Programs on WE tv, AMC, Netflix, and Hulu offer celebrity chat, in-depth analysis of landmark songs, a reality competition, and a dramatized look at the making of one of the genre’s titans.
In the pilot for an absurd, pun-filled series called “Hip Pocket Musicals,” which was pitched to PBS but never aired, LuPone steals socks and haunts an ex-lover in a laundromat.
The final episode of Season 2 deconstructs the characters’ ways of speaking power into existence. When they try to talk normally, they find that they have reached their limit.
Asif Kapadia’s remarkable documentary about the Argentine phenom offers a revealing look at the emotional cost of fame, and at how disposable talent can be, no matter how otherworldly the gift.
The movie knows a thing that is, apparently, rather difficult to say: that the system of higher learning in the United States is a scam at its essence.
“Audience of One,” by James Poniewozik, identifies Donald Trump as a postmodern feeler, who intuits and responds to the stimuli of electronic media with the dark brilliance of an idiot savant.
“The reason I design for children is I’m designing for people,” Holman, who is featured in the second season of the Netflix series “Abstract: The Art of Design,” said. “Good toys make good people.”
Before Volodymyr Zelensky was elected President, he played the part in “Servant of the People,” a genre-bending series that blends Ryan Murphy wackiness with Sorkinian uplift (minus the hubris).