Get ready, Bachelor Nation! Several stars are headed to Celebrity Family Feud this summer.
The Steve Harvey-hosted game show featuring celebrities has become a summer staple for ABC.
Thanks to The Golden Bachelor star Gerry Turner, we know that he and his new wife, Theresa Nist, battle Bachelor Nation for charity.
It was a blended family affair for the newlyweds, who were joined by Gerry’s daughters, Angie and Jenny, and Theresa’s children, Jen and Tommy.
The episode has Theresa and Gerry’s family face off against three Bachelor Nation couples.
Joey Graziadei, Kelsey Anderson, Charity Lawson, Dotun Olubeko, Zach Shallcross, and Kaity Biggar take on Gerry and Theresa on Celebrity Family Feud.
When will The Golden Bachelor stars battle Bachelor Nation on Celebrity Family feud?
Taking to Instagram, Gerry shared images from filming the ABC show. Two shots were from the red carpet with his daughters. Another...
The Steve Harvey-hosted game show featuring celebrities has become a summer staple for ABC.
Thanks to The Golden Bachelor star Gerry Turner, we know that he and his new wife, Theresa Nist, battle Bachelor Nation for charity.
It was a blended family affair for the newlyweds, who were joined by Gerry’s daughters, Angie and Jenny, and Theresa’s children, Jen and Tommy.
The episode has Theresa and Gerry’s family face off against three Bachelor Nation couples.
Joey Graziadei, Kelsey Anderson, Charity Lawson, Dotun Olubeko, Zach Shallcross, and Kaity Biggar take on Gerry and Theresa on Celebrity Family Feud.
When will The Golden Bachelor stars battle Bachelor Nation on Celebrity Family feud?
Taking to Instagram, Gerry shared images from filming the ABC show. Two shots were from the red carpet with his daughters. Another...
- 4/8/2024
- by Rachelle Lewis
- Monsters and Critics
You are reading an exclusive WrapPRO article for free. Want to level up your entertainment career? Subscribe to WrapPRO.
History typically unfolds step by step. But as Hollywood woke up to the realization that SAG-AFTRA was joining the ongoing Writers Guild strike to effectively shut down large swaths of the entertainment industry, the sense of moment and import was inescapable. The addition of a union boasting 160,000 professionals ranging from DJs and puppeteers to news anchors and actors alongside some 20,000 members of the WGA who had already been on strike for two months changed everything at the stroke of midnight.
The reverberations were felt in London, where the cast of “Oppenheimer” walked out of the film’s premiere Thursday, to Sun Valley, where media moguls biking in the Idaho sun as the strike unfolded suddenly took on a new level of impropriety. Wall Street mostly shrugged off the news, despite a...
History typically unfolds step by step. But as Hollywood woke up to the realization that SAG-AFTRA was joining the ongoing Writers Guild strike to effectively shut down large swaths of the entertainment industry, the sense of moment and import was inescapable. The addition of a union boasting 160,000 professionals ranging from DJs and puppeteers to news anchors and actors alongside some 20,000 members of the WGA who had already been on strike for two months changed everything at the stroke of midnight.
The reverberations were felt in London, where the cast of “Oppenheimer” walked out of the film’s premiere Thursday, to Sun Valley, where media moguls biking in the Idaho sun as the strike unfolded suddenly took on a new level of impropriety. Wall Street mostly shrugged off the news, despite a...
- 7/14/2023
- by Kristen Lopez
- The Wrap
You are reading an exclusive WrapPRO article for free. Want to level up your entertainment career? Subscribe to WrapPRO.
“All of us labor in webs spun long before we were born,” William Faulkner wrote in “Requiem for a Nun.” As we’ve seen with the WGA strike, Hollywood’s past issues with labor often seem like a familiar tangle. An ongoing exhibit at the Skirball Center in Los Angeles about the Hollywood blacklist of the 1950s is making those attending since the writers’ strike began see the dispute in a new — and yet familiar — light.
The writers’ battle with studios is primarily economic, while the blacklist dealt with Cold War politics. But Skirball Center curator Cate Thurston, who put together the current exhibition “Blacklist: The Hollywood Red Scare,” sees similarities between then and now — chiefly in the idea that studios and writers are pitted against each other by external forces...
“All of us labor in webs spun long before we were born,” William Faulkner wrote in “Requiem for a Nun.” As we’ve seen with the WGA strike, Hollywood’s past issues with labor often seem like a familiar tangle. An ongoing exhibit at the Skirball Center in Los Angeles about the Hollywood blacklist of the 1950s is making those attending since the writers’ strike began see the dispute in a new — and yet familiar — light.
The writers’ battle with studios is primarily economic, while the blacklist dealt with Cold War politics. But Skirball Center curator Cate Thurston, who put together the current exhibition “Blacklist: The Hollywood Red Scare,” sees similarities between then and now — chiefly in the idea that studios and writers are pitted against each other by external forces...
- 6/30/2023
- by Kristen Lopez
- The Wrap
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