Do not panic. I repeat. Do not panic! HBO’s biggest series Game of Thrones season 8 is set to air in 2019.
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HBO’s ‘Divorce’ Hosts “New Year, New You” Week to Kick Off 2018
Divorce, an HBO comedy series starring Sarah Jessica Parker and Thomas Haden Church, knows exactly what it means to need a fresh start.
On The Scene: HBO Hosts Premiere For ’15: A Quinceañera Story’
Quinceañera – an important Latino tradition where a young girl at the age of 15 is showcased to the world at the start of her womanhood.
‘Baltimore Rising’ is a 2017 documentary on the protests in Baltimore after the death of Freddie Gray. It was created, directed, and produced by actor and filmmaker Sonja Sohn and HBO Films.
Rolling Stone: Stories From the Edge is narrated through the past. Charming and unapologetic archival footage of Rolling Stone magazine’s founding fathers speaking as idealistic 20 somethings ties the new HBO documentary together, and it serves well to represent the core youthful energy that still drives the media superpower.
The documentary, that premiers its first part Nov. 6, does well in presenting the true ‘stories from the edge,’ from the beginnings of the magazine that turns 50 years old this year. It also does well in exemplifying the heavy handed role Rolling Stone has played in shaping the ways we consume music, pop culture, and even politics. Where it excels is in inviting the viewer on an emotional journey, through opportunity and loss, and committing to the Rolling Stone manner of representing iconic public figures as vulnerable and human.
Stories From the Edge opens with a collage of classic covers and magazine moments paired with the words that 21 year old co-founder Jann Wenner wrote in his prophetic letter to his readers in Rolling Stone’s first issue, “Rolling Stone is not just about music, but also about the things and attitudes that the music embraces. We’ve been working quite hard on it, and we hope you can dig it.” Everyone did in fact dig it, and in parts 1 and 2 of the four part documentary we’re guided through the stories of the cultural impacts the magazine made and the classic historical moments they were given access to.
Directors Blair Foster and Alex Gibney found a way to group together some completely unrelated anecdotes in a composition that is seamlessly cohesive. The doc follows the trajectory of how Rolling Stone went from a music mag to a major player in the political sphere. There should be no mistake made, however, that the publication had less depth when it was just covering rockstars. The segments that featured the coverage of figures like Tina Turner and Mick Jagger emphasized the unique light Rolling Stone shined on them, during a time where not many other places were quite as observational and analytic in their profile pieces.
One part that stuck out from the rest was Part 2’s portion on John Lennon. Throughout the film we cut to footage of Jann Wenner and famous photographer Annie Leibowitz reminiscing over old photos, and at one point they reach the last photo ever taken of Lennon, photographed by Leibovitz. He is nude, embracing his fully clothed wife Yoko Ono. Leibowitz speaks on how during the shoot he pleaded for both he and Yoko to be on the cover. A few hours afterwards he was shot a killed. For his posthumous cover, Leibovitz and Wenner deliberated over whether Lennon should appear on his own, but Leibovitz insisted what he wanted was the women he loved on the cover with him. The image is now an iconic one, it caught him in the most human and vulnerable moment, and it stuck out as the stunning final photo of a man everyone felt they knew. Rolling Stone didn’t become ‘more than a music magazine’ because of its decision to cover more aspects of culture over time, but because the way it covered music and artists was so audacious and spirited. It was and still is the holy book of counterculture, and if you don’t agree, Stories From the Edge will convince you.
The premiere of HBO’s newest documentary special ‘Rolling Stone: Stories From the Edge’ took place Monday night in New York, and brought out a crowd of stars to celebrate the magazine’s newest venture.
According to a study conducted by Columbia University in 2014, Latinos were better represented in the mainstream media in the 50s than they are today. The report cited a “narrower range of stories and roles” – something that Shayla Rivera, one of the three stars of HBO Latino’s Entre Nos: Part 2, reiterated on the red carpet before the premiere.
Shayla Rivera, Puerto Rican comedian, mother, ex-rocket scientist, and one of three stars of Entre Nos: Part 2.
The second installation of the purely Latino-comic special, and the first original comedic content aired by HBO Latino, revolves around three distinctly different yet equally successful comedians. In watching the premiere, I found, surprisingly, that though my roots are Latina, I did not have to relate to the comedians’ nationalities to understand and relate to the humor. Much of the sketches were spoken in English with some “Spanglish,” yet I found that the non-Spanish speakers were left all but confused.
The special really did illuminate the gaping void in Hollywood and in comedy. Latinos in media are almost always the sassy, spunky, comic relief – but Entre Nos depicted them as also nerdy, goofy, and most of all, intelligent. This is a realm that is starkly misrepresented and extremely difficult to ignore; when asked to name Hollywood’s big name Latinos/as, most people are not so quick to answer.
Mexican-American comedian Frankie Quiñones getting some laughs before the premiere.
Entre Nos: Part 2 is a spontaneous and hilarious addition to this Hispanic Heritage Month, and more importantly, to the continued efforts of diversification in Hollywood. Shayla Rivera, Vladimir Caamaño, and Frankie Quiñones, are no doubt Latinos, no doubt native Spanish speakers, but moreover, they are comedians just like Jerry Seinfeld, Louis C.K., Sarah Silverman. And they deserve the same recognition. There is an overwhelmingly large fount of Latino talent that is just waiting to be discovered, and HBO Latino achieved what I’m sure will be the first of many successes for the Latino community.
HBO Latino presented Entre Nos: Part 2, a special featuring three Latino comedians, at Cinepolis on October 12 as part of the New York Latino Film Festival (NYLFF).
The special is the first original comedic content aired on HBO Latino, and features three comedians who were ecstatic about the project from its conception.
Caamaño, Rivera, and Quiñones at the red carpet before the premiere.
Shayla Rivera, Puerto Rican comedian, mother, and ex-rocket scientist, prides her comedic style as “the truth.” On the red carpet, Rivera spoke about the conception of her philosophy: “My biggest inspiration when I first started in comedy was George Carlin. I would sit there with my dad and we would laugh, and I would see how, honestly, the funniest thing out there is what we all do but we don’t talk about. That’s the truth. If you shined a light on the thing that we do behind closed doors, people will just laugh with you.”
Vladimir Caamaño, one of Variety’s Top 10 Comics to Watch, is a “true New Yorker,” he says. He has performed at almost every comedy club in the city, and has been for years. His comedy sketch in Entre Nos centers around making fun of the rich. At the panel after the premiere, Caamaño claimed that since poverty is not a choice, neither is being rich, and that coming from the “other side” gave him a good perspective with which to create a comedy sketch.
Rivera and Caamaño at the panel discussion.
Frankie Quiñones has been dubbed a “one-man variety show.” He has introduced and perfected multiple personas in his routines throughout his comedy career, and has performed overseas for troops in Japan, Europe, and the Middle East.
Rivera, Caamaño, and Quiñones shared similar opinions on the importance in displaying multi-faceted Latino comedians.
“There is so much Latino talent out there, completely untapped,” Rivera said.
When asked about the underrepresentation and misrepresentation of Latinos both in Hollywood and in comedy, she said, “They think I can only play a maid, or only play a nanny, or the hot, sassy, whatever…which is not true. I can play a scientist, I can play a judge. What I found is that it is not as much our problem as it is their perception. And they still haven’t really understood that we’re all different, we all have different tendencies – like they are.”
The special, hosted by comedian Ben Gonzalez, will premiere on all HBO platforms on October 13 at 9:30 p.m.
Exclusive: Cast Talks ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ Season 9 At NY Premiere [Video]
On September 27, 2017, The Knockturnal was on the scene for HBO’s “Curb Your Enthusiasm” season 9 premiere at SVA Theater.
Exclusive: Executive Producer Jeff Schaffer Talks ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ At NY Premiere
“Curb Your Enthusiasm’s” ninth season premiered Sunday, Oct. 1, at 10 p.m. on HBO.