“Indian Matchmaking” Season 3 will premiere April 21 on Netflix, the streamer announced Tuesday. Mumbai’s matchmaker Sima Taparia returns to help single millennials around the world find love, employing decades-worth of experience and traditional methods. This season, Sima’s matchmaking touch will reach from New York to New Delhi, Miami to London, as well as clients both old and new. “Indian Matchmaking” premiered its first season in July 2020. The show is executive produced by Aaron Saidman, Eli Holzman, Smriti Mundhra and J.C. Begley.
Check out some first looks of season three below.
Sima Aunty in Episode 1 of “Indian Matchmaking.” (Courtesy of Netflix) “Indian Matchmaking” (Courtesy of Netflix) Viral and Aashay in Episode 1 of “Indian Matchmaking.” (Courtesy of Netflix) Vikash in Episode 1 of “Indian Matchmaking.” (Courtesy of Netflix)
Also in today’s TV news:
First Looks
Netflix’s “Sweet Tooth,” set to premiere April 27, is back with a Season 2 trailer. The series...
Check out some first looks of season three below.
Sima Aunty in Episode 1 of “Indian Matchmaking.” (Courtesy of Netflix) “Indian Matchmaking” (Courtesy of Netflix) Viral and Aashay in Episode 1 of “Indian Matchmaking.” (Courtesy of Netflix) Vikash in Episode 1 of “Indian Matchmaking.” (Courtesy of Netflix)
Also in today’s TV news:
First Looks
Netflix’s “Sweet Tooth,” set to premiere April 27, is back with a Season 2 trailer. The series...
- 3/21/2023
- by Sophia Scorziello
- Variety Film + TV
This story was first published after the October 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas, the deadliest mass shooting in our history. We will republish it every time America suffers another mass shooting.
A.J. Schnack remembers the calm in every town. No matter how hellish the shooting, or how many news crews came, things always went back to normal. So Schnack made a film.
“Every time, there’s people who think we need to do something about this violence, then the other side says, ‘Now is not the time,’ and then a few days go by and there’s just… nothing,” he said. “I wanted to make something that shows these events happening again and again and how they echo one another.”
Also Read: Mass Shooting at Texas Church Sparks Mourning, Outcry: 'We Can Do Better Than This'
Schnack’s film, “Speaking Is Difficult,” travels to Colorado Springs, Colorado; Charleston, South Carolina; Fort Hood,...
A.J. Schnack remembers the calm in every town. No matter how hellish the shooting, or how many news crews came, things always went back to normal. So Schnack made a film.
“Every time, there’s people who think we need to do something about this violence, then the other side says, ‘Now is not the time,’ and then a few days go by and there’s just… nothing,” he said. “I wanted to make something that shows these events happening again and again and how they echo one another.”
Also Read: Mass Shooting at Texas Church Sparks Mourning, Outcry: 'We Can Do Better Than This'
Schnack’s film, “Speaking Is Difficult,” travels to Colorado Springs, Colorado; Charleston, South Carolina; Fort Hood,...
- 8/4/2019
- by Jeremy Fuster
- The Wrap
Read More: See Trailer for "Triggering Wounds" Gun Violence Documentary, Produced by Harlem Teens More than 8,000 people die from gunfire in the United States every spring, and Emmy-winning directors Nick Doob and Shari Cookson are exposing the trauma caused by such violence in their upcoming HBO documentary, "Requiem for the Dead: American Spring 2014." The duo, who have previously worked together on other hard-hitting HBO docs such as "Paycheck to Paycheck: The Life and Times of Katrina Gilbert" and "The Alzheimer’s Project: The Memory Loss Tapes," gathered details of gun violence and related deaths in the spring of 2014 through social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter, 911 calls, police files and interviews of family and friends of victims. With a ticking countdown to the 8,007 deaths in Spring 2014, the trailer powerfully showcases tweets, crime scene photos and tearful interviews. The emotional documentary...
- 6/3/2015
- by Kaeli Van Cott
- Indiewire
Directors Nick Doob and Shari Cookson tell the stories of some of those who died from gunfire in the spring of 2014. Using found footage, social media, news accounts, 911 calls and police files, "Requiem for the Dead" explores the aftermaths of accidental shootings, suicides, family disputes and random acts of violence through the eyes of those who survived the victims. Doob and Cookson collaborated on HBO’s Emmy-winning “The Alzheimer’s Project: The Memory Loss Tapes” and Emmy-nominated “Paycheck to Paycheck: The Life & Times of Katrina Gilbert." Below, see the emotional "Requiem for the Dead" trailer, which debuts today in honor of the first national Gun Violence Awareness Day.
- 6/2/2015
- by Ryan Lattanzio
- Thompson on Hollywood
There’s a scene about halfway through Shari Cookson and Nick Doob’s documentary short Paycheck to Paycheck: The Life and Times of Katrina Gilbert that the subject in question receives news that she has passed a long-feared college entrance exam and can now enroll in a local institution. For Gilbert, a single mother of three who works long stretches at a care facility for the elderly as a certified nurse’s assistant (hard work, and all for the paltry sum of $9.49 an hour), the possibility that she can now attend and complete college is both a tremendous blessing and the result of lots of hard work. Minutes later, however, Gilbert is informed that her financial aid – an obvious necessity in her situation – has been denied, and her joy turns to confusion, pain, and fear. Gilbert, who continually approaches the numerous setbacks of her life on the brink of poverty with a matter-of-fact spirit that is nothing...
- 3/14/2014
- by Kate Erbland
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
- This year Ioncinema.com is covering the 2006 edition of the Sundance Film Festival Live from Park City, Utah. Weâ.ll be on hand to cover the festival, and while we wonâ.t be able to cover everything from A to Z: here is a comprehensive beforehand look at the selections in each of the festivalâ.s sections. (Note: To access individual preview pages, simply click on the links below) January 19th to the 29th, 2006Counting Down: updateCountdownClock('January 19, 2006'); A Matter of Degrees - Davis Guggenheim Adam's Apples - Anders Thomas Jensen All Aboard! Rosie's Family Cruise - Shari Cookson Battle in Heaven - Carlos Reygadas Beyond Beats and Rhymes: A Hip-Hop Head Weighs In On Manhood in Hip-Hop Culture - Byron Hurt Clear Cut: The Story of Philomath, Oregon - Peter Richardson Dreamland - Jason Matzner Ev Confidential: Who Killed the Electric Car? - Chris Paine Everyone Stares: The Police Inside Out
- 1/16/2006
- IONCINEMA.com
Rosie O'Donnell is setting sail with HBO with a documentary about a gay family cruise to air next year. Rosie and Kelli O'Donnell of One Canvas Prods. are executive producers with Sheila Nevins, president of HBO Documentary and Family. Shari Cookson (Living Dolls: The Making of a Child Beauty Queen) will produce and direct. The cruise, which hosted 500 same-sex families on a weeklong adventure to Key West and the Bahamas, was chartered July 11-18 by O'Donnell's R Family Vacations, which caters to the gay and lesbian market. "We're delighted to be in business with Rosie again, and we are honored that she is entrusting this documentary -- which explores true family values and celebrates difference -- to HBO," Nevins said in a statement. O'Donnell has worked with HBO before on family special Rosie O'Donnell's Kids Are Punny and an HBO Comedy Hour stand-up special.
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