“The Amazing Race” returns for its 33rd edition on Wednesday, January 5, at 8 p.m. Et, kicking off with a disclaimer from host Phil Keoghan about this most unusual season. Variety has an exclusive first look at the opening five minutes of the two-hour premiere episode, set to air next week on CBS.
“It’s so good to be back,” Keoghan says at the start of the episode. “We know how much you have missed ‘The Amazing Race,’ and believe me, we have missed making it for you. Tonight’s episode was filmed before the outbreak of Covid-19, which prompted us to suspend shooting at the end of the third leg. I am excited to tell you that after a long break, we did finish shooting this season and once again, the world is waiting for you.”
The show then opens in the pre-pandemic times, with 11 teams at their homes across the country,...
“It’s so good to be back,” Keoghan says at the start of the episode. “We know how much you have missed ‘The Amazing Race,’ and believe me, we have missed making it for you. Tonight’s episode was filmed before the outbreak of Covid-19, which prompted us to suspend shooting at the end of the third leg. I am excited to tell you that after a long break, we did finish shooting this season and once again, the world is waiting for you.”
The show then opens in the pre-pandemic times, with 11 teams at their homes across the country,...
- 12/29/2021
- by Michael Schneider
- Variety Film + TV
Steven Avery and his new fiancée Lynn Hartman will appear on a special two-part episode of Dr. Phil, airing Monday and Tuesday.
It'll be Avery's first television interview since Netflix's Making a Murderer thrusted him into the spotlight. The 54-year-old convict is currently behind bars for the 2005 murder of 25-year-old Wisconsin photographer Teresa Halbach – though he has maintained his innocence.
He'll call into the show from Wisconsin's Waupun Correctional Institute, where he's lived for the past 11 years. According to a preview for the special, the call was a surprise to Hartman.
As she had done with People, Hartman shares their...
It'll be Avery's first television interview since Netflix's Making a Murderer thrusted him into the spotlight. The 54-year-old convict is currently behind bars for the 2005 murder of 25-year-old Wisconsin photographer Teresa Halbach – though he has maintained his innocence.
He'll call into the show from Wisconsin's Waupun Correctional Institute, where he's lived for the past 11 years. According to a preview for the special, the call was a surprise to Hartman.
As she had done with People, Hartman shares their...
- 9/30/2016
- by Dave Quinn, @NineDaves
- People.com - TV Watch
Steven Avery and his new fiancée Lynn Hartman will appear on a special two-part episode of Dr. Phil, airing Monday and Tuesday. It'll be Avery's first television interview since Netflix's Making a Murderer thrusted him into the spotlight. The 54-year-old convict is currently behind bars for the 2005 murder of 25-year-old Wisconsin photographer Teresa Halbach - though he has maintained his innocence. He'll call into the show from Wisconsin's Waupun Correctional Institute, where he's lived for the past 11 years. According to a preview for the special, the call was a surprise to Hartman. As she had done with People, Hartman shares...
- 9/30/2016
- by Dave Quinn, @NineDaves
- PEOPLE.com
Steven Avery and his new fiancée Lynn Hartman will appear on a special two-part episode of Dr. Phil, airing Monday and Tuesday. It'll be Avery's first television interview since Netflix's Making a Murderer thrusted him into the spotlight. The 54-year-old convict is currently behind bars for the 2005 murder of 25-year-old Wisconsin photographer Teresa Halbach - though he has maintained his innocence. He'll call into the show from Wisconsin's Waupun Correctional Institute, where he's lived for the past 11 years. According to a preview for the special, the call was a surprise to Hartman. As she had done with People, Hartman shares...
- 9/30/2016
- by Dave Quinn, @NineDaves
- PEOPLE.com
Lynn Hartman wanted nothing to do with Steven Avery. The 53-year-old Las Vegas legal secretary was divorcing a 30-year-veteran law enforcement officer when her daughter, Kamilia, suggested she stop sulking and watch Making a Murderer - the Netflix series about Avery's 2005 conviction for the murder of 25-year-old Wisconsin photographer Teresa Halbach. "At first, I wasn't interested because I was a Nancy Grace fan, and I believed what she said about the case," Hartman tells People. "So my answer to my daughter was, 'I don't want to watch it - I already know [Avery's] guilty.' " Eventually Hartman caved, coming around on his innocence - and him.
- 9/29/2016
- by Dave Quinn, @NineDaves
- PEOPLE.com
Lynn Hartman wanted nothing to do with Steven Avery. The 53-year-old Las Vegas legal secretary was divorcing a 30-year-veteran law enforcement officer when her daughter, Kamilia, suggested she stop sulking and watch Making a Murderer - the Netflix series about Avery's 2005 conviction for the murder of 25-year-old Wisconsin photographer Teresa Halbach. "At first, I wasn't interested because I was a Nancy Grace fan, and I believed what she said about the case," Hartman tells People. "So my answer to my daughter was, 'I don't want to watch it - I already know [Avery's] guilty.' " Eventually Hartman caved, coming around on his innocence - and him.
- 9/29/2016
- by Dave Quinn, @NineDaves
- PEOPLE.com
Steven Avery’s lawyer Kathleen Zellner is teasing the media and “Making a Murderer” fans again, this time tweeting about the pending release of her client’s co-defendant and nephew Brendan Dassey, then deleting the tweet shortly after. According to local Wisconsin news outlet Wbay, Zellner, who doesn’t represent Dassey, tweeted a picture on Thursday evening of Ryan Ferguson, a man she helped exonerate after he was wrongly convicted of murder in Missouri. In the picture, Ferguson holds a sign saying “It is over,” mimicking the text of the attorney’s tweet. However, the tweet has since been deleted.
- 9/2/2016
- by Beatrice Verhoeven
- The Wrap
One day after bringing Scream’s fictional killer to justice, MTV is shifting its focus to crimes of a different sort.
Unlocking the Truth (Wednesday, 10/9c) examines the U.S. justice system from the point of view of Ryan Ferguson, a man who was imprisoned for 10 years after being falsely accused and charged with second-degree murder. After a decade behind bars, Ferguson was exonerated with the help of attorney Kathleen Zellner, the same person who filed an appeal to free Steven Avery of Netflix’s Making a Murderer.
RelatedMaking a Murderer: Court Overturns Brendan Dassey’s Murder Conviction...
Unlocking the Truth (Wednesday, 10/9c) examines the U.S. justice system from the point of view of Ryan Ferguson, a man who was imprisoned for 10 years after being falsely accused and charged with second-degree murder. After a decade behind bars, Ferguson was exonerated with the help of attorney Kathleen Zellner, the same person who filed an appeal to free Steven Avery of Netflix’s Making a Murderer.
RelatedMaking a Murderer: Court Overturns Brendan Dassey’s Murder Conviction...
- 8/17/2016
- TVLine.com
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