Emmy Magazine - In The Mix
Twenty-Two Minutes and Counting
Writers, producers and execs are stretching out sitcom episodes, now that streaming has broken the twenty-two-minute mold.
Arriving at the perfect title for a TV series can be even harder than getting the greenlight.
A mover-and-shaker from the Show-Me State stands up for "new Sams" at the Esmail Corp.
Once she went for voiceover, this agent knew she was where she belonged.
The postpartum writing jag of the actress-author produced a book of essays, and in her "field notes on human behavior," she says, "the person who gets roasted most is myself."
First in a documentary, then a book, a Sesame Street fan explored the show's history. In the process, singular photos came to light.
As EPIX becomes MGM+, producers of some of the new streamer's prominent series couldn't be more pleased.
A filmmaker puts his all into a doc on the singer and social activist.
Series give new life to old songs.
Far from her Australian home, this pup makes herself a name.
When the actress bobbed up on a beach in 1965, in pantaloons and ponytail, a pop-culture bombshell was born. The star of I Dream of Jeannie looks back on her startling Hollywood rise.
An actress from Peacock's Killing It helps deaf Latino youth enter the industry.
The weather-challenged Adele special — shot at an L.A. landmark — leads to an Emmy win for a lighting pro.