October is shaping up to be a busy month for Netflix, with just as many titles being removed as are going to be added, including some Halloween favorites you should consider checking out before the month is up.
TV
Trevor Noah spent his first four minutes as host of “The Daily Show” paying tribute to his predecessor Jon Stewart and acknowledging the debate that ensued over who should succeed Stewart at the helm of the Comedy Central franchise.
Extreme sports athlete Erik Roner, who appeared regularly on MTV’s “Nitro Circus,” died in a skydiving accident Monday morning, Placer County Sheriff’s Deputies confirm. He was 39.
“Who’s the Boss?” star Danny Pintauro revealed that he’s HIV-positive in an interview with Oprah Winfrey that aired on Saturday.
For a show that rarely features the inside of a courtroom, “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,” the fictional television drama with an exaggerated portrayal of forensic science, certainly has had great influence at Clark County’s Regional Justice Center.
The first week of the fall TV season comes to an end Sunday with the premieres of ABC’s new dramas “Blood & Oil” and “Quantico.” Here’s a look.
A little show about forensic investigators that made its debut on Friday nights in the fall of 2000 would go on to change the fate of a network, the face of television and the way the world saw our city.
A timeline of “CSI: Crime Scene Investigators” throughout its 15-year run.
Twitter is starting to make a bigger push for TV fans, networks and advertisers wanting to reach a primetime audience: The company has started to make its TV Timelines feature more widely available, and is adding shortcuts to the TV experience directly to its users’ tweets.
One of the very first musical guests on ‘The Muppets’? None other than local homeboys in Imagine Dragons — due at this weekend’s Life Is Beautiful festival — playing “Roots” with the inimitable Dr. Teeth and The Electric Mayhem.
Nickelodeon has confirmed its intention to launch “The Splat!,” a block of programming and other content related to its 1990s heyday, when the Viacom-owned kids’ outlet produced memorable programming like “Ren & Stimpy,” “Clarissa Explains It All” and “Hey Arnold!”
“Welcome to Good Burger, home of the Good Burger. Can I take your order?” Kel Mitchell intoned on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” on Wednesday night.
Stephen Colbert is bringing something new and extraordinarily timely to late-night TV, as he demonstrated in the eagerly awaited “Late Show” appearance by Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on Tuesday night.
“You know, plenty of shows out there are, like, ‘Here’s the kid with cancer; now give me an Emmy.’ We’re a show that’s here to show you a hell of a good time for 45 minutes each and every week. That’s our job.”
Amazon.com Inc will launch six TV show pilots for its video streaming service in the United States, the UK, Germany and Austria for the 2015 fall pilot season.