Actor Tom Hanks has said that he has been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, the most common form of the metabolic disease.
TV
Rosebud is a sled. So goes the ending of the 1941 Orson Welles classic “Citizen Kane,” spoilers be damned!
The ABC drama “Lucky 7” has won a dubious derby as the first television show of the new season to be cancelled.
Some fans of “Breaking Bad,” the AMC series which concluded Sunday night, were inspired to place an obituary for character Walter White in the Albuquerque Journal.
The pope’s dating the president? A Mark Twain character’s murdering people?
Sunday’s “Breaking Bad” turned out the lights on one of the darkest shows in television history.
The supply is running low and you know there won’t be more. “Breaking Bad” stands to leave its fans reeling.
A Henderson bakery was tapped to compete on Food Network’s “Cupcake Wars” just months after it opened.
A skit poking fun at West on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live” on Tuesday provoked an irate call from the rapper about an hour and half before Thursday’s show, Kimmel said in his monologue.
It’s like the “Mad Men” of gettin’ it on.
Dexter deserved better. So did “Dexter” fans, who, witnessing this Showtime drama end in a heap, were subjected to the lamest series finale since “Seinfeld.”
“Breaking Bad,” the brutal saga of an everyman’s ambition turned evil, captured its first best drama Emmy Award on Sunday, while “Modern Family” won its fourth consecutive trophy for top comedy series.
The late Johnny Carson is coming back to NBC. The network said Thursday that it is developing a miniseries based on the life of the talk show host, who ruled late-night television as host of the “Tonight” show from 1962 to 1992.
It’s still bloody. It’s still good. But it hasn’t been bloody good for a while now.
Emmy Awards crystal-ball gazing was so much easier in the old days, circa the last few years: ABC’s “Modern Family” would be honored as best comedy series and a cable show, “Homeland” or “Mad Men” or such, would win best drama.