The movies are decent, but audiences aren't biting as Paramount keeps trying to turn the toy line into another Hollywood hero.
Red dwarfs, the universe's most abundant stars and potential hosts for life-sustaining exoplanets, might actually hinder life due to their severe UV flares, new research suggests.
Plus, Michael Keaton gets his bardic inspiration flowing in new footage from Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice.
A new lawsuit brought by Musk's social media site, X, effectively declares "war" on the advertising industry.
Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN are all getting annoying price increases.
The Netflix series returns for its fourth and final season this week, so here's a refresher about where things stand.
As darkness falls on Middle-earth's elder races, Rings of Power will set the stage for forging two of its human heroes for their destinies.
A man was killed in a Cybertruck crash in Texas early Monday morning.
He's the best at what he does, and what he does is fight scene ADR.
Urban areas are growing around the world, but rather than sprawling outwards, their skylines are getting taller.
Doctors in Vietnam had to remove a two-foot-long eel that was chewing through a man's intestines after he inserted it into his anus.
This makes its Sonos Ace headphones a little less useless.
The all-Disney, all-the-time convention features news on Lucasfilm, Marvel, Pixar, Disney Parks, and more.
At the very least, now we know that the Google Assistant isn't going "bye bye" quite yet.
The Logan and Star Wars star has very good news for Marvel Cinematic Universe fans.
The Netflix star also has another Tim Burton project—the much-anticipated Beetlejuice Beetlejuice—coming soon.
The Minnesota governor signed one of the country’s most consequential and expansive laws aimed at helping people fix their own stuff.
Lisa Kudrow, Jemaine Clement, and Taika Waititi star in the new Apple TV+ series; you can get a sneak peek at episode five right here.
A trio of South African sites contain evidence that early humans ate shellfish, used fire to modify raw materials, and used advanced projectile weapons.
A 700,000-year-old "hobbit" arm bone is offering new insights into the enigmatic species' evolutionary past.