Tony Gilroy on KCRW
More from KCRW
Lost Notes, Season 4 - Ep 4: Viva Tirado: The South/East LA Connection
ArtsLost Notes explores how the song “Viva Tirado” exemplifies the inter-generational musical conversation between LA’s Black and Brown communities.
Writer Tony McNamara on ‘Poor Things’; Disney heirs back Iger in proxy fight
EntertainmentKim Masters and Matt Belloni examine the latest developments in the Disney proxy fight. They also take a look at a peculiar lawsuit filed against CBS Studios and Paramount.
Composer Laura Karpman, new Disney and Netflix execs, and ‘peak Boomer cinema’
EntertainmentKim Masters and Matt Belloni break down the latest executive hires at Netflix and Disney.
Daniel Dae Kim, Sam Esmail, and David Oyelowo on The Treat
ArtsDaniel Dae Kim talks Avatar: The Last Airbender,” Sam Esmail creates spaces for Julia Roberts to challenge herself, and David Oyelowo has The Treat.
‘Shōgun’ co-creators on their sprawling limited series; Inside the Ronna McDaniel-NBC staff uproar
EntertainmentKim Masters and Matt Belloni report on the latest in the Disney proxy battle, and the banter partners examine the outrage of NBC staff following the brief, yet confounding, hiring of…
SPECIAL PREVIEW: Tony McNamara on adapting ‘Poor Things’
EntertainmentPREVIEW: Kim Masters speaks to writer Tony McNamara, who adapted a 1992 Alasdair Gray novel into the Oscar nominated Yorgos Lanthimos film, Poor Things.
‘This place literally saved her’: The profound role of Debbie Allen Dance Academy
ArtsA year ago, living in Miami, Lēya Graham’s passion for dance was waning. Then she discovered the Debbie Allen Dance Academy in LA, which served as a lifeline.
Lorraine Nicholson, Ellen Mirojnick, and Sir Patrick Stewart on The Treat
ArtsLorraine Nicholson talks playdates at Playboy Mansion, Oscar-nominee Ellen Mirojnick talks costuming “Oppenheimer,” and Sir Patrick Stewart has The Treat.
Museums, concerts, and no driving? Grand Ave enters new era
DesignExpansions of The Broad museum and the Colburn School represent investments in the arts on Grand Ave. Neither design is oriented toward drivers or parking.