Quinta Brunson’s mockumentary, Abbott Elementary, has quickly become a fan-favorite sitcom and is currently airing its third season. The show is a workplace comedy and follows Brunson’s Janine Teagues, a teacher at the fictional Abbott Elementary in Philadelphia.
Peacock is getting a few steps closer to Community‘s “six seasons and a movie” promise as the streamer’s follow-up film continues to take shape, but in the meantime, the comedy’s six seasons will finally come to the platform beginning Monday, April 1.
It's another starry cast (Annette Bening, Sam Neill, Alison Brie) in another literary adaptation that ends up being another pointless prestige project fishing for awards
Alison Brie and Jake Lacy co-star in the Peacock adaptation of "Big Little Lies" author Liane Moriarty's bestselling novel.
Original reporting by Melissa Miller. The prophecy foretold six seasons and a movie, and now that will come to pass. The Community movie is coming to Peacock!
Jake Lacy and Alison Brie co-star in the Peacock limited series based on Liane Moriarty’s bestsller.
Juan Pablo Raba, Alice Eve, and Christian Slater also star in the action comedy from "Taken" director Pierre Morel.
The “Community” plan for six seasons and a movie has hit a snag amid the ongoing WGA strike. Joel McHale, star of the off-beat sitcom ensemble alongisde Alison Brie, Yvette Nicole Brown, Donald Glover, Danny Pudi, Gillian Jacobs, Chevy Chase, Jim Rash and Ken Jeong, gave an update on the previously announced Peacock movie adaptation.
Alison Brie is looking back on the NBC era of beloved sitcom “Community.” The “Somebody I Used to Know” writer and star shared that she rewatched “Community” when the Dan Harmon-created series was on Netflix during the COVID-19 lockdown.
Now Jay Ellis is just somebody Alison Brie used to know in a new rom-com about regretting letting “the one” get away. Brie co-wrote Prime Video romantic comedy “Somebody I Used to Know” with real-life husband, Dave Franco, who directs.
The majority of the main cast (Joel McHale, Danny Pudi, Alison Brie, Gillian Jacobs, Jim Rash, and Ken Jeong) will return to Greendale as the cult favorite sitcom fulfills its promise to fans
“Community” fans are closer to getting their wish for six seasons and a movie. The NBC sitcom, which concluded in 2015, starred Joel McHale, Gillian Jacobs, Yvette Nicole Brown, Donald Glover, Jim Rash, Alison Brie, Ken Jeong, Danny Pudi, and Chevy Chase as a group of community college students and faculty members.
If you cast Alison Brie in a TV show, odds are good that it’s going to become a cult hit. The only downside is that it will probably be prematurely cancelled as well.
Just when it seems every production under the sun (“The White Lotus,” “House of Gucci”) seems to be jetting off to Italy, “Spin Me Round” writer-director
Few potential Hollywood projects have generated as much smoke — and as little fire — as the long-rumored “Community” movie. Dan Harmon’s cult sitcom famously promised to deliver “six seasons and a movie,” and while the six seasons are completed, many diehard fans are anxious to see a feature film released.
All Amber wants is an “Under the Tuscan Sun” kind of love affair. What she gets, though, is a much darker twist on an Italian happily ever after. Alison Brie stars as Amber, a manager at fast food restaurant Tuscan Grove who wins a corporate retreat to Italy.
These are the 20 best original Netflix series. (Note: we said series, so one-off specials and things of that ilk do not count here.)
It’s a tale as old as time: a seemingly regular gal is unexpectedly swept away to an idyllic European locale, where she indulges in food, fun, and the affection of a tasty new companion, a delight for the senses that reinforces just how undesirable her current life is.
Who says you can’t mix your professional life and your personal life? In the world of entertainment, there are many couples who have made a habit of working together.
Many sitcom actors end up making comedy movies. However, on occasion, an actor moves from sitcoms to serious drama. Not only that, they are successful dramatic actors. Here are some folks who once made a splash on the sitcom scene who have gone on to dramatic excellence.
These thespians slugged it out in a tough year and helped us forget our troubles for a couple of hours. We are forever in their debt.
You’ve watched all the movies you had on your to-do list. What now? You can turn to TV shows, but you don’t want to, say, try and binge the entire run of “The Simpsons.” Don’t worry.
There is so much television, and would that you could watch it all. But you just can’t. The ability to stream shows does help, and with many people at home, now is the perfect time to delve in.
You know who’s really happy right now? Fans of the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs. After all, they are both in the Super Bowl. One of those fan bases may be disappointed in time, but right now everybody is just celebrating.
The nominees for the 70th annual Emmy awards were unveiled Thursday morning, kicking off the annual derby to predict who will go home winners on Sept. 17.
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