'WKRP In Cincinnati' was a great sitcom. But are any of the 'WKRP' cast still alive today? 40+ years later, here's a look at ...
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) - The city once again found itself in the spotlight as a backdrop for another Hollywood production. This time, the cast of Ted Lasso is nowhere to be found. The production gear ...
“Iron Man” star Terrence Howard met Kansas City’s Andy Reid impersonator Matt Black - aka Almost Andy Reid - on the Country Club Plaza Wednesday. Howard is in town shooting scenes for a new movie.
Ron Howard will always be best known for narrative films like “Apollo 13,” “A Beautiful Mind,” “Cocoon” and “Frost/Nixon,” but in the past decade he’s turned more and more to a string of valuable ...
A radio station called WKRP in Cincinnati is now a reality nearly 50 years after the debut of a sitcom with that name made celebrities out of Lonnie Anderson, Howard Hesseman and Gordon Jump. A trio ...
Bryce Dallas Howard has been cast in Curry Barker‘s next directorial Anything But Ghosts, which is being released by Focus Features. Blumhouse-Atomic Monster, Spooky Pictures and Divide/Conquer are ...
WKRP in Cincinnati only ran for four seasons on CBS, but the radio station sitcom left a lasting mark. The cult classic ran from 1978 to 1982 and starred Gary Sandy,Gordon Jump,Howard Hesseman, and ...
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Howard | Movie review

Dustin and Wendy review "Howard", a documentary on songwriter/lyricist Howard Ashman whose work include classic Disney animated features such as The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, and Aladdin.
Terrence Howard has a new theory about why he didn’t return as James “Rhodey” Rhodes in Iron Man 2. There’s been much speculation regarding why Howard didn’t continue to play Rhodey in the MCU after ...
Academy Award winner and Garden State native Anne Hathaway is back in New Jersey — this time for a new Ron Howard-directed film based on a true story. Edison Mayor Sam Joshi told My Central Jersey ...
2025 was a year that posed a lot of questions for movie lovers: Did the success of Sinners prove that there was still a mass audience hungry for original (read: non-IP) stories on a blockbuster level?