Attempts to restrict pharmaceutical advertisements have failed many times over the years, often on First Amendment grounds.
Category: Television
-
How Airlines Pick the Movies on Your Flights
Sure, everyone likes “Barbie.” But who knew that “Cats” would be a hit at 35,000 feet?
-
Kyle Mooney on Divorced-Dad Music
The “Saturday Night Live” alum and director of the new horror-comedy movie “Y2K” talks yacht rock, Cheez-Its and “cat” videos.
-
Neil Cavuto, Longtime Fox News Host, Signs Off the Network
“Your World with Neil Cavuto” was shown in the 4-5 p.m. slot for 28 years, since the network began in 1996.
-
How a Forgotten TV Show Forever Changed the Way We Look at Art
Weekly from 1956 to ’63, a charismatic painter named Lorser Feitelson filled America’s living rooms with the first televised history of art. We’re still exploring — and trapped in — his world.
-
What Is a New York Movie? In 2024, the Definition Changed.
Whether it was “A Complete Unknown” with 1960s Greenwich Village or “Anora” with present-day Brooklyn, filmmakers put new frames around the city.
-
Disney Pulls Transgender Story Line From Pixar’s ‘Win or Lose’ Series
The animated “Win or Lose” follows a middle school softball team, and each episode is told from the perspective of a different character.
-
‘Bluey’ Is Headed to Theaters, Backed by Disney
BBC Studios and the Walt Disney Company will collaborate on a movie about the hit children’s character.
-
The TV Shows, Movies and Music That Readers Loved in 2024
Critical favorites like “Anora,” “Cowboy Carter” and “The Bear” still left room for more recent arrivals like “Wicked” and Broadway’s “Maybe Happy Ending.”
-
Holiday Movies Quiz
Find out if you deserve the expert’s Santa hat or a big old lump of coal.
-
Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie Give a Surprising Education in Opera
“Paris & Nicole: The Encore,” a sequel to “The Simple Life,” is a comedic lark about creating an opera, with enlightening lessons along the way.
