Entrepreneur Bethenny Frankel discusses "shadow-banning" allegations and business tips
Self-made businesswoman and philanthropist Bethenny Frankel is now a popular beauty influencer. She posts reviews on what she thinks are the best luxury and drugstore brands. Frankel joins "CBS Mornings" to share tips for turning a good idea into a successful business.
news.yahoo.comReview: Michael K. Williams’ final performance deepens ‘Breaking’
By JAKE COYLE“Breaking,” Abi Damaris Corbin’s lean and heartfelt first feature, is a lackluster bank-robbery thriller with noble intentions enlivened by an impassioned performance by John Boyega and an elegiac final appearance by the late Michael K. Williams. It’s not until well into “Breaking” that Williams, as a police negotiator, turns up. But the actor, who died last year, immediately reorients and deepens the film. Inside the bank, Brian spends most of his time pleading for a negotiator to be assigned or imploring a local reporter (Connie Britton) for coverage. “Breaking,” a Bleecker Street release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for some violent content, and strong language.
mlive.comAntebellum brings racial justice call to reopened theaters
This image released by Lionsgate shows co-writer/directors Christopher Renz, left, and Gerard Bush on the set of "Antebellum." Filmmakers Bush and Renz planned to release their feature-length debut film, Antebellum, in the spring of 2020, just as the coronavirus pandemic exploded internationally. In Antebellum, Mone gives moviegoers a modern Black heroine who takes charge of her own liberation without a male-dominated cavalry. Their path to feature-length films with a racial justice message has been a long time coming, Bush and Renz said. Even as they anticipate finding box office success with Antebellum, Bush and Renz are already at work on their second feature-length script, under a newly formed production company, Gloaming Pictures.
"The Purge: Anarchy" a sign of the times, says cast
"The Purge: Anarchy" a sign of the times, says cast Michael K. Williams, Frank Grillo, Carmen Ejogo and writer/director James DeMonaco spoke to CBS News' Ken Lombardi about their new sequel, "The Purge: Anarchy," set in an America where, for one night out of the year, all crime, including murder, is legal. Some of the stars said that the film is a reflection of today's gun violence.
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