Amy Jo Johnson isn't done with Power Rangers just yet, has 30th anniversary comic in the works

Once a Ranger, always a Ranger — even if you're skipping the reunion. Fans were sad to hear Amy Jo Johnson — who portrayed the original Pink Ranger, Kimberly, on Mighty Morphin Power Rangers for three seasons and 137 episodes — would not appear in Netflix's upcoming 30th anniversary reunion special, Power Rangers: Once & Always. But the actress and director is not entirely done with the Saban franchise. After raising $250,000 in less than 24 hours via a Kickstarter campaign for the "

Amy Locane's prison cell roommate is the Suitcase Killer

At least the prison conversations won't be, ahem, boring for Amy Locane. The Melrose Place actress—who is now serving a second sentence at Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women in New Jersey—shares a prison cell with Melanie McGuire, the infamous "Suitcase Killer." The New Jersey fertility nurse was sentenced to life in prison back in 2007 for murdering her husband Bill in April 2004. McGuire got the unfortunate luggage nickname after she was convicted of drugging her husband, shooting him to death, and stuffing his dismembered body into three dark green suitcases that were later found in the Chesapeake Bay.

Amy Poehler, Maya Rudolph stuck during Las Vegas cyberattack

When in doubt, dance it out! Amy Poehler and Maya Rudolph made the best of a bad situation while stuck in Las Vegas during the fallout of Sunday's cyberattack. The BFFs posted a fun video on Poehler's TikTok of the duo dancing in the casino to Christina Aguilera's "Come On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" with the hashtags #vegasbaby and #hittingtheslots. "When you're in Vegas with your bestie during a cyberhack,"

Amy Schumer dropped out of original Barbie movie because it 'didn't feel feminist and cool'

Amy Schumer wasn't feeling life in plastic while developing a previous version of the upcoming live-action Barbie movie. Before Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling, and writer-director Greta Gerwig were involved with the blockbuster take on the iconic line of Mattel dolls, Schumer was attached to lead the project when writer Hilary Winston's script was in development at Sony. Schumer reportedly worked on sprucing up the script to her liking before dropping out in 2017, and the project moved to Warner Bros.

Amy Winehouse biopic is exploitative, tone-deaf

There are few things as tried and true in cinema as the tragic tale of the price of fame (see: four versions of A Star Is Born). It’s a story we watch play out on screens and in real-time again and again — and Back to Black, the new biopic about soulful singer Amy Winehouse, is the latest addition. But the movie, which hits theaters May 17, has the fatal flaw of being far more invested in Winehouse’s demons than in her talent.

An interview with Neil Patrick Harris and Darren Star on their new show 'Uncoupled.'

It's the summer of the gay rom-com, and arriving fashionably late is Darren Star's most recent slice of confectionary comedy, Uncoupled. Neil Patrick Harris stars as Michael Lawson, a forty-something real estate broker who suddenly finds himself alone, flailing in the choppy waters of gay singlehood, after his partner of 17 years (Tuc Watkins) up and leaves him without any explanation or warning. Co-created with Modern Family executive producer Jeffrey Richman, Uncoupled nonetheless bears the hallmarks of any Darren Star series (see also: Sex and the City, Younger, Emily in Paris) in that it is pleasing both to the eyes and the ears.

Ancient-Epic TV is back, baby!

Coming off the news that HBO has officially greenlit the series based on George R. R. Martin’s fantasy novel A Game of Thrones, EW.com just received word that the Ian McShane-starring miniseries adaptation of Ken Follett’s The Pillars of the Earth (produced by Tony and Ridley Scott) has been picked up by Starz. I smell a trend! Can the sexy-violence Showtime production of Le Morte d’Arthur, the psycho-minimalist AMC adaptation of The Tale of Genji, and the terrible Syfy version of The Wheel of Time be far behind?

And Just Like That gives first glimpse of Stanford since Willie Garson's death

Warning: This article contains spoilers from And Just Like That season 2, episode 10, "The Last Supper Part One: Appetizer." Sex and the City actor Willie Garson makes a posthumous appearance as Stanford Blatch on this week's episode of And Just Like That. The character played by Garson, who died last September from pancreatic cancer, had already been referenced on season 2 in previous episodes. But Stanford appeared through a Photoshopped image given to Mario Cantone's Anthony Marentino by Sarah Jessica Parker's Carrie Bradshaw.

And the strangest book title of the year is ...

Goblinproofing One’s Chicken Coop is exactly what it sounds like. As of today, it is also the winner of the Diagram Prize, awarded by British trade magazine The Bookseller. What’s the Diagram Prize you ask? A yearly award for the weirdest book title whose previous recipients include Bombproof Your Horse and Living With Crazy Buttocks. “Reginald [Bakeley, author] and I take this as a clear sign that people have had enough of goblins in their chicken coops,” editor Clint Marsh told the AP.

Andi Mack renewed for season 2

Looks like Andi Mack will be getting a lot more time to figure out her life! The Disney Channel series has been renewed for a second season, it was announced Thursday morning. The series, which was conceived by Lizzie McGuire creator Terri Minsky, tells the story of its titular 13-year-old girl (played by Peyton Lee) and her best friends Cyrus and Buffy (Joshua Rush and Sofia Wylie) as they navigate growing up.