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‘No One Will Save You’ is a dialogue-free spin on the alien invasion movie
Why Apple’s ‘The Super Models’ is a worthy look back into the 1980s fashion industry
Why you need to watch the largely improvised ‘Theater Camp’
Pablo Larraín delivers biting satire in Netflix’s ‘El Conde’
‘The Pope’s Exorcist’ is a silly teaser for spooky season
‘You Are So Not Invited to My Bat Mitzvah’ joins the echelon of preteen coming-of-age movies
Opinion: Stop treating animation like it’s the first draft of a live-action adaptation
People want a Samantha spinoff after ‘And Just Like That…’ finale
Why Seema on ‘And Just Like That’ is one of the best new TV characters
‘Depp v. Heard’ looks back at ‘trial by TikTok,’ but offers no new insight
‘Red, White & Royal Blue’ is a solid romance—but a lot is left on the cutting room floor
Why has ‘Suits’ blown up so much on Netflix?
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The last wrestling hotline still worth calling
For a few years in the late ’80s, 900 numbers were an incredibly popular and profitable industry. Decades later, one Queens man is keeping the art of the hotline alive.
David Bixenspan
Updated on May 26 2021 6:52 pm CDT
Illustration by Bruno Moraes
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