Polone: It’s Been a Shameful Month for Animal Cruelty in Entertainment
Young chimps were pimped in a Super Bowl ad, endangered wolves were demonized in The Grey, and Joan Rivers was kibitzing in a fur coat.
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Young chimps were pimped in a Super Bowl ad, endangered wolves were demonized in The Grey, and Joan Rivers was kibitzing in a fur coat.
It was a gladiatorial, kill or be killed life of big money, but not good for the psyche.
Instead of just politicking Congress, the MPAA should have publicly debunked four Internet myths about the anti-piracy bill.
The awards aren't just meaningless, they also work as a detriment to moviemaking.
It's about the movie, not the star, but the star provides deniability.
And how, after having done eleven shows, it's different from what his first-time partner and young star are thinking.
Bad release dates and marketing can break a producer's heart.
When he finds himself thinking way too much about the Kardashians, he realizes there is a problem.
And if you don't like sports but pay big cable bills, you should be irate, too.
Shows like The Walking Dead are beating many of the Peacock's series, so why not swipe AMC's game plan?
This daring film does four things that 99 percent of all other movies are afraid to do.
As someone sues him and Sony for allegedly stealing the idea for Premium Rush, he argues that wrongful cases would fade away if there was more risk for a plaintiff.
These super-producers get paid millions to bring projects to their home studio when those execs could get the projects anyway.
We have an actual star's list of demands (private jet, nutritionist, hairstylist, etc.) that could be worth up to $2 million.
While shooting his new TV show, Polone was shocked at what his French crews did ... versus being told a single shot in Beverly Hills would cost $25,000. $25,000 to take one shot; in Paris
The money spent by places other than California to lure movie shoots just never pays off.
Just hiring David Fincher or the 'Arrested Development' team doesn't mean you know how to make a hit.
In these days of Occupy Wall Street, the voice actors who once had public opinion on their side now just seemed overpaid and underworked, leaving Fox to collect all the profits.
"I’m as much of the problem as any of the other cogs in the machine — which is why I am able to keep working, I guess."
'Two and a Half Men' can be filthy, but has to stop at a word that is all over YouTube.