Support for LAist comes from
Audience-funded nonprofit news
Audience-funded nonprofit news
Listen
Podcasts
The Frame
solid pale red banner
()
The Frame
A daily chronicle of creativity in film, TV, music, arts, and entertainment, produced by Southern California Public Radio and broadcast from November 2014 – March 2020. Host John Horn leads the conversation, accompanied by the nation's most plugged-in cultural journalists.

About the Show

A daily chronicle of creativity in film, TV, music, arts, and entertainment, produced by Southern California Public Radio and broadcast from November 2014 – March 2020. Host John Horn leads the conversation, accompanied by the nation's most plugged-in cultural journalists.

Get LA News Updates Daily

We brief you on what you need to know about L.A. today.
Take action to protect public media!
The loss of federal funding for public media means audience support is more important than ever. Make a powerful statement to safeguard the future of LAist. Become a monthly sustaining member or increase your current support to keep independent local journalism strong.
  • A scene from "Night Comes On," directed by Jordan Spiro. The film stars Dominique Fishback, right, and Tatum Hall as two young girls seeking to avenge their mother's death.
    Listen 25:43
    The actress makes her directing debut with a film about two young girls on a journey to avenge their mother's death; the National Hispanic Media Coalition is targeting movie studios over lack of Latino representation; teenaged jazz bassist Anna Abondolo is going places.
  • The popular MoviePass program has been forced to raise its subscription price as it copes with several competitors.
    Listen 25:37
    The company that revolutionized moviegoing is floundering as movie theater chains launch similar pass programs; first-time novelist Elizabeth Klehfoth sold her book to Hollywood before she even had a publisher; Taj Mahal and Keb' Mo' bring their blues collaboration to the Hollywood Bowl.
  • Susanna Fogel (center) directed and co-wrote "The Spy Who Dumped Me," which stars Kate McKinnon (left) and Mila Kunis.
    Listen 26:09
    The director and co-writer of "The Spy Who Dumped Me" turns the action-comedy genre on its head; what's the fate of CBS chief Les Moonves?; Netflix and Amazon preview their coming attractions at the TV Critics Assn. press tour.
  • "Never Goin' Back" writer/director Augustine  Frizzell  (center) with the film's director of photography,  Greta Zozula.
    Listen 25:40
    The Texas native shot her indie feature in her home state, with a script based on her own teenage years there; the Idyllwild Arts Academy appears to have escaped the fire that's ravaging the area; the use of "white voice" by black characters in current films is a comment on white privilege.
  • Singer and actress Charlotte Gainsbourg.
    Listen 25:47
    On her latest album, the French singer and actress pays tribute to her family legacy and also mourns her sister's death; Spotify is paying advances to some artists, but says it's not actually signing artists the way record labels do. But if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck ...
  • Kurt Cobain as photographed by Mark Seliger in 1993.
    Listen 25:20
    The photographer has shot virtually every famous face for Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair and other magazines; the Venice and Toronto film festivals have released their schedules — let the award campaigning begin!; streaming services aren't as encyclopedic as you might think.
  • Singer/guitarist Boz Scaggs' new album is titled "Out of the Blues."
    Listen 25:40
    The veteran singer/guitarist's lifelong passion for the genre is evident on his new album, "Out of the Blues"; playwright Young Jean Lee's provocative "Straight White Men" opens on Broadway; composer Max Richter plans to put Grand Park campers to "Sleep."
  • Chris Pratt (left) and director James Gunn on the set of Marvel's "Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol. 2."
    Listen 25:23
    "Guardians of the Galaxy" director James Gunn is the latest figure to come under fire in an industry that no longer tolerates an "anything goes" culture; the documentary, "Far From the Tree," examines what happens to a family when one child has a difference that sets them apart; Naia Izumi, winner of NPR's Tiny Desk Concert competition.
  • The convention floor at San Diego Comic-Con 2014.
    Listen 25:44
    The annual pop culture extravaganza in San Diego is nirvana for movie, TV and comic book fans; the documentary "Game Girls" follow a lesbian couple trying to escape life on L.A.'s Skid Row; what have been the best depictions of Russian spies in movies and TV shows?
  • British musician and composer Anna Meredith.
    Listen 25:28
    The British musician and composer Anna Meredith dips into movies with her score for "Eighth Grade"; voiceover actors are threatening a strike against streaming services that would affect all TV animation production; Liz Phair marks the 25th anniversary of "Exit to Guyville."