Snubbed: 10 Classic TV Shows That Never Won an Emmy
'The Wire' may be the greatest television series of all time. Emmy voters didn't care.
'The Wire' may be the greatest television series of all time. Emmy voters didn't care.
Fans of the Shelbys, the Bluths, and Texas football be warned: A dreaded red padlock is popping up on some popular series with the streamer’s new Basic With Ads offering.
The real-life mansion used for the Creel house in ‘Stranger Things’ is in Georgia—and it features a cast iron urinal.
Rednex's fiddle-fueled '90s hit “Cotton Eye Joe” was a reworking of an old American folk song that do-si-doed all the way to No. 25 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Though often dismissed as a bunch of movies about a crazy guy with a knife, there’s a sense of near-constant creativity at work within even the most low-budget, opportunistic slasher films.
During Halloween '77, dressing up as Chewbacca meant buying a werewolf mask and keeping your yap shut.
Just because you love 'Scream' doesn't necessarily mean you're going to enjoy 'Cannibal Holocaust,' so knowing your horror subgenres can come in handy.
The show, which has drawn rave reviews in London, will have previews beginning June 30.
Pennywise, Tim Curry's homicidal, pasty-faced clown, managed to really scare the poor little kid who played Georgie.
Sometimes the most terrifying movie monster is the one you never see.
What was intended to be an innocuous Halloween decorating segment ended with an allegedly inebriated Ewok humping Al Roker's leg.
From rock classics to horror movie tracks, these are the Halloween songs Spotify users are listening to.
The newest knowledge bomb from Mental Floss contains history, trivia, and lore about dozens of films from the past 50 years.
Want unsettling but not wet-your-pants scary? This unusual formula for tolerable horror movies may be just what you need.
Legendary drive-in film critic and host Joe Bob Briggs talks about the history of midnight movies, his upcoming Shudder special, ‘Joe-Bob's Haunted Halloween Hangout,‘ and more.
‘The Midnight Club’ co-creator Mike Flanagan actively tried to set the record—but not because he loves jump scares.
No one does super-fandom like the Brits, and back in late '90s, it looked as though Beatlemania might finally be outdone by the Spice Girls.
When filming began on 'Desperately Seeking Susan,' Madonna was an up-and-coming singer. By the time shooting wrapped, she was a bona fide superstar.
You don’t need to sign up for a streaming service to satisfy your horror craving.
Many movie sequels live up to—or even exceed—their predecessors.
William Shatner maintains a conventions-only signing policy. Bryan Cranston gets pestered too often. Steve Martin prefers to hand out business cards.
The jump scare is often written off as a cheap trick used to prop up bad films. But when done well and with purpose, jump scares can add genuine fright and terror.
From Werner Herzog’s ‘Fitzcarraldo’ to John McTiernan's 2002 remake of ‘Rollerball,’ these legendary cult films nearly drove their directors to the brink.
“Ohhhhhhhhh-regon Trail, where the dysentery comes sweeping down the plains.”