When ABC suspended Jimmy Kimmel last month, many critics implied or outright declared that late-night TV was dead. Not so fast, perhaps.” I saw bold proof that, despite all the talk about late-night TV losing its relevance, there sure seemed to be a lot of people who still cared about what hosts like Kimmel had to say,” Eric Deggans writes. Read his piece from [@npr]( ): https://flip.it/eSjZKh #Culture #Entertainment #LateNight #Television #TV #JimmyKimmel
Diane Keaton’s death, less than a month after Robert Redford’s passing, “represents another stinging loss to the pantheon of New Hollywood in the decades before the major studios largely stepped away from making movies for grownups,” film critic David Rooney writes. The Oscar-winning star of “Annie Hall” and dozens of other movies “essentially reinvented the classic screwball heroine for a more socially evolved age.” Movie fans will appreciate Keaton even more after reading Rooney’s article for [@THR]( ): #Culture #Entertainment #Film #Movies #DianeKeaton
Sports betting has exploded across America, with a vast majority of states legalizing gambling in recent years. In fact, Americans gambled $150 billion through online sportsbooks last year. Far too many lost nearly everything. [@RollingStone]( ) reports on the near-fatal consequences for a group of young men with a phone, app, and a growing addition: #Culture #Gambling #Betting #SportsBetting #Sports #USA