Bachelor in Paradise bartender Wells Adams appeared on Jax Taylor’s podcast and shared some interesting tea. He revealed how contestants on the beach are able to be sneaky and get around the 2 drink per hour limit. What did he have to say? Keep reading to get the scoop.
Wells Adams Spills Tea On Sneaky Way Bip Cast Got Drinks
Bachelor in Paradise gets a lot more crazy than regular seasons of The Bachelor. Plus, the cast all gets to hang out with bartender Wells Adams who is always cracking jokes.
Wells appeared on When Reality Hits With Jax and Taylor podcast. During his interview, he spilled the tea on how sneaky contestants can be when it comes to getting their alcohol. Everyone on the beach is supposed to only have two drinks per hour. They cannot order two at a time and they cannot order for someone else.
How...
Wells Adams Spills Tea On Sneaky Way Bip Cast Got Drinks
Bachelor in Paradise gets a lot more crazy than regular seasons of The Bachelor. Plus, the cast all gets to hang out with bartender Wells Adams who is always cracking jokes.
Wells appeared on When Reality Hits With Jax and Taylor podcast. During his interview, he spilled the tea on how sneaky contestants can be when it comes to getting their alcohol. Everyone on the beach is supposed to only have two drinks per hour. They cannot order two at a time and they cannot order for someone else.
How...
- 3/23/2024
- by Jamie Colclasure
- TV Shows Ace
Concerts, sporting events and flights in the East and Midwest are among the cancellations being wrought by the excessive smoke from more than 400 Canadian wildfires.
The orange haze has residents in those areas again wearing masks left over from the pandemic, as unhealthy air pollutants made breathing difficult. The air quality index, a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency metric for air pollution, exceeded 400 at times in New York and Pennsylvania. A level of 50 or under is considered good; anything over 300 is considered “hazardous,” when even healthy people are advised to curtail outdoor physical activity.
Already postponed are Major League Baseball games between the New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox in New York and the Philadelphia Phillies and the Detroit Tigers in Philadelphia — MLB’s first games postponed by air-quality issues since 2020. Those games will be made up on Thursday. Tonight’s Washington Nationals-Arizona Diamondbacks in Washington, D.C.
The orange haze has residents in those areas again wearing masks left over from the pandemic, as unhealthy air pollutants made breathing difficult. The air quality index, a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency metric for air pollution, exceeded 400 at times in New York and Pennsylvania. A level of 50 or under is considered good; anything over 300 is considered “hazardous,” when even healthy people are advised to curtail outdoor physical activity.
Already postponed are Major League Baseball games between the New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox in New York and the Philadelphia Phillies and the Detroit Tigers in Philadelphia — MLB’s first games postponed by air-quality issues since 2020. Those games will be made up on Thursday. Tonight’s Washington Nationals-Arizona Diamondbacks in Washington, D.C.
- 6/7/2023
- by Bruce Haring
- Deadline Film + TV
South Korea’s cinema box office slipped to its lowest level since mid-May as local film “6/45” took the top spot with just 3.06 million over the weekend in its second week of release.
Comedy “6/45” was released a week earlier and scored 2.74 million in its opening weekend, according to data from Kobis, the tracking service operated by the Korean Film Council (Kofic). The latest weekend, then, represents an 11 improvement for the title. It increased its share of the market to 45 during the latest weekend and advanced its cumulative total to 8.36 million.
Depressed by a lack of significant new releases, the nationwide box office over the Friday to Sunday period, however, dropped to 6.75 million. This was the lowest scoring weekend since the first half of May.
Monthly data from Kobis shows August grosses were KRW14.9 billion, down from KRW16.3 billion in July, but almost double the figure of KRW7.9 billion in August 2021. Korean...
Comedy “6/45” was released a week earlier and scored 2.74 million in its opening weekend, according to data from Kobis, the tracking service operated by the Korean Film Council (Kofic). The latest weekend, then, represents an 11 improvement for the title. It increased its share of the market to 45 during the latest weekend and advanced its cumulative total to 8.36 million.
Depressed by a lack of significant new releases, the nationwide box office over the Friday to Sunday period, however, dropped to 6.75 million. This was the lowest scoring weekend since the first half of May.
Monthly data from Kobis shows August grosses were KRW14.9 billion, down from KRW16.3 billion in July, but almost double the figure of KRW7.9 billion in August 2021. Korean...
- 9/5/2022
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
Nomadland, Borat Subsequent Moviefilm and The Crown were among the big winners at the 2021 Golden Globes.
Nomadland picked up Best Motion Picture Drama, while fillmmaker Chloé Zhao won Best Director, becoming the first woman to win that prize since Barbra Streisand in 1983 for Yentl. Borat Subsequent Moviefilm also won two trophies, Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, and Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for star Sacha Baron Cohen.
Other big film prizes went to Andra Day, who won Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama for...
Nomadland picked up Best Motion Picture Drama, while fillmmaker Chloé Zhao won Best Director, becoming the first woman to win that prize since Barbra Streisand in 1983 for Yentl. Borat Subsequent Moviefilm also won two trophies, Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, and Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for star Sacha Baron Cohen.
Other big film prizes went to Andra Day, who won Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama for...
- 3/1/2021
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Berlin — Giant Brazilian TV network Globo has seen its bet on shorter-format series vindicated by the selection of two of their new series at this year’s Berlinale Series Market.
Distancing itself from the tradition telenovela narrative, one of Globo’s Berlinale players is ‘Unsoul’ a supernatural drama, rare in its nature as it allows its director, Carlos Manga Jr, to explore the narrative beats of the horror genre without loosing a certain melodrama flare so rooted in Latin American tradition.
The series follows the arrival of Giovana (Maria Ribeiro) and her two daughters at Brigida, a town of descendants of a large wave of Ukrainian immigration. She has decided to settle there and rebuild her life after the sudden suicide of her husband, who had deep family connections to the town. As Ivana Kupala, a folkloric Slavic celebration approaches, she is confronted by mysteries surrounding a crime of the...
Distancing itself from the tradition telenovela narrative, one of Globo’s Berlinale players is ‘Unsoul’ a supernatural drama, rare in its nature as it allows its director, Carlos Manga Jr, to explore the narrative beats of the horror genre without loosing a certain melodrama flare so rooted in Latin American tradition.
The series follows the arrival of Giovana (Maria Ribeiro) and her two daughters at Brigida, a town of descendants of a large wave of Ukrainian immigration. She has decided to settle there and rebuild her life after the sudden suicide of her husband, who had deep family connections to the town. As Ivana Kupala, a folkloric Slavic celebration approaches, she is confronted by mysteries surrounding a crime of the...
- 2/27/2020
- by Emiliano Granada
- Variety Film + TV
In those circles traveled by fans and collectors of anything home video, few things are more hallowed than The Criterion Collection’s first volume of their World Cinema Project DVD/Blu-ray series. One of the company’s most lauded and adored releases in recent memory, Volume 1 of Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project included six new restorations of six legendary films spanning the history of world cinema. From a foundational work in African cinema to a tale of sexual obsession that changed the history of Korean filmmaking, the first in this series has become one of the most important and exciting releases in recent Criterion Collection memory.
And finally, they’re back for a second round.
Again bringing to light six superlative films from across the world, “No. 2” as it’s billed on their website features a treasure trove of world cinema that in many ways rivals if not exceeds its predecessor.
And finally, they’re back for a second round.
Again bringing to light six superlative films from across the world, “No. 2” as it’s billed on their website features a treasure trove of world cinema that in many ways rivals if not exceeds its predecessor.
- 6/16/2017
- by Joshua Brunsting
- CriterionCast
After four years Martin Scorsese is back with another six filmic gems from all corners of the Earth. Love struggles in the slums of Thailand and the economic boom town of Taipei; underdog heroes undertake troubled missions in Turkey and Kazakhstan, a Malay storyteller plays cinematic games with basic narrative, and a vintage Brazilian art film is pure visual poetry. They’ve all been rescued by the World Cinema Project.
Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project No. 2
Blu-ray + DVD
The Criterion Collection 873-879
1931 – 2000 / Color + B&W / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date May 30, 2017 / 124.95
Directed by Lino Brocka, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Ermek Shinarbaev, Mário Peixoto, Lütfi Ö. Akad, Edward Yang
I readily confess that in my patchy history of film festival attendance, I gravitated not toward the really obscure foreign films, unless they promise to be as entertaining as things I’m more familiar with. Based on the results, one of...
Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project No. 2
Blu-ray + DVD
The Criterion Collection 873-879
1931 – 2000 / Color + B&W / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date May 30, 2017 / 124.95
Directed by Lino Brocka, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Ermek Shinarbaev, Mário Peixoto, Lütfi Ö. Akad, Edward Yang
I readily confess that in my patchy history of film festival attendance, I gravitated not toward the really obscure foreign films, unless they promise to be as entertaining as things I’m more familiar with. Based on the results, one of...
- 5/23/2017
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
The Museum of Modern Art’s festival of film preservation, To Save and Project, "feels like a yearly miracle," writes R. Emmet Sweeney in an overview of this year's edition for Film Comment. Among the highlights: Otto Rippert's Homunculus, Norman Foster's Woman on the Run, Ewald André Dupont's Verieté, Michel Brault's Les Ordres, Helma Sanders-Brahm's Germany, Pale Mother, Mário Peixoto's Limite, William K. Howard's The Trial of Vivienne Ware, Chantal Akerman's I, You, He, She, Ebrahim Golestan's The Brick and the Mirror, Orson Welles's The Deep and Ahmed El Maanouni's Oh the Days!. » - David Hudson...
- 11/5/2015
- Fandor: Keyframe
The Museum of Modern Art’s festival of film preservation, To Save and Project, "feels like a yearly miracle," writes R. Emmet Sweeney in an overview of this year's edition for Film Comment. Among the highlights: Otto Rippert's Homunculus, Norman Foster's Woman on the Run, Ewald André Dupont's Verieté, Michel Brault's Les Ordres, Helma Sanders-Brahm's Germany, Pale Mother, Mário Peixoto's Limite, William K. Howard's The Trial of Vivienne Ware, Chantal Akerman's I, You, He, She, Ebrahim Golestan's The Brick and the Mirror, Orson Welles's The Deep and Ahmed El Maanouni's Oh the Days!. » - David Hudson...
- 11/5/2015
- Keyframe
Alejandro González Iñárritu was the "surprise guest" interviewer for Walter Salles who was presented with this year's the Founder's Directing Award at the Sfiff. For the most part, the Mexican filmmaker asked the Brazilian questions on the film's in his filmography and working with non-professional actors, but they managed to get into Salles' own background and the reasons why he turned to film. Always far from home, Salles' father was a diplomat and this lead him to watch a lot films in order to escape. The notion of the "traveling" cinema has become Salles' signature - his films feature characters who make life-altering road trips as cited in Central Station & The Motorcycle Diaries. As far as non-professionals are concerned, it depends on the roles. It took a year to cast the boy in Central Station because he was one of the main characters, where in MD it was mostly improvisation...
- 4/30/2010
- IONCINEMA.com
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