Oi! Did you hear that the fourth season of "The Boys" is officially in production? If not, then congratulations; everyone's favorite anti-superhero television show will be back for a new season, and it could come sooner than you think. With production on both the main series and its college-based spinoff, "Gen V," underway, "Boys" showrunner Eric Kripke revealed the title for the fourth season premiere in a Twitter post.
Simply captioned "Day One," the tweet revealed that the premiere is being handled by two mainstays of the series; it was written by season 3 writer and producer David Reed, while also being directed by "The Only Man in the Sky" helmer Phil Sgriccia. However, what many fans might find intriguing is the season 4 premiere's title, "Department of Dirty Tricks." If you think you've heard that name before, it's probably because you know a thing or two about government conspiracies. That title...
Simply captioned "Day One," the tweet revealed that the premiere is being handled by two mainstays of the series; it was written by season 3 writer and producer David Reed, while also being directed by "The Only Man in the Sky" helmer Phil Sgriccia. However, what many fans might find intriguing is the season 4 premiere's title, "Department of Dirty Tricks." If you think you've heard that name before, it's probably because you know a thing or two about government conspiracies. That title...
- 8/23/2022
- by Erin Brady
- Slash Film
[Originally published in Rs 150, December 20th, 1973]
Richard Goodwin is perhaps best known as the brash special assistant to Senator, and then President, Kennedy. He was one of JFK’s two main speechwriters and also became the President’s specialist in Latin American Affairs (even once holding a midnight-to-dawn secret meeting with Che Guevara in 1961, from which he returned with a personally imported selection of embargoed Cuban cigars, promptly shared and smoked with President Kennedy).
At 29, Goodwin was the youngest member of the White House staff. He was characterized by Arthur Schlesinger as “the archetypal New Frontiersman.
Richard Goodwin is perhaps best known as the brash special assistant to Senator, and then President, Kennedy. He was one of JFK’s two main speechwriters and also became the President’s specialist in Latin American Affairs (even once holding a midnight-to-dawn secret meeting with Che Guevara in 1961, from which he returned with a personally imported selection of embargoed Cuban cigars, promptly shared and smoked with President Kennedy).
At 29, Goodwin was the youngest member of the White House staff. He was characterized by Arthur Schlesinger as “the archetypal New Frontiersman.
- 9/25/2019
- by Richard N. Goodwin
- Rollingstone.com
Ever since President John F. Kennedy was shot and killed on November 22, 1963, many people have wondered: What actually transpired on that Friday in Dallas? Did Lee Harvey Oswald act alone? What about the Cubans and the Mafia? Did our government have something to do with it? 28 years later, filmmaker Oliver Stone created the award-winning movie JFK to illustrate his very personal point of view.
What Are Oliver Stone's 10 Best Movies?
JFK chronicles an investigation by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner) and the subsequent conspiracy case he...
What Are Oliver Stone's 10 Best Movies?
JFK chronicles an investigation by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner) and the subsequent conspiracy case he...
- 11/4/2013
- Rollingstone.com
From the “social strategy” by which Nancy Reagan conquered the Georgetown elite to her role in Ronald Reagan’s daring “fireside chat” with Mikhail Gorbachev, part two of this intimate chronicle of the Reagans reveals her as perhaps the most influential First Lady in recent history. Margaret Thatcher, Michael Deaver, Richard Helms, and Nancy herself, among others, share memories of the secret lunches with Katharine Graham, the power struggle between Reagan’s California “Kitchen Cabinet” and the Washington establishment, and the trauma of the assassination attempt, for a portrait of the marriage that shaped a presidency—and an era.
- 5/29/2009
- Vanity Fair
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