DWTS is owned by BBC Studios and not Disney. Drew’s show is owned by Paramount, a major AMPTP power.
DWTS is owned by BBC Studios and not Disney. Drew’s show is owned by Paramount, a major AMPTP power.
Reportedly, the Barbie: The Movie line isn’t selling that hot.
MTV runs an hour of videos on Friday afternoons, Fresh Out Playlist, apparently because their contracts with cable companies require them to run a minimum amount of music content.
It was so parents could see the characters which were also toys in stores.
He has the story credit and co-wrote the screenplay. He wouldn’t be able to do any rewrites from the original material until the strike ends.
It appears that Disney will continue streaming sales and rentals there, although that has similar reliability issues.
It depended on which theater you went to.
As a double feature, it isn’t a competition.
Duke survives.
But that series is still for sale through iTunes and Amazon and other SVOD places. It may cost more money than you are willing to spend, but it’s still there.
WoF is made in Culver City.
“(instead of consigning all his friends and allies to oblivion by jumping back in time and wiping out Aku right at the start of his reign)“
You joke, but he actually had a show there back in 2003.
Flamin’ Hot is a Hulu movie, which means no one is paying for transportation, concessions or individual single-screening admission.
If you don’t live in the UK, the article has ads.
I wonder how many people will come just for the final Dug Days short.
I know the HBO Max/Max thing is confusing, but it’s not a dismantling. HBO will still exist, just as a sub-folder of Max and on linear television, more or less as it has been currently operating.
MLP already made two animated movies recently based on more recent product in the stores, and any movie would be a hybrid. There’s a G1 fanbase out there, but the big action has been its current media activities and the remnants of its fandom, and Hasbro doesn’t want to clutter the market that way.
No one. CBS took over ownership of their Late Night shows after Letterman and Ferguson ended.
The only thing I could possibly interested in is a Pink Panther animated feature, as the animal character (as well as the rest of the Mirsch/Depatie-Freling universe) have never been a protagonist of an entire film.