In a year marked by disruption, these leaders from Lagos to London are driving the future of small-screen storytelling.| The Hollywood Reporter
Raise a glass (or a jar of face cream) for Dwayne Johnson, Selena Gomez,Brad Pitt and other A-list entrepreneurs whose brands are quickly conquering brick and mortar retail.| The Hollywood Reporter
It’s been a brutal year. But the town’s A-list’s most trusted Realtors — despite some having lost their own houses to the wildfires — are still notching nine-figure deals, including ones in cryptocurrency| The Hollywood Reporter
Cooper Koch, Diego Luna, Eddie Redmayne and Jeffrey Wright join to talk embracing the sleepless nights, their fights with fans and the reality that you’re never going to be anybody but you — and that’s perfectly OK. Isn’t it?| The Hollywood Reporter
Forget the Porsche, the sold-out arenas, the theme park. The world’s most successful stand-up — and this year’s Emmy host — swears he’s still just a regular guy.| The Hollywood Reporter
At 59, Leanne Morgan has a sold-out tour, a hit Netflix special and a best-selling book. An old-school comedy is next.| The Hollywood Reporter
The 'Last Week Tonight' host also sounds off on Stephen Colbert's "horrible, horrible" news and the future of the format.| The Hollywood Reporter
Feeling apocalyptic? No worries! TV’s top funnymen — including Ted Danson, Jason Segel and Julio Torres — will keep you laughing till the end.| The Hollywood Reporter
Former Wondery exec Jeanine Wright is leading a new firm, Inception Point AI, that's betting on flooding the zone with audio content: “I think that people who are still referring to all AI-generated content as AI slop are probably lazy luddites."| The Hollywood Reporter
Producer and manager Steven Paul says the president "loves" the entertainment business. Enough to push Congress for a federal incentive? Maybe.| The Hollywood Reporter
Plus, how Emily Bronte got her bra-like font and the man who really launched Armani in Hollywood (hint: it wasn’t Richard Gere).| The Hollywood Reporter
After skyrocketing to global fame as Alicent Hightower in HBO's 'House of the Dragon,' the star is about to break out big in Robin Wright’s new six-part thriller for Amazon.| The Hollywood Reporter
In their first joint interview, the 'Wednesday' director and star discuss their freakiest public encounters, how they navigate controversy and the prospect of 'Beetlejuice 3.'| The Hollywood Reporter
With her introspective new release, the Icelandic jazzpop phenom is flipping the record. But will her superfans follow her to the dark side?| The Hollywood Reporter
Unlike Cannes or Berlin, Venice has no formal marketplace — but this year’s slate of art house heavyweights and political thrillers shows why buyers will pay attention.| The Hollywood Reporter
They've endured global scandal, public shaming and decades of blistering media scrutiny. Now they're ready to reclaim their own stories. In their first joint interview the two friends reveal how they got their lives back, and how they teamed up to bring Knox’s twisted tale to the screen in a major new Hulu series.| The Hollywood Reporter
Plus: AIexander McQueen’s dramatic reincarnation and an AI malfunction at a Hollywood summit.| The Hollywood Reporter
Sources claim little-known British actor Scott Rose-Marsh has tested for 007 — he’d be the first ginger Bond.| The Hollywood Reporter
The Oscar winner gets candid about how sobriety saved his life, making the most of second chances and why Jackson Lamb might be the role of his life: “It’s been a real highlight of my career.”| The Hollywood Reporter
The high-flying DJ, record producer and songwriter who produced SNL’s 50th anniversary concert just collected a brand new honor: Emmy nominee.| The Hollywood Reporter
The twin forces of anxiety and celebrity are luring home buyers to the placid pleasures of the Santa Barbara enclave — and driving already-high prices through the stratosphere.| The Hollywood Reporter
The format may be low-brow, for now. But underemployed crews and actors in Southern California are increasingly turning to them in between looking for jobs on features and shows.| The Hollywood Reporter
As L.A. sound stages sit empty, fat tax incentives and saner politics are turning Britain’s capital into a mecca for streamers, studios and stars. Will Trump’s tariffs halt the exodus?| The Hollywood Reporter
Economic turmoil has thrown uncertainty into a red-hot market. But the 32 A-list agents in THR’s annual power list are weathering the storm.| The Hollywood Reporter
With wifi-enabled, voice-activated appliances too clever by half, analog, app-free abodes are suddenly tempting A-list L.A. buyers. Welcome to the new “Dumb House.”| The Hollywood Reporter