return with another album full of good-time anthems titled “Love & Light,” their latest for Mercury Nashville/UMG. “Drunk Girls in Bathrooms” might be the most romantic song written about a glorious five-minute friendship; “Kissing Cowboys” sounds like a raucous good time in a crowded dive bar. It is the soundtrack to a summertime road trip with girlfriends.
— It’s been 20 years since Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie first showed us what’s hot on “The Simple Life.” The two revive their schtick witha three-part series where they recreate memorable moments from the past and return to work at a Sonic fast-food location. It debuts Thursday on Peacock.
— Jamie Foxx is ready to address his 2023and joke about it, too. The Oscar winner has a new comedy special called “debuting Tuesday on Netflix. The streamer is promoting the event as “the story we’ve been waiting for.” In a trailer, the multi-hyphenate performer walks on stage and declares, ’I’m back!” The special was filmed in October.
details just how the serial killer discovered his “dark passenger.” The show stars Patrick Gibson as the young Dexter and Christian Slater as his father Harry, who teaches his son to follow a code of ethics when it comes to murder. “It was simple. Kill the bad buys who escape justice,” we hear Michael C. Hall say in the trailer. Hall, who played Dexter in the original series, returns to narrate the character’s inner voice. Sarah Michelle Gellar and Patrick Dempsey also appear. “Original Sin” is just“Original Sin” premieres Sunday on Showtime and streams on Paramount+ with Showtime.
returns this month with cast changes for its ninth season. Home design expert Jeremiah Brent replaces Bobby Berk to round out the Fab Five. Fans may remember Brent from Bravo’s “The Rachel Zoe Project” or his design shows with husband Nate Berkus. “Queer Eye” dropped Wednesday on Netflix.
— Two sitcom favorites, Ray Romano and Lisa Kudrow, team up for a dark comedy inHis friend didn’t have the money or the will to fix up the house after her abusive husband moved out.
“I think house shaming is about comparison, but it can also be about a person’s own struggles,” he said.Barbara Fight was a TV producer for
for 12 years before going into home organizing in New York. She said house shame got way worse with the rise of social media and its idealized depictions of homes most people can’t afford or otherwise will never have.But there are lots of easy, inexpensive ways people can help themselves feel better about their living spaces if they so choose.