CBS and Viacom Have Merged but Questions Remain About Company’s Future
Although the merger brings many key properties under the same corporate roof, questions remain about ViacomCBS’s place in the digital landscape.
Although the merger brings many key properties under the same corporate roof, questions remain about ViacomCBS’s place in the digital landscape.
There’s no time like the immediate future to add more television to your viewing plans — and here is what is arriving soon.
IndieWire keeps track of the triumphs and…less-than-triumphs of the new shows from the 2019-2020 television season.
Coming on the heels of the proposed merger of CBS and Viacom, the deal calls into question CBS All Access’ role in the bigger picture of the media landscape.
It’s a fresher and more genuine “Coming to America” narrative that should inform and entertain.
The promising new CBS drama fixes its gaze on children in — and creating — peril, leading to an unnerving ending that shows just how far “Evil” will go.
Based on the former FBI director’s bestselling book, the CBS project will be written and directed by Billy Ray.
Starring Simone Missick, the new series is well-acted and tackles topical issues with a breathtaking pace, although without much depth.
Walton Goggins leads a winning cast (already sporting great chemistry) in a comedy that just needs to get past its premise.
It’s not as sharp as Michelle and Robert King’s other legal-adjacent dramas, but it’s a solid start for a new twist on the “science vs. faith” premise.
Beyond their cable counterparts, the bosses on “SEAL Team,” “SWAT,” and “The Blacklist” discuss the realities of making the biggest stunts possible.
The deal is done, but in this era of entertainment titans, is the combined entity large enough to make an impact?