With The Morning Show named today as one of the AFI Awards’ 2023 honorees for television program of the year, the question arises, how will the Apple TV+ show possibly up the ante for Season 4?
Will Bradley be in jail ? Will Alex be running everything? And will Cory finally give up and go home to his mom to sing another round of “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough”? With the FBI, a company merger, and a sociopathic businessman (Jon Hamm) in the mix at the close of Season 3, it seems there’s everything to play for next season.
“Everybody keeps asking me if Bradley’s in jail,” Reese Witherspoon said during a press conference moderated by Deadline on Thursday, “but I don’t know if I’m in trouble.”
“But you’ve tried on jumpsuits, right?” executive producer Michael Ellenberg said.
“Did you decide on a shade of orange?” Jennifer Aniston joked.
Will Bradley be in jail ? Will Alex be running everything? And will Cory finally give up and go home to his mom to sing another round of “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough”? With the FBI, a company merger, and a sociopathic businessman (Jon Hamm) in the mix at the close of Season 3, it seems there’s everything to play for next season.
“Everybody keeps asking me if Bradley’s in jail,” Reese Witherspoon said during a press conference moderated by Deadline on Thursday, “but I don’t know if I’m in trouble.”
“But you’ve tried on jumpsuits, right?” executive producer Michael Ellenberg said.
“Did you decide on a shade of orange?” Jennifer Aniston joked.
- 12/8/2023
- by Antonia Blyth
- Deadline Film + TV
A Chicago grandmother has been sentenced to life in prison for the the 2013 strangling and beating death of her 8-year-old granddaughter, Gizzell Ford, People confirms.
The case sparked intense attention after prosecutors released Gizzell’s rainbow-colored diary, in which the third-grader — nicknamed “Gizzy” — explicitly described some of the abuse she suffered at the hand of her grandma, Helen Ford.
She detailed beatings, being chained to a bed and being forced to squat in one position for hours.
“I hope that I don’t mess up today because I really want to be able to just sit down, watch T.V.
The case sparked intense attention after prosecutors released Gizzell’s rainbow-colored diary, in which the third-grader — nicknamed “Gizzy” — explicitly described some of the abuse she suffered at the hand of her grandma, Helen Ford.
She detailed beatings, being chained to a bed and being forced to squat in one position for hours.
“I hope that I don’t mess up today because I really want to be able to just sit down, watch T.V.
- 6/9/2017
- by Steve Helling
- PEOPLE.com
A judge in Cook County, Illinois, has convicted Helen Ford of first-degree murder in the 2013 strangling and beating death of her 8-year-old granddaughter, Gizzell Ford, People confirms.
In court on Thursday, Judge Evelyn Clay did not even try to hide her outrage as she addressed the 55-year-old woman’s crime.
“This murder was torture,” Clay said. “That child suffered a slow and agonizing death. That little body looked like it had been pulverized from head to toe. Her treatment of this child was evil.”
During Ford’s murder trial this week, prosecutors described unspeakable torment: beatings, starvation, forced exercise and strangulation.
In court on Thursday, Judge Evelyn Clay did not even try to hide her outrage as she addressed the 55-year-old woman’s crime.
“This murder was torture,” Clay said. “That child suffered a slow and agonizing death. That little body looked like it had been pulverized from head to toe. Her treatment of this child was evil.”
During Ford’s murder trial this week, prosecutors described unspeakable torment: beatings, starvation, forced exercise and strangulation.
- 3/2/2017
- by Steve Helling
- PEOPLE.com
Like many girls her age, 8-year-old Gizzell Ford kept a diary. The cover was striped with rainbows, and she used a pink marker to record her thoughts.
For the first few entries, Gizzell — known to friends as “Gizzy” — wrote about typical third-grade things: jumping rope, school teachers, clothes and friends.
But her life in Chicago seemed to derail in the summer of 2013, as she began detailing abuse she allegedly suffered at the hands of her grandmother.
“I know if I be good and do everything I’m told I won’t have to do punishments,” Gizzell wrote. She described how...
For the first few entries, Gizzell — known to friends as “Gizzy” — wrote about typical third-grade things: jumping rope, school teachers, clothes and friends.
But her life in Chicago seemed to derail in the summer of 2013, as she began detailing abuse she allegedly suffered at the hands of her grandmother.
“I know if I be good and do everything I’m told I won’t have to do punishments,” Gizzell wrote. She described how...
- 3/2/2017
- by Steve Helling
- PEOPLE.com
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