Television

This comes on the heels of a Fresh Prince of Bel-Air reboot.

Television

KeKe Palmer's slay game is top notch.

During last night's MTV Video Music Awards we got our first sneak peak at CBS's new limited series, The Stand, which is based off of Stephen King's classic novel about the end of days in which a global pandemic has wiped out most of humanity off the face of the earth (sound familiar?).

An emerging streaming app is about deliver even more Black excellence to its viewers. A new partnership is set to give our culture a bigger platform to shine. This week Philo and TV One announced a distribution agreement, adding the channel to Philo‘s lineup of 60+ channels for $20 per month. This marks TV One’s […]

HBO is once again winning with another unapologetically Black, sci-fi-filled drama—Lovecraft Country—and we love to see it. The top-notch storytelling smartly intertwines fantasy amidst the all too real segregation of America in the 50's, and has already lead to some amazingly dope visuals and moments after just one episode.

The popular reality series is gearing up for its fourth season on OWN but fans on Twitter feel that darker hues are not represented widely enough.

Shannon Thornton, Brandee Evans and Elarica Johnson serve us looks every weekend and they look just in fabulous in real life as the do on "P-Valley."

Iconic family sitcom, The Wonder Years, is coming back to TV, only this time it's going to be all Black. According to published reports, the 1988 coming-of-age dramedy set in the late 1960s and early 70s that told the story of teen Kevin Arnold (played by Fred Savage) and his suburban family, is now getting a reboot that will tell the story of American life during the pivotal Civil Right Era from a Black perspective. Produced by Lee Daniels, the reboot will be set during the same time period, except it will focus on a Black family in Montgomery, Alabama.

Film director, Adelin Gasana, takes viewers on a deep dive into the love language that is high heels.