AMPLE ENTERTAINMENT
Los Angeles | www.ampleent.com
Number of employees: 75-100
Number of hours in 2020: 60
Recent projects: 9 months with Courteney Cox season three (Facebook Watch), Kangaroos: The Story of Mala (Netflix), Murder .
Exclusive: Glass Ent Group adapting “Confronting: Columbine” podcast for TV Nancy Glass’s Glass Entertainment Group is shopping a TV adaptation to assorted networks and platforms of its Confronting: Columbine podcast, which delves into the 1999 shooting and bombing at Columbine . May 11, 2021
Nancy Glass’s Glass Entertainment Group is shopping a TV adaptation to assorted networks and platforms of its
Confronting: Columbine podcast, which delves into the 1999 shooting and bombing at Columbine High School.
Confronting: Columbine, which launched on Apple Podcasts May 4, is the latest chapter in Glass Podcasts’
Confronting anthology.
The series is hosted by Amy Over, a Columbine survivor and co-founder of The Rebel’s Project, a mass shooting survivor support organization.
MTV is getting back to its musical roots with the recently announced MTV International premiere of My Life on MTV. The new music-focused series will celebrate and highlight some of pop culture’s biggest superstars and their most iconic moments on MTV.
My Life on MTV is set to premiere globally on May 21 and May 22 here in the United States.
On each episode, two international music superstars will recount moments amid nostalgic MTV footage, as well as present-day content. Fans can look forward to is their favorite artist’s first introduction on MTV News to career-defining performances on TRL, the MTV Video Music Awards, and European Music Awards.
Marsh); Comitato Internazionale per lo Sviluppo dei Popoli (CISP) Somalia (
Desgroppes, Kaburu); UNICEF Somalia (
Read-Hamilton) [C]arefully designed, community engaged, multipronged interventions that target social norms underpinning GBV and catalyse community-led mobilisation efforts may over time change harmful norms and foster norms that promote gender equality Women and girls are vulnerable to violence across their lifespan, especially during conflict and other humanitarian emergencies. Often, they do not disclose gender-based violence (GBV) to healthcare and other service providers because of social norms that blame the woman or girl for the assault, norms that prioritise protecting family honour over safety of the survivor and community, and institutional acceptance of GBV as a normal and expected part of displacement and conflict. These harmful beliefs and social norms may also serve to cause secondary traumatisation to survivors. Thus, the United Nations Children s Fu