The couple spoke with Et backstage during night one of the iHeartRadio Music Festival over the weekend.
When it came time for Brian Austin Green and Sharna Burgess to get engaged, the pair decided to keep the news to themselves and just enjoy the moment. But every secret has to surface eventually — and the iHeartRadio Music Festival played a role in the couple’s decision to share the happy news.
Green and Burgess walked the red carpet during night one of the iHeartRadio Music Festival at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Friday, and spoke with Et’s Cassie Dilaura about their exciting engagement — which they announced during a recent episode of their “Old-ish” podcast.
“We actually got engaged two months ago,” Burgess explained, as Green shared, “We just kept it to ourselves.”
According to Green, only “immediate friends and family” knew that it had actually happened until...
When it came time for Brian Austin Green and Sharna Burgess to get engaged, the pair decided to keep the news to themselves and just enjoy the moment. But every secret has to surface eventually — and the iHeartRadio Music Festival played a role in the couple’s decision to share the happy news.
Green and Burgess walked the red carpet during night one of the iHeartRadio Music Festival at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Friday, and spoke with Et’s Cassie Dilaura about their exciting engagement — which they announced during a recent episode of their “Old-ish” podcast.
“We actually got engaged two months ago,” Burgess explained, as Green shared, “We just kept it to ourselves.”
According to Green, only “immediate friends and family” knew that it had actually happened until...
- 9/25/2023
- by Sarah Curran
- ET Canada
Sharna Burgess and Brian Austin Green have announced that they’ve gotten engaged.
The revelation came on the latest edition of “Oldish”, the podcast that the couple co-host alongside Randy Spelling.
“Of course, I said yes.”
In the episode — titled “Breaking News” — the “Dancing With the Stars” pro and the “Beverly Hills, 90210” alum revealed that they’ve actually been engaged for two months.
According to Green, he popped the question during a surprise birthday 50th birthday party that Burgess threw for him back in July, figuring that “she’d never see it coming.”
Read More: Brian Austin Green And Sharna Burgess Celebrate 1st Anniversary: ‘I Love Doing Life With You’
As he’d hoped, Burgess was none the wiser until he called the kids into their bedroom to join them.
“We head into our bedroom and I start to get these feelings of like, ‘Oh my god, this just feels like a moment,...
The revelation came on the latest edition of “Oldish”, the podcast that the couple co-host alongside Randy Spelling.
“Of course, I said yes.”
In the episode — titled “Breaking News” — the “Dancing With the Stars” pro and the “Beverly Hills, 90210” alum revealed that they’ve actually been engaged for two months.
According to Green, he popped the question during a surprise birthday 50th birthday party that Burgess threw for him back in July, figuring that “she’d never see it coming.”
Read More: Brian Austin Green And Sharna Burgess Celebrate 1st Anniversary: ‘I Love Doing Life With You’
As he’d hoped, Burgess was none the wiser until he called the kids into their bedroom to join them.
“We head into our bedroom and I start to get these feelings of like, ‘Oh my god, this just feels like a moment,...
- 9/23/2023
- by Brent Furdyk
- ET Canada
Yet again, a teen drama villainizes the stereotypically feminine, super-competitive player on the team. Of course, there’s always some kind of reasoning behind this extremely uncalled-for behavior. In a better world, Wren Radic would be focusing on herself rather than fighting her insecurities by attacking others. Surviving Summer follows New York teen Summer Torres, who gets shipped off to Straya for six weeks of exile because she’s been thrown out of school and her mother has a really important assignment to complete. In the first season, Summer matures into a young woman who learns how to adjust around other people, help them, and make actual friends. She learns the power of support. But there are some things about Summer that could possibly never change— her recklessness and how bold she is. So, when in season 2, there’s a new player in town who happens to have taken her...
- 9/18/2023
- by Ruchika Bhat
- Film Fugitives
Hollywood was in the midst of its Brat Pack fervor when the director/screenwriter team of Tim Hunter and Neil Jimenez jolted moviegoers with "River's Edge." It was the grimy, dead-souled antithesis to John Hughes' peppy tales of suburban woe. The Northern California high schoolers in Hunter's film are dead-enders who, aware of their paltry worth to society, have little value for human life. When their friend John (Daniel Roebuck) claims he's murdered his girlfriend Jamie (Danyi Deats) and takes them to see her nude corpse, which he's discarded like a dog toy next to a riverbank, they do not recoil in horror. They are at most dumbstruck, and at worst eager to aid John in covering up the crime.
We should be shocked by their lack of revulsion, but Hunter lets us hang out with these kids for a good 15 minutes before taking us to Jamie. They're future burnouts...
We should be shocked by their lack of revulsion, but Hunter lets us hang out with these kids for a good 15 minutes before taking us to Jamie. They're future burnouts...
- 3/22/2023
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film
Plot: Follows New York mafia capo Dwight “The General” Manfredi, after he is released from prison after 25 years and is unceremoniously exiled by his boss to set up shop in Tulsa, Okla. Realizing that his mob family may not have his best interests in mind, Dwight slowly builds a crew from a group of unlikely characters to help him establish a new criminal empire in a place that to him might as well be another planet.
Review: Paramount loves Taylor Sheridan. With Yellowstone consistently ranking as one of the most watched shows on television, Sheridan’s creative output has expanded with sequels, prequels, and spin-offs of the Montana-set drama along with separate projects like Mayor of Kingstown starring Jeremy Renner. Sheridan’s latest project is Tulsa King, a unique twist on gangster stories led by Sylvester Stallone in his first small-screen leading role. With a heavy dose of inspiration from...
Review: Paramount loves Taylor Sheridan. With Yellowstone consistently ranking as one of the most watched shows on television, Sheridan’s creative output has expanded with sequels, prequels, and spin-offs of the Montana-set drama along with separate projects like Mayor of Kingstown starring Jeremy Renner. Sheridan’s latest project is Tulsa King, a unique twist on gangster stories led by Sylvester Stallone in his first small-screen leading role. With a heavy dose of inspiration from...
- 11/11/2022
- by Alex Maidy
- JoBlo.com
Dads rejoice! There's a new show where an older guy wanders around complaining about stuff and punching anyone who gets in his way! And that guy is played by none other than Sylvester Stallone. Stallone is the titular "Tulsa King," a mobster who gets out of jail and gets relocated to Oklahoma. The series is the latest from Taylor Sheridan, the man responsible for the ubiquitous "Yellowstone" franchise. "Tulsa King" will likely appeal to the same dads who love all-things "Yellowstone," especially since the thrust of the entire show seems to be Stallone's annoyance at all things modern.
His character, Dwight "The General" Manfredi, has been in prison for 25 years. As a result, the outside world is a mystery to him. He carries cash instead of a credit card! He doesn't have a cell phone! He doesn't understand why a coffee shop gives him a paper cup instead of one made of glass!
His character, Dwight "The General" Manfredi, has been in prison for 25 years. As a result, the outside world is a mystery to him. He carries cash instead of a credit card! He doesn't have a cell phone! He doesn't understand why a coffee shop gives him a paper cup instead of one made of glass!
- 11/11/2022
- by Chris Evangelista
- Slash Film
“Tulsa King,” the new Paramount+ drama created by Taylor Sheridan and Terence Winter, is entirely too conventional and workmanlike to be a remarkable series. And yet it is remarkable – and oddly fascinating – for a couple of reasons.
For one thing, “Tulsa King” continues the parabolic rise of Sheridan, a writer-director who has quickly become one of the past decade’s predominant television successes. Once best known for a low-profile main cast role in “Sons of Anarchy,” Sheridan has parlayed a handful of well-received neo-Western films into a burgeoning small-screen empire. In addition to his flagship hit “Yellowstone” and its four spinoffs, Sheridan has built an ever-expanding slate of projects and a storytelling brand as distinct as household names like Shonda Rhimes and Ryan Murphy.
The other fascinating thing about “Tulsa King” is its star, Sylvester Stallone, who at 76 is making his first foray into series television. There’s nothing new...
For one thing, “Tulsa King” continues the parabolic rise of Sheridan, a writer-director who has quickly become one of the past decade’s predominant television successes. Once best known for a low-profile main cast role in “Sons of Anarchy,” Sheridan has parlayed a handful of well-received neo-Western films into a burgeoning small-screen empire. In addition to his flagship hit “Yellowstone” and its four spinoffs, Sheridan has built an ever-expanding slate of projects and a storytelling brand as distinct as household names like Shonda Rhimes and Ryan Murphy.
The other fascinating thing about “Tulsa King” is its star, Sylvester Stallone, who at 76 is making his first foray into series television. There’s nothing new...
- 11/11/2022
- by Joshua Alston
- Variety Film + TV
‘Tulsa King’ Review: Sylvester Stallone in Taylor Sheridan’s Flimsy Fish-Out-of-Water Mobster Series
Click here to read the full article.
The oft-repeated narrative around Taylor Sheridan and Terence Winter’s new Paramount+ gangster dramedy Tulsa King is that the pilot script for the Sylvester Stallone vehicle was written in a day. Suck it, building-of-Rome.
Next time, maybe take two?
Don’t get me wrong. I know such creative tales are apocryphal, but just because something is a tall tale doesn’t mean it doesn’t contain elements of truth. And based on the first two episodes of Tulsa King, there’s no question that it is a path-of-least-resistance piece of television. On almost every level, it hits the most obvious of genre beats, resorts to the most obvious of punchlines. If there are absolutely hints of a potentially likable series here, anchored by a nicely self-effacing performance from Stallone, most of what’s currently on display is reminiscent of either a middlebrow TNT...
The oft-repeated narrative around Taylor Sheridan and Terence Winter’s new Paramount+ gangster dramedy Tulsa King is that the pilot script for the Sylvester Stallone vehicle was written in a day. Suck it, building-of-Rome.
Next time, maybe take two?
Don’t get me wrong. I know such creative tales are apocryphal, but just because something is a tall tale doesn’t mean it doesn’t contain elements of truth. And based on the first two episodes of Tulsa King, there’s no question that it is a path-of-least-resistance piece of television. On almost every level, it hits the most obvious of genre beats, resorts to the most obvious of punchlines. If there are absolutely hints of a potentially likable series here, anchored by a nicely self-effacing performance from Stallone, most of what’s currently on display is reminiscent of either a middlebrow TNT...
- 11/11/2022
- by Daniel Fienberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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