The Almost Famous director sees "deep stuff" and "spectacle" in the Marvel Studios Franchise
Stranger Things , Beyonce, and House of Hammer are some of the most egregious culprits.
Taylor Swift has fostered a dedicated group of hungry followers that discuss her every move on TikTok, just like they did on Tumblr before.
While the rise of the meme was probably not what Twitter had in mind when it released the feature, it brought people joy.
"No one’s going to be 100% perfect," said the star, who went over her monthly water budget by 232,000 gallons in June.
The Armie Hammer docuseries' production studio Talos Films is removing the photo after social media pointed out its questionable origin.
Meet Hellraiser 's new Pinhead and Joker: Folie a Deux adds more to its cast.
The day Facebook's news feed went berserk, we all learned that people sent very weird things to celebrities on Facebook.
It’s fine to roast the singer for her jet use—and to think about the meaning of individual responsibility in the process.
Harry Styles, Lizzo, Kate Bush, and Louis Theroux are responsible for some of TikTok's catchiest hooks.
The "unauthorized source" uploaded some pretty bizarre videos to millions of subscribers.
Queer creators can now show off their packers, fake breasts, or any other products related to their own "gender dysphoria journeys"—and get paid to do so.
It might not become the viral hit "Toss a Coin to Your Witcher" was, but it's every bit as fun.
Brace for impact, the Instagram story shares are about to start rolling in...
Albums on Spotify will no longer play on "shuffle" at default. You can still choose to shuffle the songs in the platform's player, though.
Emo millennials might regress to their AIM days with a lyric-sharing tool.
The social media company is slowly rolling out the groups but you'll likely find a place for yourself.
Kanye West is fully immersing himself in the streaming era and the iPhone event would be the perfect stage for the album drop.
'SERIOUSLY!!!??': and other tidbits from inter-office emails show colleagues reacting to the incident.
While activists filmed, the officer cued the licensed music, saying: "I just know it just can’t be posted on YouTube."