Emmy Magazine Features
The world agrees: there was — and will be — only one Pablo Picasso. And for the team behind season two of Nat Geo’s Genius, there was only one actor to portray him in his fertile, later years: Antonio Banderas.
L.A.’s special relationship with the television industry comes alive — frame by frame — in a historic still-photography exhibit.
In the age of television business disruption, analysts seem to be quoted in every business story. But just who are these gurus?
Her new Amazon series allows admirers to savor yet another side of the sought-after actress.
“There are no limitations to what you can create,” says Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, whose many media worlds include music, film and television, where he flexes his muscles on Starz’s Power and the new Crackle series The Oath.
To Sara Gilbert’s surprise, all of her Roseanne costars said yes to a reboot — and so did an eager ABC. Now an exec producer as well as an actress, she’s sold on helping shape the show.
A kidnapping that wasn’t — then was — is just part of the intrigue of Trust, the FX series about the dysfunctional Getty family and the billions of industrialist J. Paul.
Jason Katims sets his newest NBC drama in high school musical theater, where the footlights find some big hearts — and big hopes — in small-town America.
Battling depression after a harrowing accident, Tracy Morgan took a doctor’s advice and went looking for laughs. He found them in Key & Peele, the show that he says “saved my life.” Now, with Jordan Peele, Morgan is back in funny business with the new TBS comedy The Last O.G.
The team at Vista Studios — the newest production center in L.A.’s Silicon Beach — is appealing to producers looking for the latest technology and support staff who never say no.
Stand-up comic and reality host Byron Allen has spent the past 25 years building an entertainment empire — which many in the business have never heard of.