WYSIWYG
Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced the launch of NY PopsUp - an unprecedented and expansive festival featuring hundreds of pop-up performances, many of which are free of charge and all open to the public that will intersect with the daily lives of New Yorkers. This series of events, intended to revitalize the spirit and emotional well-being of New York citizens with the energy of live performance while jumpstarting New York s struggling live entertainment sector, is a private/public partnership overseen by producers Scott Rudin and Jane Rosenthal, in coordination with the New York State Council on the Arts and Empire State Development.
âThe Great Northâ: Watch these Alaskan movies on Tubi before the premiere of FOXâs new animated series
By Austin Williams
Viewers can watch anything from retro TV shows to Hollywood blockbusters, all completely free.
LOS ANGELES - From the creators of Bob’s Burgers, The Great North joins FOX’s animation domination.
Following the antics of an Alaskan Family, the Tobins, Single dad Beef, played by Nick Offerman who is best known for his role as Ron Swanson in Parks and Recreation, attempts to keep his wacky family close.
He’ll have to work especially hard to solidify a relationship with his only daughter, Judy (Jenny Slate), a unique child who’s artistic dreams lead her astray from the family fishing boat and into the glamorous world of the local shopping mall.
The 38-year-old actress confirmed on Wednesday s episode of
Jimmy Kimmel Live! that she welcomed her first child, a daughter, with her fiancé, Ben Shattuck.
Advertisement What a beautiful thing to happen to me, Slate said. My baby is six weeks old now.
Slate shared her baby girl s name, Ida, after host Jimmy Kimmel asked if she gave her daughter a special pandemic name. We should have thought more about giving her something to commemorate this distinct time in our universe. We named her Ida, she said.
Slate said she and Shattuck considered Eastern European names, including Bagrat, before ultimately choosing Ida.
Save
Left to right: Uli Latukefu in Young Rock (Photo: Mark Taylor/NBC); Rebecca Breeds in Clarice (Photo: Brooke Palmer/CBS); Bitsie Tulloch and Tyler Hoechlin in Superman & Lois (Photo: Niño Munoz/The CW); the cast of Punky Brewster (photo: Robert Trachtenberg/Peacock); The Snoopy Show (Image: Apple TV Plus); Kevin James in The Crew (Photo: Eric Liebowitz/Netflix)
Graphic: Graphic: The A.V. Club
February TV looks, if not wholly impressive, then almost
normal. The Super Bowl is scheduled for a CBS broadcast on February 7, the premieres of two CWverse (as the Arrowverse is now known) shows one returning, one debuting are on the horizon, and Kenan Thompson is leading a sitcom again. Even Punky Brewster and Katherine Heigl are back. (Netflix’s
The Great North brings warm laughs to a chilly winter: Review Darren Franich
Fox s Sunday night is for the Forever Shows, with
Family Guy, and
The Simpsons dutifully churning out seasons 11, 19, and 32, respectively. The network has had trouble rounding out its Animation Domination lineup, though, which makes
The Great North a welcome surprise. The sweetly clever cartoon takes place in Lone Moose, Alaska, where the library hosts a chainsaw workshop and the occasional moose sneaks into the occasional house. The concept suggests easy 49th-state gags and there is the local Russian restaurant advertising, We Can See Your Mouth From Here. But co-creators Lizzie Molyneux-Logelin and Wendy Molyneux are longtime