Here’s a compilation organized through Associated Press entertainment reporters about what’s happening on TV, streaming and music platforms this week.
films
– If you’ve heard of Netflix’s “Cuties,” it’s probably because of the poster, which aims at online petitions that accuse him of sexualizing young women. Forget the sign. The film by director Ma’mouna Doucouré is a thoughtful and moving drama about the age of Amy, an 11-year-old Senegalese immigrant living in Paris. As her domestic life collapses, Amy is drawn to an organization of women with her elegance who dance, create disorders and wear tight garments and wedge heels. This Sundance Award winner has become famous even before the public sees him. Don’t judge “Cuties” through your canopy and give it a chance when it starts airing on Wednesday.
– “Unpregnant”: The ever-wonderful Haley Lu Richardson stars in this comedy/drama, broadcast on HBO Max on Thursday, about a Missouri teenager looking for an abortion and who has to cross several states to get one in New Mexico and the only additional tension is the fact that she has to team up with her former best friend (played through Barbie Ferreira) on the road.
– “Women Make Film: Episode 2”: Turner Classic Movies’ ambitious Women Make Film series continues Tuesday night with the delivery of Mark Cousins’ 14-hour documentary, focused on credibility, with the character and cute game, at 8pm ET, with a full night of programming through “El Camino” through Spanish filmmaker Ana Mariscal , at 9:15 p. m. (no, not the film “Breaking Bad”) and adding Nicole Holofcener’s net portrait of a very confusing family of women, “Lovely
– AP lindsey Bahr screenwriter
The music
– On Monday, Janelle Monae releases a new song called “Turntables”, featured in the Amazon Studios documentary “All In: The Fight for Democracy. ” The political track is Monae’s first new original music since 2018, when she released it critically. The acclaimed and Grammy nominated album, “Dirty Computer. ” “All In: The Fight for Democracy,” about voter suppression in the United States, will launch in select theaters on Wednesday and will be available for viewing on Amazon Prime Video on September 18. .
Grammy-winning rock icons The Flaming Lips will release their 21st album on Friday. “American Head” includes thirteen non-public tracks produced through Dave Fridmann and the band. Country music superstar Kacey Musgraves appears on the album, causing a song to run in “God and the Policeman”.
– AP Mesfin Fekadu Music Editor
Television
– Track: This is a beloved exhibition that returns for a season 37. Answer: “Jeopardy!” The quiz with Alex Trebek at the forefront of a COVID-19 conscious season hits the screens on Monday and the level now allows more space between the 3 podiums of the competition, as well as among the participants of the host’s lectern. It will also be perfect: 74-time champion Ken Jennings, who will be a representative manufacturer this season. It will provide its own categories of special videos, expand projects, raise awareness of applicants and serve as general ambassador of the exhibition.
– Famous guest hosts are in vogue those days on night television, however, a documentary broadcast on Thursday highlights the one that hitale. “The Sit-In” in Peacock tells the story of when Harry Belafonte replaced Johnny Carson on “The Tonight Show” in 1968. For five nights, the black singer, actor and activist entertained Central American whites with his wits, skill and an astonishing array of visitors: the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. , Sidney Poitier, Robert F. Kennedy, Paul Newman and Aretha Franklin, among them.
– The 19th anniversary of September 11 is Friday and several TELEVISION specials mark this memorable day. ABC will broadcast “9/11 Remevered: The Day We Came Together”, a special filmed at the 2014 inauguration of the 9/11 Remembral Museum. President Barack Obama and then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg sign up for survivors, family circle members, and lifeguards. The performances come with a chorus of children from three hundred other people who make a song “Somewhere”. There are also two consecutive one-hour documentaries about the History Channel: “September 11: The Final Minutes of Fight 93” and “September 11: The Pentagon. “
– Mark Kennedy, AP Entertainment
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Watch AP entertainment here: https://apnews. com/apf-entertainment.
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