After Woodstock 99: Peace, Love And Rage: What To Watch If You Liked The HBO Documentary cinemablend.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cinemablend.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Sustainable U: Music festivals
I had no idea “sustainable” music festivals, let alone eco-friendly ones, were a thing. Cut to the Flow Festival. What emerged in 2004 as a lowkey club event, spurred into the modern-day trailblazing European music and arts celebration with innovative content that is inspired by popular culture and experimental arts. It was during my student exchange a couple of summers ago that I had an epiphany I must come back and write about this newfound phenomenon of music festivals. After having lived in Helsinki and the surrounding area, I was astonished to find that we, in Calgary, Alberta (let alone Canada!) and at the University of Calgary are living in the Stone Age. From their love of oat milk, veganism and sidewalk bike lanes and their super strictness on banning single-use plastics to their entire music festival culture integrating sustainability initiatives so well in Finland it blew my mind. We are so behind. And as a matter of fact, entitled,
Best Movies on Netflix: Comedy
Best Comedies on Netflix: WHAT A GIRL WANTS (2003)
What a Girl Wants stars
Amanda Bynes,
Colin Firth, and
Kelly Preston. When Daphne graduates high school, she travels from New York City to England to meet her father who serves in the House of Lords. When she arrives overseas, she must learn how to balance creating a relationship with a father with upholding his proper lifestyle, all while trying not to lose who she truly is.
Watch
Best Comedies on Netflix: MURDER MYSTERY (2019)
Murder Mystery stars
Jennifer Aniston, and
Luke Evans. Husband and wife Nick and Audrey take a trip to Europe where they befriend a billionaire and sail aboard his yacht. While on the boat, the owner is murdered by one of the other passengers. Nick and Audrey then hilariously investigate the murder in an effort to clear their own names.
The Vow on HBO have popped into the larger cultural conversation, in ways that keep encouraging showbiz executives to hire filmmakers who want to tell stories drawn directly from reality.
For the streamers, documentaries fill a need. Netflix’s programmers in particular like to overwhelm subscribers with options each month to keep the customers in the store, so to speak. Docs are both relatively inexpensive to make, and potentially limitless in scope. Deeply into politics? Love music? Fascinated by true-crime stories? Netflix has the inventory to cover just about any interest. (True crime especially… scarcely a month goes by without a new non-fiction murder series hitting the service.)
Two years after landing at DAZN, Jamie Horowitz is on the move.
WWE announced on Monday morning that the former ESPN and Fox Sports executive was stepping into the ring as the company’s executive vice president for development and digital. According to Deadline, he’s taking the position effective immediately.
Horowitz will oversee WWE’s original content, which includes scripted and unscripted programs for digital and social media. Such content, such as documentaries, figures to be even more important with WWE Network moving over to Peacock and needing additional programming to build around its premium events and archived matches.