The ultimate goal for die-hard American Pickers fans is to, one day, visit one of Mike Wolfe's famed Antique Archaeology shops, where a handful of he and his colleagues' best finds, from both onscreen and off, now reside ... although, you might be disappointed by the time your trip concludes.
Revered as one of the best sitcoms of the 21st century, The Office finds unending humor in one of the most unexpected places: A paper company's Scranton office. It takes a mundane American work environment and twists it into a comical extreme. Sometimes, these extremes come from real life.
As is the case with most long-running shows, character departures have become a regular part of the Shameless narrative. No departure was bigger than that of series star Emmy Rossum, though, who shocked the television world by walking away from Shameless just a season after winning an equal pay dispute with her Shameless bosses.
As Five (Aidan Gallagher) works hard to gather his family back together, Diego (David Castañeda), also known as Number Two, has given himself his own mission: To stop the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. His way of going about this? Killing Lee Harvey Oswald.
The Boys can't just rush in every time they see a cape fluttering in the wind: They have to be cautious. Things don't always go as planned — emotions get in the way, unexpected obstacles arise — and they are mostly cognizant of the fact that they're outmatched. However, there might be a weakness.
In the latest iteration of Dracula, the 2020 series that premiered earlier this year on Netflix and BBC One, the titular vampire is portrayed by Claes Bang. However, what if the role had gone to a different Danish actor? Here's what Mads Mikkelsen would have looked like.
The world is still in mourning of the loss of one of Hollywood's brightest stars: Sir Sean Connery. Even though he was, for decades, a larger-than-life presence in pop culture, you have to keep in mind that behind that persona was a human being with a life, a family, and, most of all, a heart.
Sean Connery, who sadly passed away on October 31, 2020, was one of the biggest names to ever grace the silver screen. Way back when, one of Connery's movie salaries even managed to land him in the Guinness World Records.
Before James Bond had a movie universe, the character was found between the pages of author Ian Fleming's novels. Fleming had an idea for a leading man, and Sir Sean Connery wasn't it.
Between 1962 and 1983, Sir Sean Connery appeared in six official James Bond movies, plus the non-canonical Thunderball remake Never Say Never Again. There truly is no bad Bond movie with Connery at the helm, but which is the best of the bunch?
Two years before Sean Connery's tragic death, a new Dungeons and Dragons model was released that had just a bunch of Sean Connery references in it. Waterdeep: Dragon Heist was released in 2018 and tipped its hat to Sean Connery's 1974 cult classic Zardoz.
At 90 years of age, the iconic Sir Sean Connery passed away on October 31, leaving fans and peers alike in a state of mourning for one of the greatest actors of our time. One huge role that Sean Connery turned down was the part of Gandalf the Grey. Here's how much he would have made from it.
Sir Sean Connery, who passed away on October 31, 2020, made his fame when he became the first, and arguably the most well-liked, James Bond to hit the big screen. But one of those turns as James Bond involved some martial arts training with Steven Seagal, and it ended poorly. Here's what happened.
He's best remembered as the first man who brought James Bond to the big screen, but did you know the late Sir Sean Connery also starred in a Disney movie?
There's a point in some actors' careers at which they become so successful that they can make enormous bank just for showing up for a tiny cameo. One actor who was big enough to make a major splash through a brief cameo is the original James Bond himself, Sir Sean Connery.
Comic book writer Alan Moore, whose work The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen was adapted into a film starring the late Sir Sean Connery, once alleged that some of the scenes featuring explosions in Connery projects were actually a result of a bizarre clause in the actor's contract.
Here's a message from one Bond to another. Following the news that Sir Sean Connery passed away on October 31, 2020, current James Bond Daniel Craig penned a touching statement to the man who originated the role.
Over the course of his career, the late Sir Sean Connery played all sorts of characters. But there's one cinematic feat many may not know Connery pulled off, a strange flick starring the late Scotsman that you probably have ever seen: Zardoz, released in February 1974.
Many believe Sir Sean's final film role was in 2003's critically panned The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. However, the Stephen Norrington-directed comic book movie isn't actually the last film that Connery ever made; that distinction goes to a much stranger movie.
Following the news of his passing, Sir Sean Connery — who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2000 — is being remembered by his former Bond co-stars and fellow franchise members and creatives on both social media and in statements provided directly by the Hollywood talent.
The first time the world saw a cinematic adaptation of Bond — James Bond — the charismatic Scottish actor Sir Sean Connery was the man in the center of the action. But, of course, Connery didn't stick around forever. Here's the real reason why he stopped playing James Bond.