A&E staff picks: March 18
By Arts & Entertainment Staff | March 17, 2016Each month, Arts & Entertainment staff members compile a list of their current favorite tracks to help readers find their new go-to jam.
Each month, Arts & Entertainment staff members compile a list of their current favorite tracks to help readers find their new go-to jam.
“The Real O’Neals” is the newest sitcom on ABC — a network whose comedy lineup focuses on variations of the traditional family unit.
In 2008, “Cloverfield” captivated audiences with a fresh-take on a rather traditional tale: an attack on a city by a mysterious monster.
This year’s Virginia Festival of the Book kicked off Wednesday and continues through Sunday. Arts & Entertainment has compiled a list of the weekend’s most interesting, exciting and thought-provoking discussions.
Episode four returns to Brooklyn to focus on the leading women’s relationships as some fall apart and others fall together.
With their third album, the group returns with an updated, smoother, warmer sound that still holds true to the style from the first album that shot them into the spotlight back in 2009.
It becomes clear almost immediately in “The Brothers Grimsby” that viewers are in a for a raunchy experience.
Netflix recently released the fourth season of their wildly popular, critically acclaimed political drama “House of Cards.”
After part one’s tumultuous events, part two of the season 11 finale of “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” showcases the gang’s final interactions in the face of a likely death.
Following the releases of Slayer’s “Repentless” and Megadeth’s “Dystopia,” metal fans across the world called out for the other two members of The Big Four, Anthrax and Metallica, to put out albums. Anthrax responded first with heads banging and teeth gnashing.
On Thursday, rapper Kendrick Lamar released “Untitled Unmastered,” a collection of eight demo tracks created during the recording of “To Pimp a Butterfly” unpublished until now.
Why does “Fuller House” exist? No seriously, why in our crowded and sophisticated television landscape would a show so insipid even be made?
In the third episode of season five, “Girls” headed east this week in “Japan.” After her absence in last week’s episode, Shoshanna (Zosia Mamet) is the focus of this week’s installment.
Disney’s “Zootopia” is the latest in a batch of animated hits which some see as a revival of the “Disney Renaissance” — a period beginning with “The Little Mermaid.”
On Jan. 30, without warning, Louis C.K. released Horace and Pete, a web-series in which C.K. is the writer, director and lead actor.
Patrick Stickles is not a very happy man. Having fronted Titus Andronicus since 2005, almost every lyric he’s penned for the band has reveled in self-loathing and hatred of both the people around him and humanity at large.
This week, “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” kicked off the first half of a two-part finale with “The Gang Goes to Hell.”
The men of “Girls” are consistently charming and quirky, but the series’ newest episode, “Good Man,” really gives them a chance to shine.
In their penultimate performance of Pierre de Marivaux’s “Triumph of Love,” the seven-person cast presented an incredibly comical performance of unrequited love, false identities and raunchy jests.
The 88th Academy Awards were held this past Sunday, and the show was sharper than it's been in years, while also bringing quite a few surprises.