In TV News...
►NBC is getting back into the live musical business. The network has ordered
Annie Live to air during the holiday season this year. It will be the first live musical for the network since
Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert in 2018. Former NBC Entertainment chief Bob Greenblatt and Neil Meron will executive produce.
More.
+Adult Swim has ordered three movies based on previously canceled, fan-favorite animated series.
Aqua Teen Hunger Force,
Metalocalypse and
The Venture Bros. are all getting new films. Each will be released globally on Blu-ray/DVD and On Demand for a 90-day exclusive window, followed by premieres on HBO Max and Adult Swim.
The story.
+Ziwe isn’t sure about Cancel Culture: “I see it as a bad press day." The late night writer and Instagram Live provocateur keeps up her fearless approach to such topics as wealth hoarding, beauty standards and immigration in her new Showtime variety show.
The interview.
+HBO Max is adding another comedy to its roster. The streamer has handed out a series order to half-hour scripted entry
Gordita Chronicles. The comedy, which was first put into the WarnerMedia-backed platform’s development pipeline in February 2020, revolves around a 12-year-old Dominican girl who struggles to fit into hedonistic 1980s Miami as her family pursues the American dream.
More.
+NBCUniversal’s high-profile Joe Exotic drama starring Kate McKinnon is no longer headed for broadcast television. After announcing that the series based on the Wondery podcast of the same name would air across NBC, USA Network and Peacock, the media company’s new streaming and TV regime has decided that the content of the limited series would be best suited for its streamer.
The story.
+Also: Peacock is bolstering its unscripted roster with series featuring Paris Hilton and JoJo Siwa, along with importing a hybrid show called
True Story, which was originally developed for NBC.
More.
+Meanwhile:
The Banker’s Wife is the latest series to be a casualty of the pandemic. Amazon has scrapped the series from
Homeland‘s Meredith Stiehm and Lesli Linka Glatter, with sources noting the international scope of the drama made it a challenging series to produce even as the world begins to open back up again amid the ongoing pandemic.
More.
►Roku will officially enter the original programming space on Streaming Day. The streaming device maker will officially bow 30 of its rebranded Quibi originals on May 20. All 30 series, including Die Hart, Free Rayshawn and Reno 911, previously aired last year on Quibi, the now-defunct shortform streaming platform. More.
►Janelle Monae is the latest A-lister to be enlisted for the Knives Out sequel . She is in talks to join what will be a starry ensemble for the Rian Johnson-directed whodunit, which has Edward Norton and Dave Bautista circling roles. The original
Knives Out starred Chris Evans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Christopher Plummer, Michael Shannon, and Toni Collette.
More.
+Also: Robert De Niro will play the titular dad in the Lionsgate comedy
About My Father, the feature film vehicle for popular comic Sebastian Maniscalco.
More.
►Spanish-language TV upfronts: NBCUniversal's Telemundo
is pitching itself as the only place to get the "full spectrum" of Hispanic audiences... Univision is "in the middle of an
interesting transformation," as it prepares to merge with Televisa and embrace streaming...
►TV reviews: Inkoo Kang reviews HBO Max's Hacks, writing that "There’s a schematic quality to the series’ foundation that
Hacks mostly fails to outgrow in the first six of its 10 episodes. Deborah and Ava’s boomer-versus-millennial, heartland-versus-the-coasts, experience-versus-innovation tensions are constantly telegraphed without becoming organic to the characters."
The review.
+Daniel Fienberg reviews FX's Pride, writing that the series "has been made with a scholar’s eye toward intersectionality and marginalized figures within already marginalized communities. I find that to be remarkable and entirely admirable, even if the series itself is very much, almost by design, hit-and-miss."
The review.
In other news... --Funny or Die
has a new owner. Designer, philanthropist and former Democratic National Committee finance chair Henry R. Muñoz III has acquired the digital comedy studio and branded content maker. The deal includes FOD’s library, social media assets and longform slate.
--Comcast-owned European pay TV giant Sky
has named Cécile Frot-Coutaz, former CEO of Fremantle and currently head of YouTube in Europe, the CEO of its production arm Sky Studios, starting in September.
--Fox News is
shaking up its weekend lineup. The conservative-leaning cable news channel is giving former congressman Trey Gowdy and radio host Dan Bongino weekend programs, starting in June. Gowdy will host an hour-long program on Sundays at 7 p.m., with Bongino hosting a show Saturdays at 10 p.m.
--Amid the growth of streaming, pay TV giant Comcast is
striking shorter-term carriage fee deals with TV network companies and making sure the prices paid in them take into account the content partners’ streaming strategies, Comcast Cable CEO Dave Watson said on Wednesday.
--Universal Pictures
has apologized for using a male actor to dub the performance of trans actor Laverne Cox in the Italian-language version of Oscar-winning
Promising Young Woman.
--The English Premier League
has agreed to roll over its existing £5 billion ($7 billion) rights deal with Comcast’s Sky, telecom giant BT and Amazon from 2022 to 2025.
--As a presenting partner for
The Hollywood Reporter’s annual Women in Entertainment Breakfast, Lifetime
has joined with THR for the evolution of the event. Lifetime will air a broadcast special titled
Lifetime and The Hollywood Reporter Present Women in Entertainment: The Next Generation, a
Voices Magnified program celebrating female trendsetters, industry leaders and potential future female power players.
--Gal Gadot
waded into the topic of the current wave of Israel-Palestine violence and, not surprisingly, is receiving some backlash online.
--Chrissy Teigen
has publicly apologized to Courtney Stodden after being accused of bullying them in their teens, including telling Stodden to take their own life.
What else we're reading... --"LeVar Burton, Drew Barrymore among celebrity guest hosts for CBS This Morning" [L.A. Times]
--"Dax Shepard’s Armchair Expert podcast is going exclusive to Spotify" [The Verge]
--"The new CNN is more opinionated and emotional. Can it still be ‘the most trusted name in news’?" [Washington Post]
--"Dentsu creates unit to boost diversity in media" [WSJ]
Today's birthdays: Stevie Wonder, 71, Dennis Rodman, 60, Harvey Keitel, 82, Pusha T, 44, Robert Pattinson, 35.