Takehiro Hira, Shōgun

     

    Outstanding Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie

    Andrew Scott, Ripley

    Jon Hamm, Fargo

    Matt Bomer, Fellow Travelers

    Richard Gadd, Baby Reindeer

    Tom Hollander, Feud: Capote vs. the Swans

     

    Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or a Movie

    Dakota Fanning, Ripley

    Diane Lane, Feud: Capote vs. the Swans

    Jessica Gunning, Baby Reindeer

    Kali Reis, True Detective: Night Country

    Lily Gladstone, Under the Bridge

    Nava Mau, Baby Reindeer

    Outstanding Actress in a Limited Series or a Movie

    Brie Larson, Lessons in Chemistry

    Jodie Foster, True Detective: Night Country

    Juno Temple, Fargo

    Naomi Watts, Feud: Capote vs. the Swans

    Sofía Vergara, Griselda

     

    Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie

    Jonathan Bailey, Fellow Travelers

    Lamorne Morris, Fargo

    Lewis Pullman, Lessons in Chemistry

    Robert Downey Jr., The Sympathizer

    Tom Goodman-Hill, Baby Reindeer

    Treat Williams, Feud: Capote vs. the Swans

     

    Outstanding Variety Talk Series

    The Daily Show

    Jimmy Kimmel Live!

    Late Night With Seth Meyers

    The Late Show With Stephen Colbert

    Outstanding Scripted Variety Series

    Last Week Tonight with John Oliver

    Saturday Night Live

     

    Outstanding Reality Competition Program

    The Amazing Race

    RuPaul’s Drag Race

    Top Chef

    The Traitors

    The Voice

     

    Outstanding Structured Reality Program

    Antiques Roadshow

    Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives

    Love Is Blind

    Queer Eye

    Shark Tank

     

    Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program

    Below Deck

    Love on the Spectrum

    RuPaul’s Drag Race

    Vanderpump Rules

    Welcome to Wrexham

     

    Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality Competition Program

    Alan Cumming, The Traitors

    RuPaul Charles, RuPaul’s Drag Race

    Jeff Probst, Survivor

    Kristen Kish, Top Chef

    Barbara Corcoran, Daymond John, Kevin O’Leary, Lori Greiner, Mark Cuban, Robert Herjavec, Shark Tank

     

    Outstanding Host for a Game Show

    Jane Lynch, Weakest Link

    Keke Palmer, Password

    Ken Jennings, Jeopardy!

    Pat Sajak, Wheel of Fortune

    Steve Harvey, Celebrity Family Feud

     

    Outstanding Television Movie

    Mr. Monk’s Last Case

    Quiz Lady

    Red, White & Royal Blue

    Scoop

    Unfrosted

     

    Outstanding Animated Program

    Blue Eye Samurai

    Bob’s Burgers

    Scavengers Reing

    The Simpsons

    X-Men ‘97

     

    Outstanding Variety Special (Live)

    The Apple Music Super Bowl LVIII Halftime Show Starring Usher

    66th Grammy Awards

    The Greatest Roast Of All Time: Tom Brady

    The Oscars

    76th Annual Tony Awards

     

    Outstanding Variety Special (Pre-Recorded)

    Billy Joel: The 100th – Live At Madison Square Garden

    Dave Chappelle: The Dreamer

    Dick Van Dyke 98 Years Of Magic

    Nikki Glaser: Someday You’ll Die

    Trevor Noah: Where Was I

     

    Outstanding Short Form Comedy, Drama Or Variety Series

    Carpool Karaoke: The Series

    The Eric Andre Show

    Late Night With Seth Meyers Corrections

    Only Murders In The Building: One Killer Question

    Real Time With Bill Maher: Overtime

     

    Outstanding Documentary Or Nonfiction Special

    Albert Brooks: Defending My Life

    Girls State

    The Greatest Night In Pop

    Jim Henson Idea Man

    Steve! (Martin) A Documentary In 2 Pieces

    Outstanding Documentary Or Nonfiction Special

    Beckham

    The Jinx – Part Two

    Quiet On Set: The Dark Side Of Kids TV

    STAX: Soulsville U.S.A

    Steve! (Martin) A Documentary In 2 Pieces

    [ad_2]

    Rebecah Jacobs

    Source link

  • Quinta Brunson to star in upcoming ‘Cat in the Hat’ animated film

    Quinta Brunson to star in upcoming ‘Cat in the Hat’ animated film

    [ad_1]

    A new adaptation of Dr. Seuss’ “The Cat in the Hat” is in the works, and the cast includes “Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson.

    The animated film will premiere in theaters on March 6, 2026, Variety reported. Brunson’s role has not yet been specified, but “Barry” star Bill Hader will lead the cast in the role of the titular feline.


    RELATED: Quinta Brunson will receive honorary degree from Temple


    Along with Brunson and Hader, the vocal ensemble for the Warner Bros. Pictures Animation flick includes Bowen Yang, Xochitl Gomez, Matt Berry and Paula Pell. Susan Brandt, president and CEO of Dr. Seuss Enterprises, and Hader will executive produce the film. 

    “We are excited to see such an exceptional group of talent join the effort to bring this iconic property to the screen as an animated feature,” Brandt told Variety.

    “The Cat in the Hat” will reportedly be the first feature to debut as part of a slate of animated projects that Warner Bros. Pictures Animation is developing with Dr. Seuss Enterprises.

    This isn’t the first time the classic children’s book, which was written and illlustrated by Dr. Seuss and published in 1957, has been adapted for the screen. A live-action version starring Mike Myers was released in 2003, earning $134 million and scathing critical reviews.

    In this new feature version, directed and written by Alessandro Carloni and Erica Rivinoja, the Cat takes on the task of cheering up a pair of siblings who just moved to a new town, according to Deadline.

    “The Cat in the Hat” will reportedly be the first feature to debut as part of a slate of animated projects that Warner Bros. Pictures Animation is developing with Dr. Seuss Enterprises.

    West Philly-native Brunson recently earned her second Emmy for “Abbott Elementary,” when she was awarded outstanding lead actress in a comedy series. In May, she will receive an award and an honorary degree from Temple University, where she attended for a year, and address the graduating class during the school’s commencement. In a new interview with The New Yorker, Brunson said she hopes to make a “coming of age” show about a teen girl.

    “Abbott Elementary” is currently airing its star-studded third season on ABC, and has already been renewed for a fourth.

    [ad_2]

    Franki Rudnesky

    Source link

  • Abbott Elementary Reopens the School

    Abbott Elementary Reopens the School

    [ad_1]

    After eight painful, Abbott Elementary–less months, the teachers agreed to end the strike and are ready to reopen their classrooms. The workplace sitcom is returning for season three on February 7, giving you just enough time finish your homework (find 20 minutes of free time during the workday to watch). A promo assures us that Abbott is staying true to its Emmy-winning form. That is, quirky and funny and heartfelt and, probably, depicting one of Principal Ava Coleman’s latest scams or chaotic pranks. “Welcome back, slackers,” the remarkably unprofessional and unserious principal (Janelle James) yawps over the school intercom in the first trailer for the upcoming season. “I got cameras all over this joint.” The second trailer goes into further detail, showing that for once Ava is trying to do a good job…which is somehow so much worse then when she was half-assing it.

    Characters who should be used to constant surveillance of a documentary crew — remember, the show is an Office-style mockumentary — still shudder in fear over Ava’s potential threat to their privacy in the workplace. While the principal cackles at her own CCTV monitor, teacher Jacob (Chris Perfetti) makes his own plans to thwart her. “She must be stopped,” he vows. The second trailer shows the other teachers turning Gregory Eddie (Tyler James Williams) into a honeypot, or “Jeremy Allen Black” as Ava calls him. Whatever chaos Ava may relentlessly drag into the workplace is nothing in comparison to dealing with a broke school system that does nothing to support its students. Like, there’s new iPads (four) for Janine’s (creator Quinta Brunson) entire classroom, but only one of them is working. Just your average Wednesday at Abbott Elementary.

    [ad_2]

    Zoe Guy

    Source link

  • ‘Abbott Elementary’ returns for Season 3 next week. Here’s what to know

    ‘Abbott Elementary’ returns for Season 3 next week. Here’s what to know

    [ad_1]

    It’s back to school for fans of “Abbott Elementary” as the ABC sitcom returns next week.

    The series, which was created by and stars West Philadelphia-native Quinta Brunson, returns Wednesday, Feb. 7 with a special, hour-long Season 3 premiere. A new trailer shows what the staff of the titular Philly public school have been up to since viewers last saw them in the spring, and it’s clear that changes have been afoot.

    To commemorate the mockumentary’s return to TV, the “Abbott Elementary” team is launching a “Lunch Break” tour to donate meals and supplies to underserved schools across the country. The tour, which features a giant “lunch box vehicle,” will make a stop in Philadelphia on Friday, Feb. 2. No further information has been released about where the Philly stop will be.

    With just one week before “Abbott Elementary” returns, here’s what to know about Season 3:

    Who’s in the Season 3 cast?

    There will be some new faces this season. “Abbott Elementary” is welcoming actors Josh Segarra, Kimia Behpoornia and Benjamin Norris to recurring roles. The trio will portray “good-natured Philadelphia school district representatives who aim to bring fresh perspectives to their roles as school ambassadors,” Deadline reported.

    Segarra — known for roles in “The Other Two,” “Scream VI” and “She-Hulk” — will play a character named Manny, Behpoornia (“Hacks”) will play Emily and Norris (“Never Have I Ever”) will play Simon.

    Lisa Ann Walter, the recent “Celebrity Jeopardy!” champion who plays sassy second-grade teacher Melissa on the show, told Entertainment Tonight “so many great characters” will be in the third season

    Segarra, Behpoornia and Norris join a beloved returning cast that includes Brunson, who also produces and writes the show, as plucky second-grade teacher Janine Teagues. The fictional public school’s other quirky staff members are played by Walter, Tyler James Williams, Janelle James, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Chris Perfetti and William Stanford Davis. The show has featured cameos by acclaimed actors like Ayo Edebiri, Leslie Odom Jr. and Taraji P. Henson.

    What can we expect from Season 3?

    The new season is sure to set itself apart from previous installments, for multiple reasons. 

    Rather than beginning the season at the start of the school year, as the show did previously, the series will pick up in the middle of the school year to reflect its February premiere. The show experienced monthslong delays due to last year’s dual Writers Guild of America and SAG-AFTRA strikes. For this reason, the season will also be shorter than Season 2, containing just 14 episodes compared to 22. 

    “Our season will still be on the school calendar. Last year, we started airing in September, when school started. We’re not doing that this year,” Brunson told Deadline in October. “It’s not like coming back to a family show where you can pop in on that family on any sitcom-y thing. It’s really like, what’s going on in the school?”

    The hour-long premiere will center on a district-wide career day planned by Janine, who is anxious for it to be a success. The first episode also will show Ava (James) trying out a new approach to her role as principal, according to ABC. The first episode contains some surprises, according to Walter.

    “I will tell you this, the premiere episode of Season 3 is so chock full of new, exciting stuff,” Walter told Entertainment Tonight. “I can’t even, we’re not allowed to say it obviously. But all I can say is stay tuned. It’s a lot.”

    One such surprise seems to be the formerly lax Ava’s newfound rigidity as leader of the school, following an Ivy league stint over the break.

    “I went to Harvard this summer,” Ava says during the trailer. “I’ve learned what it truly takes to do the job of a principal.”

    ABC also teased details of the second episode, which airs Wednesday, Feb. 14. The Valentine’s Day episode handles the revelation that Janine’s ex Tariq (Zack Fox) is dating the mother of one of the school’s students, while Gregory (Williams) hesitantly deals with his newfound status as the “cool teacher.”

    Where did we leave off?

    When viewers last saw the “Abbott” crew, they were on a school field trip at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. The Season 2 finale marked the first time the show, which is set in Philly, was actually filmed in the city. 

    During that fateful night at the museum, Janine and Gregory finally had a tense chat about their feelings for each other. The pair, who have been pushing the boundaries between friendship and flirtation since the show began, shared a highly anticipated kiss earlier that season. But things were complicated because Janine was dating Gregory’s friend at the time. 

    The coworkers walked away from the Franklin Institute as just friends, with Janine hoping to focus on herself and Gregory looking for new beginnings. One of the most pressing concerns on fans’ minds is how the pair’s will-they-won’t-they relationship will resolve, but Season 3 is sure to give their slow burn more time to either simmer or fizzle.

    In the Season 3 trailer, Gregory and Janine refer to their friendship as “good” and “fine,” which appears to be a polite way of saying things are awkward.

    The latest accolades

    At the Emmys earlier this month, “Abbott Elementary” added to its long list of awards. Brunson won outstanding lead actress in a comedy series for her performance in the second season. It was Brunson’s second Emmy, having previously won for writing the pilot episode of “Abbott Elementary.” On Instagram, Brunson shared a larger-than-life congratulatory bouquet sent to the “Abbott” set by Oprah Winfrey, who Brunson portrayed in a 2022 Weird Al Yankovic biopic.

    When and where to watch

    Fans can catch up on Seasons 1 and 2 of “Abbott Elementary” on Hulu before the new season premieres Wednesday, Feb. 7 at 9 p.m. on ABC. Watch the trailer below:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-61kVCFplfI



    [ad_2]

    Franki Rudnesky

    Source link

  • Could AI Write This Article?

    Could AI Write This Article?

    [ad_1]

    Last week, social media erupted when the Writers Guild of America went on strike. Didn’t hear about it? Well, you will soon.


    If you don’t think the WGA Strike will affect you, consider this: what will happen when none of your favorite TV shows and movies are released when you expected they would be? What will happen when you tune in for a mindless episode of late-night comedy and there’s … nothing? What will happen when shows like Abbott Elementary are forced to shoot fewer episodes for the next season? Riots.

    So, I have your attention now? Good. I’m sure you have questions…and I’m here to answer them.

    Why Are The Writers On Strike?

    This isn’t our first writers’ strike. From November 2007 to February 2008, American TV writers went on strike for the first time this century. This resulted in a $1.5 billion impact on the Los Angeles economy and cost the U.S. entertainment industry $500 million…And someone’s telling us we don’t need writers?

    Essentially, the writers need to be paid more. The East and West branches of the WGA represent the writers of 11,500 movies and television series. And the WGA negotiates writer contracts with Hollywood studios roughly every three years. This year, things didn’t go so well.

    While the studios believe they made a fair appraisal of the compensation increase, the writers believe they are being undervalued. With the rise of Artificial Intelligence, studios are mulling over whether or not writers are truly essential anymore.

    The studios state that this is not the best time for the writers to see a major change in compensation. Meanwhile, the writers argue that streaming platforms have increased episode counts from the standard 8-10 run to close to 20 episodes a season and this severely cuts into their work lives.

    But Why Not Use AI?

    Look, I get it. AI helped you write that essay you procrastinated until the very last possible moment to write (don’t worry, I won’t tell). It generated that photo of you in 1800’s garb. It can make almost anything look real (it terrifies me to no end).

    But what AI can’t do is capture true human emotion in the ways that a writer can. While Chat GPT may get you 800 words, it surely won’t tell the truth about a certain brand or product. AI isn’t funny, doesn’t have a sense of humor…in other words, breaking news: robots can’t relate to us as well as humans can.

    I don’t know how we got to the point of such laziness and greed that we actually entertain the notion that writers are no longer critical in the wake of Artificial Intelligence. It’s insipid. But I do know that Artificial Intelligence can’t tell you about the time they flew cross-country only to crash a rental car in Los Angeles and almost got banned from the state after a Harry Styles concert.

    Who Is Affected By The Writers’ Strike?

    If this madness continues, the entire planet will be affected in some way or another. And this insanity looks like it’s going to go on for a while. Late-night talk shows have all stopped shooting – which means no one’s getting paid unless the hosts are paying out of pocket, and many are. Late-night programming is the most immediate effect of the strike.

    Meanwhile, films can halt production, but since movies take over a year to produce, release dates will just be pushed back. However, daily running shows like soap operas – a dying industry in itself – will run out of episodes to release within a month.

    With no one writing at all right now, there are no new seasons in the works. Netflix shows like Big Mouth, Stranger Things, and Unstable have shuttered their writers’ rooms. And on May 2, Abbott Elementary scribes weren’t allowed to start working on the next. Yellowjackets and Billions among other popular shows have also paused writing due to the strike.

    As you can see, we are about to face some major consequences. Celebs and the rich and famous are picketing with the writers, where you can see faces like Quinta Brunson, Dan Levy, Rob Lowe, and more boasting signs for the WGA. Late-night hosts like Seth Meyers and Jimmy Kimmel are paying their staff out-of-pocket for the time being.

    What Now?

    Writers are an essential part of storytelling, so we stand with the WGA and hope they get their bag ASAP. Plus, I will never forgive the Hollywood studios if I don’t see Quinta Brunson on my screen for endless-endless episodes. Get the deal done, Hollywood.

    So the answer is no, AI can’t write like a real writer does. AI can’t create your favorite show the way humans can. And without our brilliant writers, there would be no shows.

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • Quinta Brunson Shuts Down Critic Of ‘Abbott Elementary’ Charter School Plotline

    Quinta Brunson Shuts Down Critic Of ‘Abbott Elementary’ Charter School Plotline

    [ad_1]

    “Abbott Elementary” creator Quinta Brunson schooled a critic on her own academic background last week during a critique of her Emmy-winning television series.

    Jeanne Allen, founder and CEO of the Center for Education Reform, called Brunson out on Twitter last Thursday, stating that the actor and writer had “attended charter schools her entire education.”

    “She reportedly loved it at the time, heaped praise on it,” Allen added. “Once upon a time.”

    Brunson responded by deeming Allen “wrong and bad at research,” along with a detailed clarification of her education history.

    “I only attended a charter for high school. My public elementary school was transitioned to charter over a decade after I left,” she wrote on Twitter. “I did love my high school. That school is now defunct ― which happens to charters often.”

    In a second tweet, she added: “Loving something doesn’t mean it can’t be critiqued. Thanks for watching the show.”

    Brunson, a Philadelphia native, attended the Charter High School of Architecture and Design, or CHAD, which closed in 2020.

    Her exchange with Allen came one day after the most recent episode of “Abbott Elementary” aired, sparking debate among some real-life teachers and parents over the charter school movement.

    Titled “Festival,” the episode depicts Draemond Winding (played by Leslie Odom Jr.), the New York-based founder of a network of charter schools, plotting a takeover of the underfunded Abbott Elementary.

    Abbott’s conversion from a public school to a charter school would require implementing a rigid application process for students while possibly leaving many educators’ jobs on the chopping block.

    Allen has previously called out Brunson and “Abbott Elementary” for their depiction of the charter school movement. The March 2 episode, titled “Mural Arts,” alluded to charter schools as being broadly funded by “wealthy donors with ulterior motives.”

    Many interpreted the line, delivered by Sheryl Lee Ralph’s character, Barbara Howard, as a reference to Republican mega-donor Jeff Yass, who has spent millions to support charter schools and political action committees that push for the election of conservative candidates.

    Speaking to The Philadelphia Inquirer, Allen called the line a “gratuitous slap against people with wealth” and a “hollow, evidence-lacking shot at charter schools.”

    Brunson has frequently used her show to highlight the virtues of public education. Still, her comments on the movement as a whole have been measured.

    “Are charter schools better? Maybe,” she told Time. “But can we support our public schools more so that we don’t feel like one is necessarily better than the other? Because public schools have so much to offer. And we wanted to focus on: How can we support our public schools?”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • 2023 NAACP Image Awards: Complete Winners List

    2023 NAACP Image Awards: Complete Winners List

    [ad_1]

    By Mekishana Pierre‍, ETOnline.com.

    The 54th NAACP Image Awards did the thing! After its regular week-long, non-televised celebrations, the annual awards ceremony concluded with its main ceremony on Saturday night.

    Hosted by Grammy, Emmy and Golden Globe-winning actress and producer Queen Latifah, Saturday’s ceremony included Janelle Monae, Taye Diggs, Kerry Washington, Jonathan Majors, Zendaya and more presenting awards to their peers, while also highlighting the accomplishments of political leaders and activists.

    Jennifer HudsonQuinta Brunson, Keke Palmer and more scored wins during the pre-awards festivities, while Saturday’s ceremony saw Angela Bassett, Viola Davis, Will Smith and more honoured for their artistic contributions.


    READ MORE:
    2023 NAACP Image Awards Nominations: See the Full List

    This year’s Activist of the Year Award was presented to Dr. Derrick Lee Foward, president of the Dayton Unit of the NAACP and a vice president of the Ohio NAACP, and the Youth Activist of the Year Award honoured to Bradley Ross Jackson, the president of the youth council of the Bloomington-Normal NAACP in Bloomington, Indiana. Jackson was recognized for organizing a peaceful protest of over 1,000 people in response to the murder of George Floyd.

    Democratic Congressman Bennie G. Thompson from Mississippi, civil rights attorney Ben Crump, and Dwyane Wade and actress Gabrielle Union also received honours during the main ceremony.

    See the complete list of winners for the 54th NAACP Image Awards below, in bold:

    ACTIVIST OF THE YEAR AWARD

    Dr. Derrick Lee Foward

    CHAIRMAN’S AWARD

    Congressman Bennie G. Thompson

    JACKIE ROBINSON SPORTS AWARD

    Serena Williams

    PRESIDENTS AWARD

    Dwyane Wade and Gabrielle Union-Wade

    SOCIAL JUSTICE IMPACT AWARD

    Attorney Ben Crump

    VANGUARD AWARD

    Bethann Hardison

    YOUTH ACTIVIST OF THE YEAR AWARD

    Bradley Ross Jackson

    ENTERTAINER OF THE YEAR NOMINEES

    Angela Bassett
    Mary J. Blige
    Quinta Brunson
    Viola Davis
    Zendaya

    MOTION PICTURE CATEGORIES

    Outstanding Motion Picture

    A Jazzman’s Blues (Netflix)
    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)
    Emancipation (Apple TV)
    The Woman King (Sony Pictures Releasing)
    TILL (United Artists Releasing/Orion Pictures)

    Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture

    Daniel Kaluuya – Nope (Universal Pictures)
    Jonathan Majors – Devotion (Sony Pictures Entertainment)
    Joshua Boone – A Jazzman’s Blues (Netflix)
    Sterling K. Brown – Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul (Focus Features)
    Will Smith – Emancipation (Apple)

    Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture

    Danielle Deadwyler – TILL (United Artists Releasing/Orion Pictures)
    Keke Palmer – Alice (Vertical Entertainment)
    Letitia Wright – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)
    Regina Hall – Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul (Focus Features)
    Viola Davis – The Woman King (Sony Pictures Releasing)

    Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture

    Aldis Hodge – Black Adam (Warner Bros. Pictures / New Line Cinema)
    Cliff “Method Man” Smith – On The Come Up (Paramount Pictures)
    Jalyn Hall – TILL (United Artists Releasing/Orion Pictures)
    John Boyega – The Woman King (Sony Pictures Releasing)
    Tenoch Huerta – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)


    READ MORE:
    53rd NAACP Image Awards: The Complete Winners List

    Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture

    Angela Bassett – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)
    Danai Gurira – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)
    Janelle Monáe – Glass Onion: A Knives OutMystery (Netflix)
    Lashana Lynch – The Woman King (Sony Pictures Releasing)
    Lupita Nyong’o – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)

    Outstanding Independent Motion Picture

    Breaking (Bleecker Street)
    Causeway (Apple TV)
    Mr. Malcolm’s List (Bleecker Street)
    Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story (Hulu)
    The Inspection (A24)

    Outstanding International Motion Picture

    Athena (Netflix)
    Bantú Mama (ARRAY)
    Broker (NEON)
    Learn to Swim (ARRAY)
    The Silent Twins (Focus Features)

    Outstanding Breakthrough Performance in a Motion Picture

    Jalyn Hall – TILL (United Artists Releasing/Orion Pictures)
    Joshua Boone – A Jazzman’s Blues (Netflix)
    Ledisi – Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story (Hulu)
    Y’lan Noel – A Lot of Nothing (RLJE)
    Yola – Elvis (Warner Bros. Pictures)

    Outstanding Ensemble Cast in a Motion Picture 

    A Jazzman’s Blues (Netflix)
    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)
    Emancipation (Apple TV)
    The Woman King (Sony Pictures Entertainment)
    TILL (United Artists Releasing/Orion Pictures)

    Outstanding Animated Motion Picture

    DC League of Super-Pets (Warner Bros. Pictures / WAG / DC)
    Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (Netflix)
    Puss in Boots: The Last Wish (Universal Pictures)
    Turning Red (Pixar Animation Studios)
    Wendell & Wild (Netflix)

    Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance – Motion Picture

    Angela Bassett – Wendell & Wild (Netflix)
    Keke Palmer – Lightyear (Walt Disney Studios)
    Kevin Hart – DC League of Super-Pets (Warner Bros. Pictures / WAG / DC)
    Lyric Ross – Wendell & Wild (Netflix)
    Taraji P. Henson – Minions: The Rise of Gru (Universal Pictures)

    Outstanding Short-Form (Live Action)

    Dear Mama… (Film Independent)
    Fannie (Chromatic Black)
    Fathead (University of Southern California)
    Incomplete (20th Century Digital, Hulu)
    Pens & Pencils (Wavelength Productions/Black TV & Film Collective)

    Outstanding Short-Form (Animated)

    I Knew Superman (Houghtonville Animation)
    More Than I Want To Remember (MTV Entertainment Studios)
    Supercilious (York Cinemas)
    The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse (Apple Studios)
    We Are Here (271 Films)

    Outstanding Breakthrough Creative (Motion Picture)

    Elvis Mitchell – Is That Black Enough For You?!? (Netflix)
    Ericka Nicole Malone – Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story (Hulu)
    Krystin Ver Linden – Alice (Vertical Entertainment)
    Mo McRae – A Lot of Nothing (RLJE)
    Stephen Adetumbi, Jarrett Roseborough – This Is My Black (Campus of Pine Forge Academy)


    READ MORE:
    2022 NAACP Image Awards: Mary J. Blige Performs At the Iconic Apollo Theater

    TELEVISION + STREAMING CATEGORIES

    Outstanding Comedy Series

    Abbott Elementary (ABC)
    Atlanta
     (FX)
    black-ish (ABC)
    Rap Sh!t (HBO Max)
    The Wonder Years (ABC)

    Outstanding Actor in a Comedy Series

    Anthony Anderson – black-ish (ABC)
    Cedric The Entertainer – The Neighborhood (CBS)
    Donald Glover – Atlanta (FX)
    Dulé Hill – The Wonder Years (ABC)
    Mike Epps – The Upshaws (Netflix)

    Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series

    Loretta Devine – Family Reunion (Netflix)
    Maya Rudolph – Loot (Apple TV+)
    Quinta Brunson – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
    Tichina Arnold – The Neighborhood (CBS)
    Tracee Ellis Ross – black-ish (ABC)

    Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

    Brian Tyree Henry – Atlanta (FX)
    Deon Cole – black-ish (ABC)
    Kenan Thompson – Saturday Night Live (NBC)
    Tyler James Williams – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
    William Stanford Davis – Abbott Elementary (ABC)

    Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

    Janelle James – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
    Jenifer Lewis – black-ish (ABC)
    Marsai Martin – black-ish (ABC)
    Sheryl Lee Ralph – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
    Wanda Sykes – The Upshaws (Netflix)

    Outstanding Drama Series

    Bel-Air (Peacock)
    Bridgerton (Netflix)
    Euphoria (HBO Max)
    P-Valley (Starz)
    Queen Sugar (OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network)

    Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series

    Damson Idris – Snowfall (FX)
    Jabari Banks – Bel-Air (Peacock)
    Kofi Siriboe – Queen Sugar (OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network)
    Nicco Annan – P-Valley (Starz)
    Sterling K. Brown – This Is Us (NBC)

    Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series

    Angela Bassett – 9-1-1 (FOX)
    Brandee Evans – P-Valley (Starz)
    Queen Latifah – The Equalizer (CBS)
    Rutina Wesley – Queen Sugar (OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network)
    Zendaya – Euphoria (HBO Max)

    Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

    Adrian Holmes – Bel-Air (Peacock)
    Amin Joseph – Snowfall (FX)
    Caleb McLaughlin – Stranger Things (Netflix)
    Cliff “Method Man” Smith – Power Book II: Ghost (Starz)
    J. Alphonse Nicholson – P-Valley (Starz)

    Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series

    Adjoa Andoh – Bridgerton (Netflix)
    Bianca Lawson – Queen Sugar (OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network)
    Loretta Devine – P-Valley (Starz)
    Susan Kelechi Watson – This Is Us (NBC)
    Tina Lifford – Queen Sugar (OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network)

    Outstanding Television Movie, Limited-Series or Dramatic Special

    Carl Weber’s The Black Hamptons (BET Networks)
    From Scratch (Netflix)
    The Best Man: The Final Chapters (Peacock)
    The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey (Apple TV+)
    Women of the Movement (ABC)

    Outstanding Actor in a Television Movie, Limited-Series or Dramatic Special

    Morris Chestnut – The Best Man: The Final Chapters (Peacock)
    Samuel L. Jackson  – The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey (Apple TV+)
    Terrence Howard – The Best Man: The Final Chapters (Peacock)
    Trevante Rhodes – Mike (Hulu)
    Wendell Pierce – Don’t Hang Up (Bounce TV)

    Outstanding Actress in a Television Movie, Limited-Series or Dramatic Special

    Niecy Nash-Betts – Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story (Netflix)
    Regina Hall – The Best Man: The Final Chapters (Peacock)
    Sanaa Lathan – The Best Man: The Final Chapters (Peacock)
    Viola Davis – The First Lady (Showtime)
    Zoe Saldaña – From Scratch (Netflix)

    Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Television Movie, Limited-Series or Dramatic Special

    Glynn Turman – Women of the Movement (ABC)
    Keith David – From Scratch (Netflix)
    Omar Benson Miller – The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey (Apple TV+)
    Russell Hornsby – Mike (Hulu)
    Terrence “TC” Carson – A Wesley Christmas (AMC)

    Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Television Movie, Limited-Series or Dramatic Special

    Alexis Floyd –  Inventing Anna (Netflix)
    Danielle Deadwyler – From Scratch (Netflix)
    Melissa De Sousa – The Best Man: The Final Chapters (Peacock)
    Nia Long – The Best Man: The Final Chapters (Peacock)
    Phylicia Rashad – Little America (Apple TV+)

    Outstanding News/Information (Series or Special)

    #RolandMartinUnfiltered: Black Votes Matter Election Night 2022 Coverage (Black Star Network/YouTube)
    ABC News 20/20 Michelle Obama: The Light We Carry, A Conversation with Robin Roberts (ABC)
    Finding Your Roots with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (PBS)
    OWN Spotlight: Viola Davis – The Woman King (OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network)
    The Hair Tales (Hulu)

    Outstanding Talk Series

    Hart to Heart (Peacock)
    Red Table Talk (Facebook Watch)
    Sherri (Syndicated)
    Tamron Hall (ABC)
    Uninterrupted: The Shop (YouTube)

    Outstanding Reality Program, Reality Competition or Game Show (Series)

    Legendary (HBO Max)
    Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls (Amazon Studios)
    Shark Tank (ABC)
    Sweet Life: Los Angeles (HBO Max)
    The Real Housewives of Atlanta (Bravo)

    Outstanding Variety Show (Series or Special) 

    A Black Lady Sketch Show (HBO Max)
    BET Awards 2022 (BET Networks)
    Deon Cole: Charleen’s Boy (Netflix)
    Martin: The Reunion (BET Networks)
    The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (Comedy Central)

    Outstanding Children’s Program

    Family Reunion (Netflix)
    Raising Dion (Netflix)
    Raven’s Home (Disney+)
    Tab Time (YouTube Originals)
    Waffles + Mochi’s Restaurant (Netflix)

    Outstanding Performance by a Youth (Series, Special, Television Movie or Limited-Series)

    Alaya “That Girl Lay Lay” High – That Girl Lay Lay (Nickelodeon)
    Cameron J. Wright – Family Reunion (Netflix)
    Elisha Williams – The Wonder Years (ABC)
    Khali Spraggins – The Upshaws (Netflix)
    Ja’Siah Young – Raising Dion (Netflix)

    Outstanding Host in a Talk or News/Information (Series or Special) – Individual or Ensemble

    Jada Pinkett-Smith, Adrienne Banfield-Norris, Willow Smith – Red Table Talk (Facebook Watch)
    Jennifer Hudson – The Jennifer Hudson Show (Syndicated)
    Kevin Hart – Hart to Heart (Peacock)
    Lester Holt – NBC Nightly News (NBC)
    Tracee Ellis Ross – The Hair Tales (Hulu)

    Outstanding Host in a Reality/Reality Competition, Game Show or Variety (Series or Special) – Individual or Ensemble

    Keke Palmer – Password (NBC)
    Lizzo – Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls (Amazon Studios)
    Tabitha Brown – Tab Time (YouTube Originals)
    Taraji P. Henson – BET Awards 2022 (BET Networks)
    Trevor Noah – The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (Comedy Central)

    Outstanding Guest Performance

    Amanda Gorman – Sesame Street (HBO Max)
    Chance the Rapper – South Side (HBO Max)
    Colman Domingo – Euphoria (HBO Max)
    Glynn Turman – Queen Sugar (OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network)
    Gabourey Sidibe – American Horror Stories (FX)

    Outstanding Animated Series

    Central Park (Apple TV+)
    Eureka! (Disney Junior)
    Gracie’s Corner TV (YouTube)
    The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (Disney+)
    Zootopia+ (Disney+)

    Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance (Television)

    Billy Porter – The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (Disney+)
    Cedric the Entertainer – The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (Disney+)
    Chris Bridges – Karma’s World (Netflix)
    Cree Summer – Rugrats (Nickelodeon)
    Kyla Pratt – The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (Disney+)

    Outstanding Short Form Series – Comedy or Drama 

    Between The Scenes – The Daily Show (Comedy Central)
    Oh Hell No! With Marlon Wayans (Facebook Watch)
    Rise Up, Sing Out (Disney+)
    Sunday Dinner (Youtube)
    Zootopia+ (Disney+)

    Outstanding Short Form Series or Special – Reality/Nonfiction

    Black Independent Films: A Brief History (Turner Classic Movies)
    Daring Simone Biles (Snap)
    Historian’s Take (PBS)
    NFL 360 (NFL Network)
    Omitted: The Black Cowboy (ESPN)

    Outstanding Breakthrough Creative (Television)

    Amy Wang – From Scratch (Netflix)
    Branden Jacobs-Jenkins – Kindred (FX)
    Hannah Cope – Karma’s World (Netflix)
    Quinta Brunson – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
    Syreeta Singleton – Rap Sh!t (HBO Max)


    READ MORE:
    Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Attend 2022 NAACP Awards, Honored With President’s Award

    RECORDING CATEGORIES

    Outstanding New Artist

    Adam Blackstone – “Legacy” (BASSic Black Entertainment Records/Anderson Music Group/Empire)
    Armani White – “Billie Eilish” (Def Jam Recordings)
    Coco Jones – “ICU” (Def Jam Recordings)
    Fivio Foreign – “B.I.B.L.E” (Columbia Records)
    Steve Lacy – “Gemini Rights” (RCA Records)

    Outstanding Male Artist

    Brent Faiyaz – Wasteland (Lost Kids)
    Burna Boy – Love, Damini (Atlantic Records)
    Chris Brown – Breezy (Deluxe) (RCA Records/Chris Brown Entertainment)
    Drake – Honestly, Nevermind (OVO/Republic Records)
    Kendrick Lamar – Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers (pgLang/Top Dawg Entertainment/Aftermath/Interscope Records)

    Outstanding Female Artist

    Ari Lennox – age/sex/location (Dreamville/Interscope Records)
    Beyoncé – Renaissance (Columbia Records/Parkwood Entertainment)
    Chlöe – “Surprise” (Columbia Records/Parkwood Entertainment)
    Jazmine Sullivan – “Hurt Me So Good” (RCA Records)
    SZA – S.O.S. (RCA Records/Top Dawg Entertainment)

    Outstanding Gospel/Christian Album 

    All Things New – Tye Tribbett (Motown Gospel)
    Hymns – Tasha Cobbs Leonard (Motown Gospel)
    Kingdom Book One – Maverick City Music & Kirk Franklin (Tribl Records, Fo Yo Soul Recordings and RCA Inspiration)
    My Life – James Fortune (FIYA World/MNRK Music Group)
    The Urban Hymnal – Tennessee State University (TSU/Tymple)

    Outstanding International Song

    “Bad To Me” – Wizkid (RCA Records/Starboy/Sony Music International)
    “Diana” feat. Shenseea – Fireboy DML, Chris Brown, Shenseea (YBNL Nation / EMPIRE)
    “Last Last” – Burna Boy (Atlantic Records)
    “No Woman No Cry” – Tems (Def Jam Recordings)
    “Stand Strong” – Davido feat. Sunday Service Choir (RCA Records/Sony Music UK)

    Outstanding Music Video/Visual Album

    “About Damn Time”– Lizzo (Atlantic Records)
    “Be Alive” – Beyoncé (Columbia Records/ Parkwood Entertainment)
    “Lift Me Up” – Rihanna (Def Jam Recordings)
    “LORD FORGIVE ME” feat. FAT, Pharrell and OLU of EARTHGANG – TOBE NWIGWE (THE GOOD STEWARDS COLLECTIVE)
    “The Heart Part 5” – Kendrick Lamar (pgLang/Top Dawg Entertainment/Aftermath/Interscope Records)

    Outstanding Album

    age/sex/location – Ari Lennox (Dreamville/Interscope Records)
    Breezy (Deluxe) – Chris Brown (RCA Records/Chris Brown Entertainment)
    Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers – Kendrick Lamar (pgLang/Top Dawg Entertainment/Aftermath/Interscope Records)
    Renaissance – Beyoncé (Parkwood/Columbia Records)
    Watch the Sun – PJ Morton (Morton Records)

    Outstanding Soundtrack/Compilation Album

    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever – Music From and Inspired By – Ryan Coogler, Ludwig Göransson, Archie Davis and Dave Jordan (Hollywood Records)
    Bridgerton Season Two (Soundtrack from the Netflix Series) – Kris Bowers (Capitol Records)
    Entergalactic – Kid Cudi (Republic Records)
    P-Valley: Season 2 (Music From the Original TV Series) – Various Artists (Lions Gate Records)
    The Woman King – Terence Blanchard (Milan Records)

    Outstanding Gospel/Christian Song 

    “All in Your Hands” – Marvin Sapp (Elev8 Media & Entertainment LLC)
    “Fly (Y.M.M.F.)” – Tennessee State University (TSU/Tymple)
    “Positive” – Erica Campbell (My Block Inc.)
    “Whole World In His Hands” – MAJOR. (MNRK Music Group)
    “Your World” – Jonathan McReynolds (MNRK Music Group)

    Outstanding Jazz Album – Instrumental

    Detour – Boney James (Concord Records)
    JID014 (Jazz is Dead) – Henry Franklin, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, Adrian Younge
    The Funk Will Prevail – Kaelin Ellis (NCH Music)
    The Gospel According to Nikki Giovanni – Javon Jackson (Solid Jackson Records)
    Thrill Ride – Ragan Whiteside (Randis Music)

    Outstanding Jazz Album – Vocal

    Legacy – Adam Blackstone (BASSic Black Entertainment Records / Anderson Music Group / Empire)
    Linger Awhile – Samara Joy (Verve Records)
    Love and the Catalyst – Aimée Allen (Azuline)
    New Standards Vol. 1 – Terri Lyne Carrington (Candid Records)
    The Evening : Live at Apparatus – The Baylor Project (Be A Light)

    Outstanding Soul/R&B Song

    “About Damn Time” – Lizzo (Atlantic Records)
    “Cuff It” – Beyoncé (Columbia Record/Parkwood Entertainment)
    “Good Morning Gorgeous Remix” feat. H.E.R. – Mary J. Blige (300)
    “Hurt Me So Good” – Jazmine Sullivan (RCA Records)
    “Lift Me Up” – Rihanna (Def Jam Recordings)

    Outstanding Hip Hop/Rap Song 

    “Billie Eilish” – Armani White (Def Jam Recordings)
    “City of Gods” – Fivio Foreign (Columbia Records)
    “Hotel Lobby” – Quavo, Takeoff (Motown Records/Quality Control Music)
    “The Heart Part 5” – Kendrick Lamar (pgLang/Top Dawg Entertainment/Aftermath/Interscope Records)
    “Wait for U” – Future feat. Drake and Tems (Epic Records)

    Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration (Traditional) 

    Kendrick Lamar feat. Blxst & Amanda Reifer – “Die Hard” (pgLang/Top Dawg Entertainment/Aftermath/Interscope Records)
    Mary J. Blige feat. H.E.R. – “Good Morning Gorgeous” Remix (300)
    PJ Morton feat. Alex Isley and Jill Scott – “Still Believe” (Morton Records)
    Silk Sonic – “Love’s Train” (Atlantic Records)
    Summer Walker, Cardi B, and SZA – “No Love” (LVRN/Interscope Records)

    Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration (Contemporary) 

    Beyoncé feat. Grace Jones and Tems – “MOVE” (Columbia Records/Parkwood Entertainment)
    Chris Brown feat. Wizkid – “Call Me Every Day” (RCA Records/Chris Brown Entertainment)
    City Girls feat. Usher – “Good Love” (Motown Records/Quality Control Music)
    Future feat. Drake and Tems – “Wait For U” (Epic Records)
    Latto feat. Mariah Carey and DJ Khaled – “Big Energy (Remix)” (RCA Records)

    DOCUMENTARY CATEGORIES

    Outstanding Documentary (Film)

    Civil (Netflix)
    Descendant (Netflix)
    Is That Black Enough For You?!? (Netflix)
    Louis Armstrong’s Black & Blues (Apple TV+)
    Sidney (Apple TV+)

    Outstanding Documentary (Television)

    Black Love (OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network)
    Everything’s Gonna be All White (Showtime)
    Frontline (PBS)
    Race: Bubba Wallace (Netflix)
    Shaq (HBO Max)

    WRITING CATEGORIES

    Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series

    Aisha Muharrar – Hacks – “Episode 206” (HBO Max)
    Ayo Edebiri, Shana Gohd – What We do in the Shadows – “Episode 405” (FX)
    Brittani Nichols – Abbott Elementary – “Student Transfer” (ABC)
    Karen Joseph Adcock – The Bear – “Episode 105” (FX)
    Quinta Brunson – Abbott Elementary – “Development Day” (ABC)

    Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series

    Aurin Squire – The Good Fight – “Episode 603” (Paramount+)
    Branden Jacobs-Jenkins – Kindred – “Episode 101” (FX)
    Davita Scarlett – The Good Fight – “Episode 604” (Paramount+)
    Joshua Allen – From Scratch – “Episode 105” (Netflix)
    Marissa Jo Cerar – Women of the Movement – “Episode 101” (ABC)

    Outstanding Writing in a Television Movie or Special

    Bree West – A Wesley Christmas (BET Networks)
    Scott Mescudi (Story By), Ian Edelman, Maurice Williams – Entergalactic (Netflix)
    Jerrod Carmichael – Jerrod Carmichael: Rothaniel (HBO Max)
    Lil Rel Howery – Lil Rel Howery: I said it. Y’all Thinking it (HBO Max)
    Matt Lopez – Father of the Bride (HBO Max)

    Outstanding Writing in a Motion Picture 

    Charles Murray – The Devil You Know (Lionsgate)
    Dana Stevens, Maria Bello – The Woman King (Sony Pictures Releasing)
    Jordan Peele – Nope (Universal Pictures)
    Krystin Ver Linden – Alice (Vertical Entertainment)
    Ryan Coogler – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)

    DIRECTING CATEGORIES

    Outstanding Directing in a Comedy Series

    Angela Barnes – Atlanta – “The Homeliest Little Horse” (FX)
    Bridget Stokes – A Black Lady Sketch Show – “Save My Edges, I’m a Donor!” (HBO Max)
    Dee Rees – Upload – “Hamoodi” (Amazon Studios)
    Iona Morris Jackson – black-ish – “If A Black Man Cries in the Woods” (ABC)
    Pete Chatmon – The Flight Attendant – “Drowning Women” (HBO Max)

    Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series

    Debbie Allen – The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey – “Robyn” (Apple TV+)
    Giancarlo Esposito – Better Call Saul – “Axe and Grind” (AMC)
    Gina Prince-Bythewood – Women of the Movement – “Mother and Son” (ABC)
    Hanelle Culpepper – The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey – “Sensia” (Apple TV+)
    Kasi Lemmons – Women of the Movement – “Episode 106” (ABC)

    Outstanding Directing in a Television Movie or Special

    Anton Cropper – Fantasy Football (Paramount+)
    Marta Cunningham – 61st Street (AMC)
    Sujata Day – Definition Please (Netflix)
    Tailiah Breon – Kirk Franklin’s The Night Before Christmas (Lifetime)
    Tine Fields – Soul of a Nation: Screen Queens Rising (ABC)

    Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture

    Antoine Fuqua – Emancipation (Apple)
    Chinonye Chukwu – TILL (United Artists Releasing/Orion Pictures)
    Gina Prince-Bythewood – The Woman King (Sony Pictures Releasing)
    Kasi Lemmons – I  Wanna Dance With Somebody (Sony Pictures Releasing)
    Ryan Coogler – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)

    Outstanding Directing in a Documentary (Television or Motion Picture)

    Nadia Hallgren – Civil (Netflix)
    Reginald Hudlin – Sidney (Apple TV+)
    Sacha Jenkins – Everything’s Gonna Be All White (Showtime)
    Sacha Jenkins – Louis Armstrong’s Black & Blues (Apple TV+)
    W. Kamau Bell – We Need to Talk About Cosby (Showtime)

    LITERARY CATEGORIES

    Outstanding Literary Work – Fiction

    Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction – Sheree Renée Thomas (Macmillan)
    Light Skin Gone to Waste – Toni Ann Johnson (University of Georgia Press)
    Take My Hand – Dolen Perkins-Valdez (Penguin Random House)
    The Keeper – Tananarive Due, Steven Barnes (Abrams Books)
    You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty – Akwaeke Emezi (Simon & Schuster)

    Outstanding Literary Work – Nonfiction

    Finding Me – Viola Davis (HarperCollins Publishers)
    Grace: President Obama and Ten Days in the Battle for America – Cody Keenan (HarperCollins Publishers)
    Requiem for the Massacre – RJ Young (Counterpoint)
    Under the Skin – Linda Villarosa (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)
    Who’s Black and Why? A Hidden Chapter from the Eighteenth-Century Invention of Race – Henry Louis Gates, Andrew S. Curran (The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press)

    Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author

    America Made Me a Black Man – Boyah Farah (HarperCollins Publishers)
    Illustrated Black History: Honoring the Iconic and the Unseen – George McCalman (HarperCollins)
    Marriage Be Hard – Kevin Fredericks, Melissa Fredericks (Penguin Random House)
    Truth’s Table: Black Women’s Musings on Life, Love, and Liberation – Ekemini Uwan, Christina Edmondson, Michelle Higgins (Penguin Randomhouse Convergent Imprint)
    What the Fireflies Knew – Kai Harris (Penguin Random House)

    Outstanding Literary Work – Biography/Autobiography

    A Way Out of No Way: A Memoir of Truth, Transformation, and the New American Story – Raphael G. Warnock (Penguin Random House)
    Scenes from My Life – Raphael G. Warnock (Penguin Random House)
    The Light We Carry – Michelle Obama (Penguin Random House)
    Walking In My Joy: In These Streets – Jenifer Lewis (HarperCollins Publishers)
    You’ve Been Chosen – Cynt Marshall (Ballantine Books)

    Outstanding Literary Work – Instructional

    Black Joy: Stories of Resistance, Resilience, and Restoration – Tracey Lewis-Giggetts (Gallery/Simon and Schuster)
    Cooking from the Spirit – Tabitha Brown (William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers)
    Eat Plants, B*tch: 91 Vegan Recipes That Will Blow Your Meat-Loving Mind – Pinky Cole (Simon & Schuster)
    Homecoming: Overcome Fear and Trauma to Reclaim Your Whole Authentic Self – Thema Bryant (Penguin Random House/TarcherPerigee)
    The Five Principles: A Revolutionary Path to Health, Inner Wealth, and Knowledge of Self –  Khnum Ibomu (Hachette Book Group)

    Outstanding Literary Work – Poetry

    Best Barbarian – Roger Reeves (Norton)
    Bluest Nude – Ama Codjoe (Milkweed Editions)
    Concentrate – Courtney Faye Taylor (Graywolf Press)
    Muse Found in a Colonized Body – Yesenia Montilla (Four Way Books)
    To the Realization of Perfect Helplessness – Robin Coste Lewis (Alfred A. Knopf)

    Outstanding Literary Work – Children

    Ablaze with Color: A Story of Painter Alma Thomas – Jeanne Walker Harvey, Loveis Wise (HarperCollins)
    Black Gold – Laura Obuobi, London Ladd (HarperCollins)
    Blue: A History of the Color as Deep as the Sea and as Wide as the Sky – Nana Brew-Hammond, Daniel Minter (Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers)
    Stacey’s Remarkable Books – Stacey Abrams, Kitt Thomas (HarperCollins – Balzer + Bray)
    The Year We Learned to Fly – Jacqueline Woodson, Rafael Lopez (Penguin Random House)

    Outstanding Literary Work – Youth/Teens

    Cookies & Milk – Shawn Amos (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)
    Inheritance: A Visual Poem – Elizabeth Acevedo (HarperCollins – Quill Tree Books)
    Maybe An Artist, A Graphic Memoir – Liz Montague (Random House Studio)
    Me and White Supremacy: Young Readers’ Edition – Layla F. Saad (Sourcebooks)
    Opening My Eyes Underwater: Essays on Hope, Humanity, and Our Hero Michelle Obama – Ashley Woodfolk (Feiwel & Friends, Macmillan)

    PODCAST CATEGORIES

    Outstanding News and Information Podcast

    #SundayCivics (LJW Community Strategies)
    Beyond the Scenes – The Daily Show (Central Productions, LLC)
    Black Tech Green Money (The Black Effect Podcast Network)
    Holding Court with Eboni K. Williams (Interval Presents & Uppity Productions)
    Into America with Trymaine Lee (MSNBC)

    Outstanding Lifestyle/Self-Help Podcast

    Chile, Please (Honey Chile)
    GoOD Mornings with CurlyNikki (Walton Media, LLC)
    Man to Man: A Black Love Wellness Series (Black Love Inc.)
    Maejor Frequency (Audible)
    Therapy for Black Girls (Therapy for Black Girls)

    Outstanding Society and Culture Podcast

    Comeback with Erica Cobb (Erica Cobb LLC/One Street Studios)
    Higher Learning with Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay (Spotify & The Ringer)
    Into America with Trymaine Lee (MSNBC)
    LeVar Burton Reads (SiriusXM’s Stitcher Studios)
    The Sum of Us (Higher Ground)

    Outstanding Arts and Entertainment Podcast

    Angie Martinez IRL (Media Noche Productions)
    Black Girl Songbook (Spotify & The Ringer)
    Jemele Hill is Unbothered (Unbothered Inc, Spotify, Lodge Freeway Media, Exit 39)
    The Read (Loud Speakers Network)
    Two Funny Mamas (Mocha Podcasts Network)

    COSTUME DESIGN, MAKE-UP & HAIRSTYLING CATEGORIES

    Outstanding Costume Design (Television or Film)

    Francine Jamison-Tanchuck – Emancipation (Apple Studios)
    Gersha Phillips, Carly Nicodemo, Heather Constable, Christina Cattle, Sheryl Willock, Becky MacKinnon – Star Trek: Discovery (Paramount+)
    Gersha Phillips, Carly Nicodemo, Lieze Van Tonder, Lynn Paulsen, Tova Harrison – The Woman King (Tristar Pictures)
    Ruth Carter – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)
    Trayce Gigi Field – A League of Their Own (Prime Video)

    Outstanding Make-up (Television or Film)

    Angie Wells – Cheaper by the Dozen (Disney+)
    Debi Young, Sandra Linn, Ngozi Olandu Young, Gina Bateman – We Own This City (HBO Max)
    Michele Lewis – The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey (Apple Studios)
    Ren Rohling, Teresa Vest, Megan Areford – Emergency (Amazon Studios)
    Zabrina Matiru – Surface (Apple Studios)

    Outstanding Hairstyling (Television or Film)

    Camille Friend – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Marvel Studios)
    Curtis Foreman, Ryan Randall – RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars (Paramount+)
    Louisa V. Anthony, Deaundra Metzger, Maurice Beaman – TILL (United Artists Releasing/Orion Pictures)
    Mary Daniels, Kalin Spooner, Darrin Lyons, Eric Gonzalez – All American (The CW)
    Tracey Moss, Jerome Allen, Tamika Dixon, Lawrence “Jigga” Simmons, Jason Simmons – Fantasy Football (Paramount+)

    OUTSTANDING SOCIAL MEDIA PERSONALITY OF THE YEAR NOMINEES

    @Theconsciousless- George Lee
    @thechristishow – Christianee Porter
    @earnyourleisure – Troy Millings & Rashad Bilal
    @KevOnStage – Kevin Fredericks
    @lynaevanee – Lynae Vanee (Lynae Bogues)

    More From ET: 

    Ariana DeBose Speaks out for the First Time Since Viral BAFTAs Rap Performance

    How to Watch Major League Soccer Opening Weekend for Free — Live Stream the 2023 MLS Season

    How to Watch ‘Party Down’ Season 3 Online — Revival Series Now Streaming

    [ad_2]

    Melissa Romualdi

    Source link

  • Golden Globes 2023 Recap: Invite Jennifer Coolidge To Every Awards Show

    Golden Globes 2023 Recap: Invite Jennifer Coolidge To Every Awards Show

    [ad_1]

    In case you missed it, the less important version of the Oscars was last night! The Golden Globes were three and a half arduous hours of acceptance speeches and praise for what felt like the same three movies and shows. If you didn’t get to see the entire awards ceremony, don’t worry. I sure did. Let me catch you up.


    For starters: Austin Butler. No surprise here, Butler won best Actor in a Drama Motion Picture for Elvis. I mean, with a voice permanently stuck in Elvis’ cadence, you’d hope he gets his recognition.

    Austin Butler

    David Fisher/Shutterstock

    There were several awards given to the cast of Abbott Elementary, but the real award of the night goes to Tyler James Williams’ power pantsuit. Quinta Brunson’s mid-speech shoutout to a front-row Brad Pitt will forever live in my memory.

    Tyler James Williams

    Chris Pizzello/AP/Shutterstock

    We’ve all learned that what makes these shows bearable is inviting Jennifer Coolidge and handing her the mic. After warning the crowd that pronunciation wasn’t her strongsuit, the White Lotus favorite stole the show with quite the tearjerker.

    With equally iconic speeches from herself and creator, Mike White, Coolidge credits White for getting her neighbors to speak to her again and giving her life even though he killed her off in the show. Similarly, Mike White called out the audience for “passing onWhite Lotus originally.

    What a year it was for streaming TV shows. Hopeful nominees like Jenna Ortega (Wednesday), Evan Peters (Dahmer), Selena Gomez (Only Murders in the Building), and Jeremy Allen White (The Bear) were notable names in the crowd. Both Jeremy Allen White and Evan Peters received their first ever Golden Globe.

    Michelle Yeoh

    CAROLINE BREHMAN/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

    Movies like The Fabelman’s, The Banshees of Inisherin, and Everything, Everywhere, All At Once took home multiple awards. My personal favorite speeches came from Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan, who spoke about second chances in the industry. Yeoh even threatened physical violence when the music turned on to usher her off stage.

    And with the season opener of Awards Season behind us, it’s time to buckle up. We’re just getting started.

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • Must Read: Quinta Brunson Covers ‘Cosmopolitan,’ Instagram Releases 2023 Trend Report

    Must Read: Quinta Brunson Covers ‘Cosmopolitan,’ Instagram Releases 2023 Trend Report

    [ad_1]

    These are the stories making headlines in fashion on Tuesday.

    Quinta Brunson is the star of Cosmopolitan‘s The Party Issue
    The “Abbott Elementary” star and creator is gracing the cover of Cosmpolitan‘s Issue 8: The Party Issue. In an interview with Patrice Peck, Quinta Brunson discusses her path to television success, her appreciation for Marilyn Monroe and her role as a boss. When it comes to whether Brunson has had time to celebrate her recent award wins, she says, “I’m finding my ways to celebrate, but it’s been a consistent grind […] I look forward to the day when I can look back and remember, Ah, yeah. That was cool.” {Cosmopolitan}

    [ad_2]

    Brooke Frischer

    Source link

  • McConaughey, Kunis among People mag’s ‘People of the Year’

    McConaughey, Kunis among People mag’s ‘People of the Year’

    [ad_1]

    Matthew McConaughey, Mila Kunis, Jennifer Hudson and “Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson have been named People magazine’s 2022 “People of the Year.”

    LOS ANGELES — Matthew McConaughey, Mila Kunis, Jennifer Hudson and “Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson have been named People magazine’s 2022 “People of the Year.”

    The magazine unveiled its annual list Wednesday, with Editor in Chief Wendy Naugle explaining this year’s honorees were selected because of their efforts to help others.

    McConaughey was chosen for his advocacy efforts after the Uvalde school shooting rocked his hometown. Kunis was lauded for her fundraising — which People said has topped $37 million — for Ukraine, where she was born.

    Hudson and Brunson were honored for their onscreen work. Hudson, who launched a daytime talk show this year, was cited for her efforts to create an inclusive show where everyone felt welcome. Brunson’s “Abbott Elementary,” a critical hit that turned her into an Emmy winner, was praised as a show that brought many joy and showed that different generations can work well together.

    Each of the honorees are featured on a special cover that highlights their contributions. Kunis’ includes the quote, “I’m proud to be from Ukraine,” while Brunson includes her statement: “I’m a sign that times are changing.”

    McConaughey’s proclaims, “We have to do better for our kids,” while Hudson’s says, “I’m living my dream — and learning as I go.”

    Previous People honorees have included George Clooney, Regina King, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Sandra Oh, Selena Gomez and Simone Biles. This year’s special editions will be released Friday.

    [ad_2]

    Source link