What We Do In The Shadows Season 6 Will End The Bloodsucking Comedy Series
Nandor, Guillermo, and the rest of the gang will hang it up for good after What We Do in the Shadows airs its sixth and final season next year.
Read MoreNandor, Guillermo, and the rest of the gang will hang it up for good after What We Do in the Shadows airs its sixth and final season next year.
Read MoreAfter the success of Wednesday, Netflix is expanding its Addams Family universe of shows. But is centering the next one on Fred Armisen the right move?
Read MoreMarvel's What If...? season 2 is making history by creating the first ever Mohawk superhero who speaks in the indigenous language, with help from local experts.
Read MoreThe Star Wars timeline, or more accurately timelines, are hard to keep straight, and that's why Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni use the methods they use.
Read MoreAlan Ritchson has a lot of insight into Lee Child's Jack Reacher character after playing him for a whole season, and he knows what makes a good Reacher story.
Read MoreGary Oldman understands that humor, and especially farts, are important to both his Slow Horses character and the show at large.
Read MoreNetflix is going all-in on franchises with plans for TV spin-offs of Wednesday, Extraction, and Peaky Blinders, plus an animated remake of One Piece.
Read MoreDanny DeVito has a certain ritual he performs whenever he needs to play Frank on It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
Read MoreFrom the foul people on top of the system to the system itself, these were the best movie and TV villains of 2023.
Read MoreLauren Tom has always been an invaluable part of the Futurama cast, but the reason she was initially cast by Matt Groening is a bit surprising.
Read MoreTed Danson's Sam and Shelley Long's Diane were the backbone of Cheers, and when Kelsey Grammer's Frasier threatened to come between them, one fan intervened.
Read MoreIn the nearly 100 year history of the Academy Awards, a lot of Best Picture winners have been remade, or sequelized, but only a few have had their own TV shows.
Read MoreThe It's Always Sunny gang have all been friends for so long that when they're coming up with new ideas, they sometimes plagiarize old ones.
Read MoreRick and Morty fall into a fear hole, where they must confront their deepest fears, in the Rick and Morty season 7 finale.
Read MoreThe cast of Bones was being so boisterous on set that the first assistant director had to pull them aside and stage an intervention.
Read MoreM*A*S*H's main characters were often seen drinking in the first couple seasons, but after a call from a baseball legend, the writers reconsidered these habits.
Read MoreThe great Dabney Coleman made a memorable appearance in the Yellowstone season 2 finale as Kevin Costner's character's father. Here's how Coleman got that role.
Read MoreKate McKinnon hosted Saturday Night Live for the first time, and while she easily fit back into the show, something felt a little awkward throughout.
Read MoreWhen it came to translating his particular brand of suspense to the small screen, Alfred Hitchcock had to deal with runtimes and sponsors.
Read MoreSNL guest host Kate McKinnon re-enacts a popular Hollywood legend about how Meet Me In St. Louis director Vincente Minnelli made little Tootie cry on camera.
Read MoreLieutenant Reginald Barclay wasn't exactly a hotshot in his Star Trek appearances, but the actor who also played him was also a member of the A-Team.
Read MoreKelsey Grammer worked with an impressive cast on Fraiser. On of his co-stars, however, got on his nerves sometimes.
Read MoreThe first TNG film, Star Trek: Generations, bent over backward to get Picard and Kirk together. Trekkies didn't want it, and the story suffered for it.
Read MoreWhen it comes to Fry and Leela's relationship on Futurama, the show's writers have a new rule that they don't intend to break.
Read MoreActors are often changing their bodies when a certain character requires it, but sometimes, actors like Jennifer Lawrence and Harrison Ford refuse to change.
Read MoreBuffy the Vampire Slayer's whole premise was based on the lead character suffering - a fact that certainly wasn't lost on Joss Whedon himself.
Read MoreMASH actor Wayne Rogers was apparently notorious for breaking on the set of the dramedy, which didn't always please creator Larry Gelbart.
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