TV/Film
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Amid rumors that Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo were paid different salaries for their work co-starring in Wicked, the reports have been debunked by the film’s production company, Universal Pictures. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news “Reports of pay disparity between Cynthia and Ariana are completely false and […]
As audiences continue holding space for the lyrics of “Defying Gravity,” Wicked star Cynthia Erivo is making sure that they understand the intention of her green-skinned heroine. On Tuesday (Nov. 26), Erivo spoke with Variety about the creation of her version of the iconic character, saying that she wanted her Elphaba to be intrinsically similar […]
Aliyah Khaylyn brought down the house on The Voice Season 26 Playoffs with her unforgettable rendition of Whitney Houston’s “I Have Nothing.”
Representing Team Snoop Dogg, Khaylyn tackled one of the most iconic ballads of all time and left both the audience and judges in awe and on their feet dancing along. Right from her opening lines, Snoop exclaimed, “Yes!” while Gwen Stefani’s jaw practically hit the floor at Aliyah’s powerhouse vocals, declaring at the end of the performance, “I have no words!”
For Snoop, this wasn’t just about hitting the high notes; it was about understanding resilience. To help his team, he brought in none other than Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles as a mentor. “Because the things that she went through, goes through, and how she has to prepare herself, this is what these artists are actually experiencing,” Snoop explained.
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Biles was thrilled to lend her experience to the artists. “I’m a huge music fan. I love The Voice,” she said. “I know the hard work and dedication that it takes when you’re an amateur and then you decide to go professional. You just have to make sure that they believe in themselves.”
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Khaylyn’s song choice was bold. Houston’s “I Have Nothing,” released as the third single from The Bodyguard soundtrack in February 1993, achieved remarkable success on the charts upon its release.
The power ballad peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking Houston’s 14th top-five hit and solidifying her unparalleled dominance during that era. The song spent 20 weeks on the chart and also climbed to No. 1 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart for two weeks. On the Hot R&B Singles chart, it reached No. 4
Performing it is no small feat, but The Voice contestant gave the classic a fresh, heartfelt interpretation.
The performance and its connection hits close to home for The Voice judge Reba McEntire, who introduced Houston’s unforgettable medley at the 1994 American Music Awards.
That night, Houston graced the stage with a jaw-dropping nine-minute performance, seamlessly moving through “I Loves You Porgy,” “I Am Telling You I’m Not Going,” and closing with the iconic “I Have Nothing.” Every note showcased Houston’s unmatched talent, while intimate camera shots captured tender moments with her then-husband Bobby Brown and infant daughter Bobbi Kristina Brown.
While Khaylyn didn’t make it to The Voice live shows, her performance certainly left a lasting impression. You can watch her incredible performance here.
The Voice has revealed new playoffs advisors, and it’s getting an extra shot of country music in the process. The Voice coach Reba McEntire will welcome fellow country artist Lainey Wilson as the playoff advisor for her team. Meanwhile, Michael Bublé will welcome Carly Pearce as the playoffs advisor for his team. Snoop Dogg will […]
If anyone understands what it means to have a very sudden fandom thrust upon you, it’s former James Bond star Daniel Craig. Now, the star of Luca Guadagnino’s Queer is giving praise to Chappell Roan for the way she’s handled fans who don’t respect her boundaries. In a new interview with The New York Times, […]
Wicked is dominating pre-Thanksgiving weekend at the box office.
Universal’s live-action adaptation of the Broadway musical, starring Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo, debuted at No. 1 with an estimated $114 million domestically, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
That figure makes it the third-biggest opening of the year, behind Deadpool & Wolverine and Inside Out 2, the Associated Press reports. It also sets a new record for a Broadway musical adaptation and ranks among the biggest opening weekends ever for a big-screen musical.
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Directed by Jon M. Chu, Wicked has grossed $164.2 million globally.
Meanwhile, Paramount’s Gladiator II, the sequel to Ridley Scott’s Oscar-winning 2000 film, is projected to open domestically with $55.5 million, according to THR. Starring Paul Mescal, Denzel Washington, Pedro Pascal, Connie Nielsen and Fred Hechinger, the movie has already earned $165.5 million internationally.
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There was speculation that the two major releases might recreate the Barbenheimer effect, referencing the simultaneous box office success of Barbie and Oppenheimer in 2023. Nicknamed “Glicked” (a blend of Gladiator II and Wicked), the two films didn’t quite reach the domestic openings of Barbie ($162 million) and Oppenheimer ($82.5 million), but still performed strongly.
With Erivo starring as the green-skinned Elphaba and Grande as her pink-loving counterpart, Galinda (aka Glinda the Good), Wicked has already earned praise from critics, particularly for the performances of its lead actresses in these iconic roles. Part two of the adaptation is slated for release in November 2025.
Accompanying the film’s release is Wicked: The Soundtrack, which includes the movie’s 11 songs as well as a new orchestral track. The second half of the musical’s songs will be released with part two in 2025.
When director Jon M. Chu shared that Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo had been cast as Galinda and Elphaba, respectively, in the long-awaited movie adaptation of Broadway’s smash musical Wicked back in Nov. 2021, reactions were mixed. No one doubted Erivo’s thespian credentials: She’d won a Tony (lead actress, musical) for The Color Purple in 2016 and been nominated for a best actress Oscar in 2019 for playing abolitionist Harriet Tubman in Harriet. But Grande? Well, Ari’s pop career was unimpugnable – she’d released the acclaimed, Billboard 200-topping Positions a year prior to the announcement and topped the Billboard Hot 100 just months earlier on a remix of The Weeknd’s “Save Your Tears” – but her acting credits were a different matter entirely.
It wasn’t that her résumé was slim. Between Victorious and Sam & Cat, Grande had been a consistent presence on Nickelodeon in the first half of the ‘10s. During the second half of that decade, Grande – who by then had earned her spot on pop music’s A-list – continued to flex her acting chops in small parts, getting killed in 2015’s Scream Queens, co-starring in Hairspray Live!, hosting Saturday Night Live and making a cameo in Zoolander 2 (all 2016).
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So it wasn’t that audiences hadn’t seen her act – it was that we hadn’t seen her act too far afield of the bubbly, ditzy Cat Valentine of her Nickelodeon days. A month after the Wicked casting was revealed, Grande showed a bit more range in the love-it-or-hate-it Netflix comedy Don’t Look Up, but considering that she was playing a pop star, it didn’t exactly assuage Wicked fan fears that Grande wasn’t qualified for one of the most beloved, sought-after roles in modern musical history.
Yes, Galinda/Glinda (the “Ga” is silent by the end of the musical) is both giddy and scatterbrained – two traits Grande excels at portraying – but Kristin Chenoweth’s iconic, Tony-nominated work in Wicked established that to play the role, you needed depth, layers and razor-sharp comedic timing. No one with ears could question Grande’s pipes, but based on her acting credits, we simply didn’t know if she was capable of filling Chenoweth’s small but mighty heels.
Well, having seen Wicked: Part 1 in theaters, I can say without exaggeration that Grande isn’t just a good witch – she’s sinceriously astonishing. From her first scene – when she descends from the sky to tell the overjoyed Munchkins that the Wicked Witch of the West is dead – it’s abundantly clear that Grande has figured out how to make the role her own.
This isn’t Grande the impressionist recreating Chenoweth’s Glinda for the big screen; this is a fresh interpretation delivered with nuance and pathos. As a traditionally beautiful pop star, it’s no surprise that Grande captures Glinda’s more-perfect-than-perfection aura; and as a Nickelodeon veteran, Grande can milk the humor of the Ozian mispronunciations (“confusifying,” etc.) without batting an eyelash. But when a Munchkin confrontationally inquiries about Glinda’s past friendship with the Wicked Witch, forcing the Good Witch to literally burst her own pink bubble, Grande is a revelation.
Caught off guard by the question, Grande’s Glinda falters, struggling to deliver a PR-acceptable reply without betraying a deeply felt kinship with the so-called Wicked Witch. Forcing a smile to cover up the pain and haunted loneliness in her eyes, Grande demonstrates from the go that she knows exactly what makes the Glinda character work: It’s not just about satirizing her superficiality — it’s conveying the sense that the experience of knowing Elphaba has fundamentally changed Glinda’s unthinking faith in institutions, public opinion and people in power. Glinda is a gently tragic figure in many ways, ultimately getting exactly what she wants while simultaneously realizing how hollow it all is.
As with the stage musical, the Wicked film plays out primarily as one lengthy flashback, which takes us back to a pre-epiphany Galinda: narcissistic, ambitious, a bit cruel, self-promoting and unhindered by one iota of self-awareness. Wicked touches on weighty themes, yes, but it’s not a Shakespearean tragedy, so all of that is naturally played for laughs, and Grande eats up every syllable, hair flip and vapid smile. She soars in the vocal showcase “Popular” – nailing some hair-raising high notes toward the end while putting her own stamp on Chenoweth’s best-known song – but more importantly, she delivers the laughs. Like a Golden Era Hollywood pro, Grande is luminous onscreen while balancing choreography and comedy, alternately subtle and silly in her performance of this winking celebration of conformity. When Wicked hits streamers, expect viewers to hit rewind more than once on this scene.
Any successful staging of Wicked needs a push-pull chemistry between the two leads, and Erivo’s Elphaba exudes a potent mixture of warmth, longing and self-loathing in the role. (It goes without saying that Erivo sings the absolute hell out of every song.) From bristling irritation to empathy and affection, her feelings toward Galinda evolve in a way that feels real and relatable — even in a musical with talking goats and Winkie princes.
When it’s time for Elphaba’s signature song, “Defying Gravity,” Erivo is stunning, overcoming disillusionment to find her self-confidence and purpose while giving the film it’s pounding, wounded heart. Grande provides deft, subtle support; these characters are on the same page morally but wired too differently to follow the same path, and that tension is magnificently acted. (Grande obviously knows “Yes, And?” as more than just a song title.)
Skeptics of Grande’s acting abilities might insist that while she soars in this role, it’s more a case of perfect casting than impressive acting. But from the opening scene to the climatic finale, Grande goes so much deeper than just playing a shallow, popular girl for laughs – she takes us on a journey that reveals the hopes, disappointments, compromises and realizations of a surprisingly three-dimensional character. Some pop stars turned actors acquit themselves competently on the big screen, but like Lady Gaga in A Star Is Born, this performance signals the arrival of a formidable cinematic talent with a lot more to show us.
Maroon 5’s “Memories” tops the second Top Movie Songs chart, powered by Tunefind (a Songtradr company), following its synch in the latest installment in the Venom film series, Venom: The Last Dance.
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Rankings for the Top Movie Songs chart are based on song and film data provided by Tunefind and ranked using a formula blending that data with sales and streaming information tracked by Luminate during the corresponding period of October 2024. The ranking includes newly released films from the preceding three months.
“Memories” leads a sweep of the top two spots on Top Movie Songs for Venom: The Last Dance, which was released Oct. 25 and is the first film in the series since 2021’s Venom: Let There Be Carnage. The song earned 8.8 million official on-demand U.S. streams in October 2024, plus 1,000 downloads sold, according to Luminate.
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Released in 2019, “Memories” is Maroon 5’s most recent top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 2 in January 2020.
It’s followed by Queen’s “Don’t Stop Me Now,” from 1978’s Jazz, allowing Venom: The Last Dance to become the first film to occupy the top two of the chart, coming in its second month of existence. Bee Gees’ “Tragedy” from Beetlejuice Beetlejuice led the inaugural ranking, followed by Taylor Swift’s “My Tears Ricochet” from It Ends With Us.
Speaking of It Ends With Us, Post Malone’s “White Iverson” (13.3 million streams) ranks at No. 3. It’s followed by Jungle’s “Back on 74” at No. 4. “Back on 74,” with 8.1 million streams and 1,000 downloads, was featured in Netflix’s Lonely Planet, released Oct. 11. It’s the first time a movie that premiered on a streaming service reaches the chart, as the films represented on the September 2024 tally all had theatrical releases.
A pair of songs from Maren Morris released as part of Dreamworks’ The Wild Robot also make the chart, with “Kiss the Sky” (No. 6; 1.4 million streams, 1,000 downloads) and “Even When I’m Not” (No. 9; 790,000 streams, 1,000 downloads) representing the second and third chart appearances for animated films, after Transformers One made the September 2024 list with Quavo, Ty Dolla $ign and ARE WE DREAMING’s “If I Fall.”
See the full top 10 below.
Rank, Song, Artist, Film1. “Memories,” Maroon 5, Venom: The Last Dance2. “Don’t Stop Me Now,” Queen, Venom: The Last Dance3. “White Iverson,” Post Malone, It Ends With Us4. “Back on 74,” Jungle, Lonely Planet5. “Tragedy,” Bee Gees, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice6. “Kiss the Sky,” Maren Morris, The Wild Robot7. “Right Here Waiting,” Richard Marx, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice8. “Margaritaville,” Jimmy Buffett, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice9. “Even When I’m Not,” Maren Morris, The Wild Robot10. “Nothing’s Gonna Hurt You Baby,” Cigarettes After Sex, It Ends With Us
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With Thanksgiving just around the corner, if you’ll be spending the day with friends and family eating turkey and watching plenty of NFL action, then Sling TV has got a deal for you.
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NFL Thanksgiving 2024 happens on Thursday, Nov. 28 at 12:30 p.m. ET/9:30 a.m. PT.
How to Watch the NFL Thanksgiving on Sling TV
A subscription to Sling TV Blue — which comes with Fox and NBC for NFL Thanksgiving — gets you access to live TV, local and cable channels, starting at $22.50 per month for the first month of service ($45 per month afterwards).
You can watch local networks such as ABC, while you can also watch many cable networks, including NFL Network, FS1, Lifetime, FX, AMC, A&E, Bravo, BET, Cartoon Network, Fuse, CNN, Food Network and many others. However, CBS isn’t available on Sling TV.
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Please note: Prices and channel availability depends on your local TV market.
What NFL Teams Are Playing on Thanksgiving?
There are three games scheduled for Thanksgiving Day on Thursday, Nov. 28. Scroll down for the matchups, below:
Chicago Bears vs. Detroit Lions at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan (12:30 p.m. ET/9:30 a.m. PT, CBS)
New York Giants vs. Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas (4:30 p.m. ET/1:30 p.m. PT, Fox)
Miami Dolphins vs. Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin (8:20 p.m. ET/5:20 a.m. PT, NBC)
NFL Thanksgiving 2024 broadcasts on CBS, Fox and NBC, while most of the games are also available to livestream with Sling TV on Thursday, Nov. 28.
Want more? For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best Xbox deals, studio headphones and Nintendo Switch accessories.
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Cynthia Erivo had some gratitude to share on Friday morning (Nov. 22) as she and Wicked co-star Ariana Grande reached the end of an exhaustive, full-court-press media tour promoting the first part of the Broadway-to-big-screen musical.
“This journey has been long, and paved with bright, yellow brick. We have laughed and cried, held hands and walked side by side, our lives intertwined, and because of that, we were irrevocably changed for good,” the Emmy, Grammy and Tony-winning singer/actress wrote in an Instagram post about the yearslong process of bringing the beloved Broadway re-telling of The Wizard of Oz onto movie screens.
With the film finally opening on Friday, Erivo opened up about the transformative experience of slipping into Elphaba’s green makeup and round glasses, confiding that this was more than just a role for her. “We gained more than a movie. We gained a love letter to love, friendship, the celebration of the things that make us different, special, and beautiful, and the bravery it takes to change your mind,” she said before offering targeted shout-outs to the movie’s key players, including her own character.
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“Elphaba, Thank you for the gifts you have brought me,” she wrote before heaping praise on Grande’s Glinda. “Galinda/ Glinda/ Ariana Grande-Butera, I love you. You are the truest, kindest, human being. It has been an honor to share this experience of a lifetime with you,” she added; Grande is credited with what she’s called her “little girl name” in the movie’s credits, which is how she was referred to when she first saw the Wicked musical on Broadway as a 10-year-old.
She also thanked her “dear captain,” director Jon M. Chu, for “your trust and your belief, your heart and imagination. You lead us with love and it is all over that screen.” And, as for the many fans who’ve been waiting three long years for the movie — which has been in development with a variety of directors and actors attached to it for nearly 15 years — to open after several delays, including one caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, Erivo wrote, “Wicked is now yours, from us with love. Your Elphie.”
The post included a number of photos from set, a time-lapse video of the intensive Elphaba makeup process, choreography rehearsals and moving behind-the-scenes snaps, including one of Erivo laying her head on Grande’s shoulder.
The second part of Wicked is slated to open on Nov. 21, 2025 and a Wicked sing-along is slated to his theaters this Christmas.
Check out Erivo’s post below.