HBO Max has renewed Selena Gomez’s cooking show “Selena + Chef” for a second season.
The final four episode of the first season debuted today, featuring recipes for Baja-style fried rice, buttermilk fried chicken, fried gnocchi and meatballs with brown butter sauce, pan-seared Branzino with spiced tomato-coconut sauce, and Ginger’s peanut butter bacon dog biscuits.
In Season 2, the “Lose You to Love Me” singer will continue cooking at home with a new roster of all-star chefs who will show her how to whip up new dishes remotely via video-chat. Like in Season 1, Gomez will highlight a different food-related charity in each episode.
Also Read: Mo Willems Sets First HBO Max Special With Some Famous Friends - and the Animated Ones, Too (Video)
“Learning from some of the best chefs in the world has vastly improved my cooking skills but I have a lot more to learn. I am...
The final four episode of the first season debuted today, featuring recipes for Baja-style fried rice, buttermilk fried chicken, fried gnocchi and meatballs with brown butter sauce, pan-seared Branzino with spiced tomato-coconut sauce, and Ginger’s peanut butter bacon dog biscuits.
In Season 2, the “Lose You to Love Me” singer will continue cooking at home with a new roster of all-star chefs who will show her how to whip up new dishes remotely via video-chat. Like in Season 1, Gomez will highlight a different food-related charity in each episode.
Also Read: Mo Willems Sets First HBO Max Special With Some Famous Friends - and the Animated Ones, Too (Video)
“Learning from some of the best chefs in the world has vastly improved my cooking skills but I have a lot more to learn. I am...
- 8/27/2020
- by Margeaux Sippell
- The Wrap
Come and get it — Selena Gomez’s “Selena + Chef” is returning for a second season on HBO Max.
The quarantine cooking show features the multihyphenate celebrity whipping up meals while confined to her home, and included in this season recipes for Baja-style fried rice, buttermilk fried chicken, fried gnocchi and meatballs with brown butter sauce, and pan seared Branzino with spiced tomato-coconut sauce, among other dishes.
“Learning from some of the best chefs in the world has vastly improved my cooking skills but I have a lot more to learn,” said Gomez. “I am looking forward to challenging myself in the kitchen on the next season.”
The upcoming season will feature more all-star chefs who will guide Gomez — remotely, via video conference — through new recipes and cooking techniques. Each episode highlights a different food-related charity.
“We are thrilled to continue the culinary fun of watching Selena in the kitchen on HBO Max,...
The quarantine cooking show features the multihyphenate celebrity whipping up meals while confined to her home, and included in this season recipes for Baja-style fried rice, buttermilk fried chicken, fried gnocchi and meatballs with brown butter sauce, and pan seared Branzino with spiced tomato-coconut sauce, among other dishes.
“Learning from some of the best chefs in the world has vastly improved my cooking skills but I have a lot more to learn,” said Gomez. “I am looking forward to challenging myself in the kitchen on the next season.”
The upcoming season will feature more all-star chefs who will guide Gomez — remotely, via video conference — through new recipes and cooking techniques. Each episode highlights a different food-related charity.
“We are thrilled to continue the culinary fun of watching Selena in the kitchen on HBO Max,...
- 8/27/2020
- by Elaine Low
- Variety Film + TV
Angry, brutal, and more than a little campy, Max Pachman’s directorial debut “Beneath Us” is a thriller with a lot on its mind. Subtlety is not one of those things, but when has subtlety ever been part of a recipe for exploitation cinema?
“Beneath Us” may be brand new, but it plays like the kind of overlooked yet fascinating B-movie rediscovery that Vinegar Syndrome would dig up out of the 1970s and unleash upon a grateful grindhouse marketplace.
“Beneath” stars Rigo Sanchez (“Animal Kingdom”) and Josue Aguirre (“Veronica Mars”) as Alejandro and Memo, two undocumented workers who stand outside a lumber mill every day in Eagle Rock, Calif., looking for contracting work. Alejandro wants to save money to bring his wife and son over the border to join him. His younger brother Memo has come to America for mysterious reasons and seems to harbor a lot of mixed feelings...
“Beneath Us” may be brand new, but it plays like the kind of overlooked yet fascinating B-movie rediscovery that Vinegar Syndrome would dig up out of the 1970s and unleash upon a grateful grindhouse marketplace.
“Beneath” stars Rigo Sanchez (“Animal Kingdom”) and Josue Aguirre (“Veronica Mars”) as Alejandro and Memo, two undocumented workers who stand outside a lumber mill every day in Eagle Rock, Calif., looking for contracting work. Alejandro wants to save money to bring his wife and son over the border to join him. His younger brother Memo has come to America for mysterious reasons and seems to harbor a lot of mixed feelings...
- 3/6/2020
- by William Bibbiani
- The Wrap
Films directed or co-directed by women dominated the nominations for the 35th Ida Documentary Awards, which were announced on Wednesday by the International Documentary Association.
All five films nominated in the new Best Director category — “Advocate,” “American Factory,” “The Edge of Democracy,” “For Sama” and “Honeyland” — were directed or co-directed by women, as was “One Child Nation,” which joined those films in the Best Feature category.
Also nominated in the top category: “Apollo 11,” “Midnight Family,” “Sea of Shadows” and “The Biggest Little Farm.”
Also Read: 'The Biggest Little Farm' Leads Critics' Choice Documentary Awards Nominations
The nominations, which were made by committees assembled by the Ida, mean that “American Family,” “Apollo 11,” “The Biggest Little Farm,” “Honeyland” and “One Child Nation” are now the only nonfiction films to have received nominations by the Ida and the Critics’ Choice Documentary Awards and included on Doc NYC’s list...
All five films nominated in the new Best Director category — “Advocate,” “American Factory,” “The Edge of Democracy,” “For Sama” and “Honeyland” — were directed or co-directed by women, as was “One Child Nation,” which joined those films in the Best Feature category.
Also nominated in the top category: “Apollo 11,” “Midnight Family,” “Sea of Shadows” and “The Biggest Little Farm.”
Also Read: 'The Biggest Little Farm' Leads Critics' Choice Documentary Awards Nominations
The nominations, which were made by committees assembled by the Ida, mean that “American Family,” “Apollo 11,” “The Biggest Little Farm,” “Honeyland” and “One Child Nation” are now the only nonfiction films to have received nominations by the Ida and the Critics’ Choice Documentary Awards and included on Doc NYC’s list...
- 10/23/2019
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
Selena Gomez returns with self-love anthem, “Lose You to Love Me.” The singer’s last full-length album was 2015’s Revival.
Gomez reunited with frequent collaborators Justin Tranter and Julia Michaels for the piano ballad, which was also co-written by Swedish production and songwriting duo Mattman & Robin. Finneas, known best for his work with sister Billie Eilish, co-produced the song, which has Gomez reflecting on how her relationship with herself became better following the end of a toxic relationship.
“This song was inspired by many things that have happened in my...
Gomez reunited with frequent collaborators Justin Tranter and Julia Michaels for the piano ballad, which was also co-written by Swedish production and songwriting duo Mattman & Robin. Finneas, known best for his work with sister Billie Eilish, co-produced the song, which has Gomez reflecting on how her relationship with herself became better following the end of a toxic relationship.
“This song was inspired by many things that have happened in my...
- 10/23/2019
- by Brittany Spanos
- Rollingstone.com
Selena Gomez hosted an emotional roundtable discussion with three of the young adults featured in Netflix’s docuseries Living Undocumented. The series, which Gomez produced, premieres Friday on the streaming site and follows eight families as they face potential deportation.
Gomez sat down with 18-year-old Bar, whose family fled Tel Aviv, and Colombian brothers Pablo (20) and Camilo (18), who have lived in the U.S. since 2002; their family escaped constant threats from narcos-guerillas. Gomez prompted the three to reflect on their experiences since the documentary was filmed, often tearing up.
“It...
Gomez sat down with 18-year-old Bar, whose family fled Tel Aviv, and Colombian brothers Pablo (20) and Camilo (18), who have lived in the U.S. since 2002; their family escaped constant threats from narcos-guerillas. Gomez prompted the three to reflect on their experiences since the documentary was filmed, often tearing up.
“It...
- 10/4/2019
- by Brittany Spanos
- Rollingstone.com
Selena Gomez's new Netflix show, Living Undocumented, tells the heartbreaking stories of eight undocumented families living in fear of being deported. Three of its subjects include a young woman named Bar whose family brought her to America from Israel when she was 6 months old and two brothers named Pablo and Camilo who fled Colombia with their family in 2002 after being threatened by narco-guerillas. On Oct. 2, Selena stepped out at the screening for the series in La, where she posed for photos with members of the families seen in the show and Rosario Dawson, who also made an appearance.
As the show made its debut, the singer also penned an emotional essay for Time, in which she opened up about how her family's own experience coming to America led her to produce the documentary. "In the 1970s, my aunt crossed the border from Mexico to the United States hidden in the back of a truck,...
As the show made its debut, the singer also penned an emotional essay for Time, in which she opened up about how her family's own experience coming to America led her to produce the documentary. "In the 1970s, my aunt crossed the border from Mexico to the United States hidden in the back of a truck,...
- 10/4/2019
- by Danielle Jackson
- Popsugar.com
Selena Gomez serves as an executive producer for Netflix’s Living Undocumented, which premieres on Wednesday, and her involvement in the project is a personal one. Ahead of the documentary series’ debut, the pop star penned an essay for Time in which she opened up about her family and shared her thoughts on America’s immigration crisis.
Gomez said that her aunt came to the United States from Mexico “hidden in the back of a truck.” Her grandparents soon followed and her father was born in Texas. “In 1992, I was born a U.
Gomez said that her aunt came to the United States from Mexico “hidden in the back of a truck.” Her grandparents soon followed and her father was born in Texas. “In 1992, I was born a U.
- 10/2/2019
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
Welcome back to Tune In: our weekly newsletter offering a guide to the best of the week’s TV.
Each week, Variety’s TV team combs through the week’s schedule, selecting our picks of what to watch and when/how to watch them. This week, “Batwoman” debuts on the CW and “The Walking Dead” returns on for season 10 on AMC.
“Living Undocumented,” Netflix, Wednesday
This new docuseries, produced by Selena Gomez, follows eight undocumented families who tale the extraordinary risk of allowing film crews to chronicle their lives as they face potential deportation.
“Almost Family,” Fox, Wednesday, 9 p.m.
Tune in for the series premiere of “Almost Family,” starring Brittany Snow, Megalyn Echikunwoke, Emily Osment and Timothy Hutton. The show centers on three women who learn they share the same biological father because a fertility doctor used his own sperm to impregnate his patients.
“Raising Dion,” Netflix, Friday
Produced by Michael B. Jordan,...
Each week, Variety’s TV team combs through the week’s schedule, selecting our picks of what to watch and when/how to watch them. This week, “Batwoman” debuts on the CW and “The Walking Dead” returns on for season 10 on AMC.
“Living Undocumented,” Netflix, Wednesday
This new docuseries, produced by Selena Gomez, follows eight undocumented families who tale the extraordinary risk of allowing film crews to chronicle their lives as they face potential deportation.
“Almost Family,” Fox, Wednesday, 9 p.m.
Tune in for the series premiere of “Almost Family,” starring Brittany Snow, Megalyn Echikunwoke, Emily Osment and Timothy Hutton. The show centers on three women who learn they share the same biological father because a fertility doctor used his own sperm to impregnate his patients.
“Raising Dion,” Netflix, Friday
Produced by Michael B. Jordan,...
- 9/30/2019
- by Will Thorne
- Variety Film + TV
Netflix has confirmed that a whopping 66 new original series, movies and specials will be debuting on the streaming service in October. Leading off the lineup is the eagerly awaited “Breaking Bad” movie, which the streaming service is billing as a “television event.” Emmy winner Aaron Paul reprises his role as Jesse Pinkman, who is on the run as his past catches up with him. The first half of the sixth and final season of the cult favorite “Bojack Horseman” will also drop this month.
Two features with awards buzz are coming to Netflix just weeks after their debuts at the Toronto film festival: “The Laundromat,” Steven Soderbergh‘s wry satire about international financial fraud that showcases Oscar darling Meryl Streep; and “Dolemite Is My Name,” a vehicle for Eddie Murphy who portrays 1970s comedian Rudy Ray Moore.
In the lead-up to Halloween, Netflix is programming a slew of scary fare,...
Two features with awards buzz are coming to Netflix just weeks after their debuts at the Toronto film festival: “The Laundromat,” Steven Soderbergh‘s wry satire about international financial fraud that showcases Oscar darling Meryl Streep; and “Dolemite Is My Name,” a vehicle for Eddie Murphy who portrays 1970s comedian Rudy Ray Moore.
In the lead-up to Halloween, Netflix is programming a slew of scary fare,...
- 9/30/2019
- by Paul Sheehan
- Gold Derby
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