Season 2 of
Jeremy Strong) abruptly pinning the blame on his father, Logan (
Brian Cox) for a major scandal regarding Waystar Royco’s cruise ship line at a news conference. Kendall’s decision obviously shocks the rest of the family, but the last shot of the episode shows a complicated expression on Logan’s face. It’s no surprise Kendall is at odds with his father again, but could Logan actually be proud of Kendall’s betrayal?
I knew I’d seen that smirk on Belichick’s face when Vrabel started intentionally taking penalties somewhere before. Logan Roy in the final scene of This Is Not For Tears. pic.twitter.com/qTLPNFvVLP
Posted on Wednesday, May 5th, 2021 by Hoai-Tran Bui
Succession season 3 is raising itself to new heights both literal and metaphorical. The HBO comedy series just added two towering actors to its ensemble, with Oscar winner
Adrien Brody and Nordic statue
Alexander Skarsgård joining the
Succession season 3 cast as guest stars.
RIP Kieran Culkin’s neck. The 5′ 6″ actor who plays Roman already has to deal with the gangling 6′ 7″ tall Cousin Greg (Nicholas Braun) in a height difference the show already loves to poke fun at and now he has two more very tall actors to tower over him. Variety reports that the 6′ 1″ Adrien Brody and the 6′ 4″Alexander Skarsgård have joined the tall cast, Brody joining the ensemble a few days after Skarsgård was reported to be added.
Check Out the Celebrity Couples You Keep Forgetting About and a Few Who Might Be News to You E! 2 hrs ago
Replay Video
Ah, celebrity couples. There are so many categories when it comes to love among the famous.
Young, new, short-term, long-term, rebound, dreamy, dramatic and one that seems to come up a lot former.
Relationships in various levels of peril, from Twitter feuds to messy or shocking divorces, tend to suck up most of the headline oxygen, with leftover space going to people dating, getting married or having children. And while most couples comprised of actors, directors, artists and basically any kind of personality will garner at least one of these at some point because not a lot sneaks through the cracks these days some are just so undramatically ensconced with one another that it doesn t occur to the wider world to peek behind the curtain.
This week, anticipating a new clash between collectors and the taxman…
AIM HIGH
On April 6, New York state announced a new budget that does exactly what many in the liberal-leaning cultural sector have been clamoring for every level of government to do in recent years: raise taxes on the highest-earning residents, partly to directly benefit the art industry. The question now will be whether this more progressive tax policy works as envisioned, or whether it backfires by driving the one percent away from spending, giving, and even living in New York.
All told, the state’s fiscal year 2022 budget will channel more than $1 billion in relief and recovery funding to small businesses within and beyond the cultural space. The lion’s share of that total ($865 million) will take the form of grants to small businesses, including both for-profit and nonprofit arts institutions accosted by our ongoing public-health nightmare. Another $139 million will be doled out to the same catego