As Hollywood goes through vast technological, financial and global change, the state’s cornerstone entertainment industry and its workers face a hard reality: Lost jobs may never come back.
Balogun and her husband had been building their dream home with "saved pennies" when the blaze burnt it down last week.
Just one week has passed since wildfires began ravaging Southern California, but in seven days time, the destruction caused ...
Hollywood’s awards season has all but come to a rare halt as the wildfires continue to disrupt life and work in the Los ...
Stiller argued that, especially since the COVID-19 shutdowns and 2023 strikes, Hollywood has gotten more difficult to ...
The fires come five years into a uniquely difficult time when livelihoods dried up in the early days of COVID and then the ...
As Los Angeles is gripped by wildfires that resemble a Hollywood disaster movie, the city's vast entertainment industry is ...
The LIT Summit brings together top labor leaders, worker advocates, policy experts and allied organizations to discuss ...
The actor stars in Netflix's gritty western "American Primeval" and will soon take over the lead role in "Oh, Mary!" on ...
Full-year ticket sales were down just 3.4% from 2023, reaching $8.74 billion, a far cry from the nearly 27% shortage seen at ...
Film production has failed to bounce back after major strikes last year, and competition from other locales has gotten stiffer. Hollywood’s challenges have clouded the economic outlook for the ...
Hosting award shows is one of Hollywood’s most thankless jobs, but comedian Nikki Glaser appeared to strike all the right ...