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Arts & Entertainment
After 15 years starring in CBS sitcoms like Mike & Molly, Billy Gardell is back doing what he’s always done best: stand-up comedy.
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For a smallish production company reading 10 scripts a week, AI can save 30 hours a week.
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Is Larry Ellison only helping to bankroll the deal to boost the fortunes of Oracle’s lagging cloud-computing business?
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Rebel Wilson talks about her new memoir, an Ed Ruscha retrospective comes to LACMA, a tasting event downtown, and more.
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Few people know about the community center in Long Beach in the 1970s that offered meals, summer school for youth and housing assistance to the city’s Chicano community.
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The new facility will offer classes, lessons, ensembles, and workforce training in music and other creative fields.
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A group of Korean Americans are pushing to move the Koreatown museum project forward decades after being proposed.
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For a company that employs 10,000 people at last count, the potential impact of a now-private Endeavor could be profound.
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The lineup includes new independent film premieres and revivals.
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An unvarnished look at everything happening right now with the new technology that's affecting the entertainment industry.
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Corgis frolicking on the beach, Japanese movies, music and whiskey, Funny Girl at the Ahmanson, and 80 breweries on tap at the L.A. Beer Festival.
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Larry Mantle and LAist film critics Claudia Puig and Peter Rainer review this weekend’s latest movie releases in theaters and on streaming platforms.
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Earlier mergers, like Disney's 2019 acquisition of Fox, cut the number of films studios released theatrically — a troubling trend for theater owners already coping with consolidation and streaming.
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The Village Directors Circle, which bought the nearly century-old movie palace in February, will partner with American Cinematheque to operate and program the Village Theater.
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President Donald Trump continues to rage over late night comedians who make fun of him. This weekend he posted on social media that Seth Meyers has "no talent" and called for NBC to fire him.
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Nth Power jam at the Mint, the lights at Manhattan Beach Pier, Miranda July moderates a timely film screening at the LGBT Center and more of the best things to do this week.
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Rom-coms, heist flicks, a sports/horror mashup, a pair of Broadway musicals, a biopic of The Boss, festival award winners and lots of showbiz sagas — here's what NPR critics are watching this fall.
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The project, which will include some 50,000 songs from private record collections, is a collaboration between UC Santa Barbara and the Dust-to-Digital Foundation.
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The first three paintings sold for a record-shattering $662,000. Bonhams says the works attracted hundreds of registrations, more than twice the usual number for that type of sale.
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On FilmWeek, Larry speaks with author Samuel Garza Bernstein about his new biography Cesar Romero: The Joker is Wild.
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Larry Mantle and LAist film critics Tim Cogshell and Beandrea July review this weekend’s latest movie releases in theaters and on streaming platforms.
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Bob Iger said his company is talking with AI companies about allowing subscribers to create their own short-form videos on Disney+.
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Emmy-nominated host and writer Baratunde Thurston explores what it means to be human in the age of AI in his upcoming show in Long Beach.
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Kim Kardashian and Naomi Watts play divorce lawyers at an all-female L.A. firm in All's Fair. The show has gotten bad reviews, but actual L.A. divorce attorneys had more generous assessments.