Tools
Change country:
Entertainment & Arts
  1. Netflix's password-sharing crackdown is paying off as earnings beat Wall Street expectations Netflix on Thursday released its first-quarter earnings, which topped analyst estimates in terms of subscriber additions and profit.
    latimes.com
  2. Indie creatures to the core, David and Nathan Zellner cut their own path through the wild The filmmaking brothers have found a deep emotional connection to a family of mythical creatures led by an unrecognizable Riley Keough and Jesse Eisenberg.
    latimes.com
  3. Broadway makes way for 'Crazy Rich Asians' with new musical directed by Jon M. Chu Filmmaker Jon M. Chu will find familiar material in his Broadway debut as he directs a musical adaptation of author Kevin Kwan's 'Crazy Rich Asians' trilogy.
    latimes.com
  4. How Leslie Liao left Netflix's HR department to return as a rising star in stand-up comedy The comedian talks about quitting her Netflix job when she got her stand-up career up and running. Next month she headlines the Masonic Lodge at Hollywood Forever as part of Netflix Is A Joke Fest.
    latimes.com
  5. Maynard James Keenan celebrates 60 by rocking out family-style with all of his bands for "Sessanta" The Times spoke with the frontman of Tool, A Perfect Circle and Puscifer about his upcoming birthday show and creative process, how he manages it all, where he sees himself at 60, and more.
    latimes.com
  6. He wasn't a crier, but then his wife died — and the tears wouldn't stop. How one father found his way forward When bereavement books didn't help Warren Kozak, he decided to write his own. Only after he was done did he realize that his book about loss was really a book about love.
    latimes.com
  7. This trans author toured red-state libraries. What she found might surprise you Diana Goetsch spent months visiting red-state libraries to do presentations on the freedom to read. Would she be recognized, or clocked as transgender?
    latimes.com
  8. 'Amor Eterno' and 'El Cantante' to be added to National Recording Registry Juan Gabriel’s “Amor Eterno" and Héctor Lavoe’s “El Cantante" will be safeguarded for posterity, the Library of Congress announced on Tuesday.
    latimes.com