Katherine Schwarzenegger launched a pop-up shop collaboration with the sustainable brand Cleobella over the weekend. She was spotted at the store on Saturday at the Coast Lounge in Palisades Village, California.
Her family and friends were also seen at the shop showing support for Katherine, including her husband Chris Pratt, Patrick Schwarzenegger, Maria Shriver, Christina Schwarzenegger and Abby Champion.
The collaboration includes a line of home goods and clothes that are handmade and sustainably sourced that Katherine created. She first announced the partnership on Wednesday through social media.
She shared a post on Instagram with a series of pictures of the new line, including her and her daughters wearing matching outfits, captioning it, “I’m so excited to announce this @cleobella x Katherine Schwarzenegger collection, because not only is it coming out for my favorite time of year, but all the designs were inspired by my favorite family memories.”
Pratt...
Her family and friends were also seen at the shop showing support for Katherine, including her husband Chris Pratt, Patrick Schwarzenegger, Maria Shriver, Christina Schwarzenegger and Abby Champion.
The collaboration includes a line of home goods and clothes that are handmade and sustainably sourced that Katherine created. She first announced the partnership on Wednesday through social media.
She shared a post on Instagram with a series of pictures of the new line, including her and her daughters wearing matching outfits, captioning it, “I’m so excited to announce this @cleobella x Katherine Schwarzenegger collection, because not only is it coming out for my favorite time of year, but all the designs were inspired by my favorite family memories.”
Pratt...
- 11/6/2023
- by Nina Hauswirth
- Uinterview
Exclusive: Maria Shriver has signed with CAA for representation. The agency will now help to identify opportunities for the Peabody and multiple Emmy Award-winning journalist, and for her company Shriver Media, through unscripted and scripted television content, film, summits—like her recent Sounds True collaboration, Radically Reframing Aging—and podcasting. CAA will also pursue opportunities in the publishing space for her digital outlet The Sunday Paper and her Penguin Random House imprint The Open Field, while repping Shriver for speaking engagements.
Shriver is a seven-time New York Times bestselling author, NBC News Special Anchor, and the founder of both The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement at the Cleveland Clinic and Shriver Media, a for-benefit media enterprise that produces documentary films, summits and The Sunday Paper. In addition, she is the co-founder, with her son Patrick, of the mission-driven brain health and wellness brand, Mosh. A portion of the proceeds from...
Shriver is a seven-time New York Times bestselling author, NBC News Special Anchor, and the founder of both The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement at the Cleveland Clinic and Shriver Media, a for-benefit media enterprise that produces documentary films, summits and The Sunday Paper. In addition, she is the co-founder, with her son Patrick, of the mission-driven brain health and wellness brand, Mosh. A portion of the proceeds from...
- 6/7/2022
- by Matt Grobar
- Deadline Film + TV
Fashion, of course, is rarely just fashion — it tells a story about whoever’s wearing it. And in the ’90s and 2000s, the preppy youthquake mall-fashion outlet Abercrombie & Fitch told a very big story. It was a story of where America — or, at least, a powerful slice of the millennial demo — was at. As recounted in the lively, snarky, horrifying, and irresistible documentary “White Hot: The Rise & Fall of Abercrombie & Fitch” (which drops April 19 on Netflix),
As a company, Abercrombie & Fitch had been around since 1892. It originally catered to elite sportsmen (Teddy Roosevelt and Ernest Hemingway were loyal customers), but after falling on hard times and kicking around as an antiquated brand, the company was reinvented in the early ’90s by the CEO Mike Jeffries, who fused the upscale Wasp fetishism of designers like Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger with the chiseled-beefcake-in-underwear monochromatic sexiness of the Calvin Klein...
As a company, Abercrombie & Fitch had been around since 1892. It originally catered to elite sportsmen (Teddy Roosevelt and Ernest Hemingway were loyal customers), but after falling on hard times and kicking around as an antiquated brand, the company was reinvented in the early ’90s by the CEO Mike Jeffries, who fused the upscale Wasp fetishism of designers like Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger with the chiseled-beefcake-in-underwear monochromatic sexiness of the Calvin Klein...
- 4/17/2022
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety Film + TV
In the white and WASPy corner of Connecticut where I went to high school during the early 2000s, the whole Abercrombie & Fitch aesthetic wasn’t aspirational so much as it was a baseline for acceptance. If you could wear those clothes without seeming like a poser — if you could rock the retailer’s vaguely colonialist, lacrosse and legacy admissions style of preppy sexuality without looking like a sad parody of the milk-fed Aryan super-teens who stood outside its stores — then you were entitled to a seat at the cafeteria table among the other future kings and queens of the universe.
This exclusionary phenomenon wasn’t subtle, or the kind of thing that kids would only realize with a blush of embarrassment 20 years later. On the contrary, it was Abercrombie’s brand, and it was powerful enough to make a soft-bodied Jewish theater dweeb like me buy some wildly overpriced...
This exclusionary phenomenon wasn’t subtle, or the kind of thing that kids would only realize with a blush of embarrassment 20 years later. On the contrary, it was Abercrombie’s brand, and it was powerful enough to make a soft-bodied Jewish theater dweeb like me buy some wildly overpriced...
- 4/13/2022
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
It tells the story of Alanis Morissette’s rise, and of how she took over (and changed) the pop music landscape, in 1995, with the release of “Jagged Little Pill.” The album went on to sell 33 million copies; it remains the second biggest-selling album of the ’90s, and the 12th biggest album of all time. But even before those stats piled up, you could feel the revolutionary fervor of it.
Early in the documentary, there’s a nicely edited sequence of Morissette running out onto the stage at the start of a number of the concerts she did on that tour (which lasted for 18 months). That sounds like a standard way to kick off a music doc, but I was stunned by the shudder of electricity that went through me as I saw her take the stage. The crowds are screaming, and Alanis, in her long straight hair and T-shirts and loose-fitting dark pants,...
Early in the documentary, there’s a nicely edited sequence of Morissette running out onto the stage at the start of a number of the concerts she did on that tour (which lasted for 18 months). That sounds like a standard way to kick off a music doc, but I was stunned by the shudder of electricity that went through me as I saw her take the stage. The crowds are screaming, and Alanis, in her long straight hair and T-shirts and loose-fitting dark pants,...
- 9/18/2021
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety Film + TV
Every time a new mental-health therapy arrives, it’s propelled by the ideology — and the testimonials — of a religion. Sigmund Freud’s descriptions of psychoanalysis all point to the miracle-cure mythology of the moment when a patient, at long last, touches the nerve of his or her suppressed trauma and is liberated from it. In the ’70s, primal-scream therapy, built around the notion that your body (and not just your mind) was clutching tight to the pain of the past, claimed to be the only therapy cathartic enough to wrench you away from that pain. A decade later, the Prozac revolution sold serotonin reuptake inhibitors as mood stabilizers that could slice through depression like a laser.
And as the glowing promise of what psychotropic drugs can do has gradually grown dimmer, other remedies have stepped in. One of the most intriguing — it’s been around for decades but is still...
And as the glowing promise of what psychotropic drugs can do has gradually grown dimmer, other remedies have stepped in. One of the most intriguing — it’s been around for decades but is still...
- 3/21/2020
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety Film + TV
Chicago – What does the title of Alison Klayman’s new documentary, “The Brink,” mean? On the surface, it is a fly-on-the-wall profile of right wing operative Steve Bannon, who worked for Donald Trump’s campaign in 2016 and was on his executive staff at the White House, until he unceremoniously resigned. But below the Bannon profile is a remarkable film about the nature of what Bannon does, creating nationalist division while pretending to be a righteous political warrior.
Operative Steve Bannon in ‘The Brink,’ Directed by Alison Klayman
Photo credit: Magnolia Pictures
Filmmaker Alison Klayman, notable for award-winning documentaries like “Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry” and Netflix’s “Take Your Pills,” got unprecedented access to Bannon, following him throughout 2018 as he reinvigorated his strategies after the White House disgrace. He is a globe trotting “advisor” to many Donald Trump-like campaigners while Klayman followed him, and in the film he talked about his philosophies,...
Operative Steve Bannon in ‘The Brink,’ Directed by Alison Klayman
Photo credit: Magnolia Pictures
Filmmaker Alison Klayman, notable for award-winning documentaries like “Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry” and Netflix’s “Take Your Pills,” got unprecedented access to Bannon, following him throughout 2018 as he reinvigorated his strategies after the White House disgrace. He is a globe trotting “advisor” to many Donald Trump-like campaigners while Klayman followed him, and in the film he talked about his philosophies,...
- 4/6/2019
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
There is a list of people who can read the words of Abraham Lincoln and not have tgen seem like either a threat or a lethal dose of irony. Steve Bannon is not on that list.
Yet, there he is at the start of the trailer for “The Brink,” the latest documentary to look at the damage and consequences of the enabler and self-appointed champion of alt-right causes around the world. After helping sway the 2016 presidential election, Bannon soon hated working in the White House as a Chief Strategist. Now, Alison Klayman’s film looks at the former Breitbart editor’s attempt to spread his preferred brand of nationalism throughout Europe.
Read More: ‘The Brink’ Review: Steve Bannon Finally Looks Like a Loser — Sundance
Magnolia Pictures is distributing the film after acquiring it before its Sundance premiere back in January. At the festival, IndieWire’s Eric Kohn wrote that “‘The Brink...
Yet, there he is at the start of the trailer for “The Brink,” the latest documentary to look at the damage and consequences of the enabler and self-appointed champion of alt-right causes around the world. After helping sway the 2016 presidential election, Bannon soon hated working in the White House as a Chief Strategist. Now, Alison Klayman’s film looks at the former Breitbart editor’s attempt to spread his preferred brand of nationalism throughout Europe.
Read More: ‘The Brink’ Review: Steve Bannon Finally Looks Like a Loser — Sundance
Magnolia Pictures is distributing the film after acquiring it before its Sundance premiere back in January. At the festival, IndieWire’s Eric Kohn wrote that “‘The Brink...
- 3/11/2019
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
Updated Below. The Sundance Film Festival has announced two final additions to this year’s program, including the world premiere of Dan Reed’s four-hour-long “Leaving Neverland,” which focuses on the continued claims of sexual abuse and child molestation against Michael Jackson, told through the stories of a pair of alleged victims. Per the documentary’s official synopsis, “At the height of his stardom Michael Jackson began long-running relationships with two boys, aged 7 and 10, and their families. Now in their 30s, they tell the story of how they were sexually abused by Jackson, and how they came to terms with it years later.”
While the official synopses do not list the names of the participants, an official statement from the Estate of Michael Jackson (available below) claims that they are Wade Robson and James Safechuck, both of whom have spoken out against the deceased performer in the past.
Sundance’s...
While the official synopses do not list the names of the participants, an official statement from the Estate of Michael Jackson (available below) claims that they are Wade Robson and James Safechuck, both of whom have spoken out against the deceased performer in the past.
Sundance’s...
- 1/9/2019
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
Magnolia Pictures has picked up worldwide rights to the Steve Bannon documentary The Brink.
The feature, which is set to premiere at Sundance, was directed by Alison Klayman (Take Your Pills) and follows the former White House chief strategist as he takes his effort to spread extreme nationalism from the U.S. to the rest of the world. The film follows Bannon through the 2018 U.S. mid-term elections and sheds light on his efforts to mobilize and unify far-right parties in order to win seats in the May 2019 European Parliamentary elections.
Ryot Films co-financed the movie, which ...
The feature, which is set to premiere at Sundance, was directed by Alison Klayman (Take Your Pills) and follows the former White House chief strategist as he takes his effort to spread extreme nationalism from the U.S. to the rest of the world. The film follows Bannon through the 2018 U.S. mid-term elections and sheds light on his efforts to mobilize and unify far-right parties in order to win seats in the May 2019 European Parliamentary elections.
Ryot Films co-financed the movie, which ...
Magnolia Pictures has picked up worldwide rights to the Steve Bannon documentary The Brink.
The feature, which is set to premiere at Sundance, was directed by Alison Klayman (Take Your Pills) and follows the former White House chief strategist as he takes his effort to spread extreme nationalism from the U.S. to the rest of the world. The film follows Bannon through the 2018 U.S. mid-term elections and sheds light on his efforts to mobilize and unify far-right parties in order to win seats in the May 2019 European Parliamentary elections.
Ryot Films co-financed the movie, which ...
The feature, which is set to premiere at Sundance, was directed by Alison Klayman (Take Your Pills) and follows the former White House chief strategist as he takes his effort to spread extreme nationalism from the U.S. to the rest of the world. The film follows Bannon through the 2018 U.S. mid-term elections and sheds light on his efforts to mobilize and unify far-right parties in order to win seats in the May 2019 European Parliamentary elections.
Ryot Films co-financed the movie, which ...
When it comes to social-issue documentaries, Netflix has the market cornered. In recent years, the streaming platform’s original documentaries and docuseries have tackled everything under the sun, from business and politics to drug abuse and public-health crises.
For Netflix’s newest installment, “Recovery Boys,” Academy Award–nominated director Elaine McMillion Sheldon (“Heroin(e)”) delivers a revealing look at the opioid epidemic through the lens of four young men struggling to move on after years of addiction. Available to stream now on Netflix, the film tracks the men, newly sober, as they undergo a traumatic recovery process at a farming-based rehabilitation center and the distressing years that follow.
Today, with all eyes on the opioid crisis, Sheldon’s documentary provides something rare and valuable: an intimate study of progress and pain that serves to humanize rather than alienate. Here are five more Netflix documentaries that take a deep dive into contemporary social issues,...
For Netflix’s newest installment, “Recovery Boys,” Academy Award–nominated director Elaine McMillion Sheldon (“Heroin(e)”) delivers a revealing look at the opioid epidemic through the lens of four young men struggling to move on after years of addiction. Available to stream now on Netflix, the film tracks the men, newly sober, as they undergo a traumatic recovery process at a farming-based rehabilitation center and the distressing years that follow.
Today, with all eyes on the opioid crisis, Sheldon’s documentary provides something rare and valuable: an intimate study of progress and pain that serves to humanize rather than alienate. Here are five more Netflix documentaries that take a deep dive into contemporary social issues,...
- 7/6/2018
- by Indiewire Staff
- Indiewire
Prescriptions drugs used as stimulants have become a pervasive facet of American life, from colleges to workplaces as everyone seeks to gain a competitive edge in their labor. Mother and daughter Maria Shriver and Christina Schwarzenegger serve as executive producers of Netflix’s new documentary Take Your Pills, which centers on drugs like Adderall that people have consumed and their effects on […]
Source: uInterview
The post Maria Shriver & Christina Schwarzenegger On Netflix Documentary ‘Take Your Pills,’ Addrall [Video Exclusive] appeared first on uInterview.
Source: uInterview
The post Maria Shriver & Christina Schwarzenegger On Netflix Documentary ‘Take Your Pills,’ Addrall [Video Exclusive] appeared first on uInterview.
- 3/17/2018
- by Pablo Mena
- Uinterview
While the government focuses on opioid addiction, Take Your Pills serves as a cautionary reminder that a drug intended for those with Adhd is still causing problems nationwide
The role Adderall plays in driving America, and Americans, is put under the spotlight in a new Netflix documentary launching this week.
In Take Your Pills, Alison Klayman, best known for her 2012 film Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, explores the pressures that drive some people to use Adderall to improve grades and performance.
The role Adderall plays in driving America, and Americans, is put under the spotlight in a new Netflix documentary launching this week.
In Take Your Pills, Alison Klayman, best known for her 2012 film Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, explores the pressures that drive some people to use Adderall to improve grades and performance.
- 3/14/2018
- by Adam Gabbatt
- The Guardian - Film News
The Deadline Studio is making its first appearance at the SXSW Film Festival, opening its doors to the most riveting and groundbreaking talent at the 25th edition of the fest, running March 9-18, in Austin, Texas. Actors, directors and producers – from film and television – stopping by the Deadline Studio for portraits and video interviews on Day 1 included Maria Shriver (Take Your Pills), Max Irons (Condor), Virgina Madsen (1985), Cress Williams (Black Lightning), and…...
- 3/10/2018
- Deadline
Winning the Documentary Oscar for Bryan Fogel’s Icarus, Netflix has quickly jumped back into the doc conversation with Alison Klayman’s Take Your Pills. Executive produced by Maria Shriver and her daughter, Christina Schwarzenegger, Klayman’s latest dives into a little discussed American epidemic—the epidemic of adderall—discussing the degree to which this prescription stimulant is overprescribed, and used by children and adults alike to compete in a hyper-competitive…...
- 3/10/2018
- Deadline
For a few years now, headlines around the world have made note of the Most Medicated Generation, the millennials who have been prescribed pills for everything from behavioral issues to depression and anxiety. By some estimates, nearly 25 percent of university-aged kids are on some form of prescription drug — a sharp uptick from any previous generation. These facts and figures, of course, make a movie like “Take Your Pills” — a potent but messy documentary — inevitable.
- 3/10/2018
- by Gary Garrison
- The Playlist
A comprehensive but aggravatingly myopic look at the recent proliferation of prescription amphetamines like Adderall and Ritalin, Alison Klayman’s “Take Your Pills” is much less interested in the drugs themselves than it is in this country’s unique appetite for them. Nevertheless, Klayman’s conclusions on both subjects — and the scare-mongering tactics she uses to shine light on how they intertwine — result in a reductive documentary that’s far too focused on the big picture to really unpack the human element.
“Take Your Pills” might be the first documentary feature to broach this particular subject, but it’s clear from the start that Klayman is gripped with the reactionary zeal of a local TV news segment. The opening credits set the stage for a film so hopped up on graphics that it should come with its own supply of Focalin: 8-bit graphics and glitchy music used in a tired...
“Take Your Pills” might be the first documentary feature to broach this particular subject, but it’s clear from the start that Klayman is gripped with the reactionary zeal of a local TV news segment. The opening credits set the stage for a film so hopped up on graphics that it should come with its own supply of Focalin: 8-bit graphics and glitchy music used in a tired...
- 3/10/2018
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
"That says something about our culture right now." Netflix has debuted the trailer for a documentary titled Take Your Pills, from director Alison Klayman, which is premiering this week at the SXSW Film Festival. The documentary explores the rise in popularity of prescription stimulants such as Adderall in today's do-more-better-faster world. This seems like a very provocative and important film that challenges what society has come to accept. Executive produced by Maria Shriver and Christina Schwarzenegger, Take Your Pills examines what some view as "a brave new world of limitless possibilities", and others see as a sped-up ride down a synaptic slippery slope, as these pills have become the defining drug of a generation. Yow. As usual, Netflix is releasing this a week after its festival premiere, so it should be easy to catch if you want to watch. Here's the official trailer (+ poster) for Alison Klayman's documentary Take Your Pills,...
- 3/7/2018
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Netflix won its second-ever Oscar Sunday for the doping documentary “Icarus,” and the site wasted no time readying its next exposé on performance-enhancing drugs. “Take Your Pills” will be a Day One premiere at SXSW this Friday. The 87-minute feature unpacks the $13 billion industry that exists for cognitive enhancements like Adderal and Ritalin.
Director Alison Klayman spoke with many individuals who’ve used (and and abused) pharamceuticals to boost their productivity, including college students, a Silicon Valley software engineer, and former Chicago Bear player Eben Britton. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, approximately 54 million Americans have ingested opioids, depressants, or stimulants for non-medical reasons. Our country’s opioid epidemic was the subject of another 2018 Academy Award nominee from Netflix, the documentary short “Heroin(e).”
Klayman won the Sundance Film Festival’s U.S. Documentary Special Jury Prize for Spirit of Defiance for her 2012 debut, “Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry,...
Director Alison Klayman spoke with many individuals who’ve used (and and abused) pharamceuticals to boost their productivity, including college students, a Silicon Valley software engineer, and former Chicago Bear player Eben Britton. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, approximately 54 million Americans have ingested opioids, depressants, or stimulants for non-medical reasons. Our country’s opioid epidemic was the subject of another 2018 Academy Award nominee from Netflix, the documentary short “Heroin(e).”
Klayman won the Sundance Film Festival’s U.S. Documentary Special Jury Prize for Spirit of Defiance for her 2012 debut, “Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry,...
- 3/7/2018
- by Jenna Marotta
- Indiewire
The annual multi-pronged South By Southwest Conferences and Festivals — SXSW, of course — is hitting Austin, Texas later this week for days and days of fresh film offerings (plus music, interactive, and a litany of exciting panels and conversations). With it comes the promise of a brand new festival-going season, along with a slew of films to get excited about finally checking out (and, because it’s Austin, lots of tasty barbecue).
From SXSW regulars like Mark Duplass and Joel Potrykus to rising stars like Carole Brandt and Suzi Yoonessi to marquee names like Wes Anderson and John Krasinski, this year’s SXSW Film Festival is offering up a robust new slate. We’ve picked out a dozen worthy new features to add to your SXSW schedule.
Check out 12 new films from this year’s SXSW that you’re going to want to see Asap.
“A Quiet Place”
The last thing...
From SXSW regulars like Mark Duplass and Joel Potrykus to rising stars like Carole Brandt and Suzi Yoonessi to marquee names like Wes Anderson and John Krasinski, this year’s SXSW Film Festival is offering up a robust new slate. We’ve picked out a dozen worthy new features to add to your SXSW schedule.
Check out 12 new films from this year’s SXSW that you’re going to want to see Asap.
“A Quiet Place”
The last thing...
- 3/7/2018
- by Kate Erbland, Eric Kohn, Jenna Marotta, Jude Dry, David Ehrlich and Steve Greene
- Indiewire
March may be something of a light month in terms of new additions to Netflix, but it’s still a strong one, and it finds the streaming giant doing what they do best: Padding their library with the kind of comfort viewing that you’re perfectly happy to watch from your couch.
The movies coming to the service over this next few weeks represent a broad cross-section of comedies and crime dramas that have firmly established themselves as cable television classics — “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” and “Casino” alone are probably enough to keep you busy until spring. March also finds Netflix continuing to serve up new titles straight from the festival circuit, with Alison Klayman’s “Take Your Pills” and Jody Hill’s “The Legacy of a Whitetail Deer Hunter” both coming to home video just a few short days after they debut at SXSW.
For a full list of everything...
The movies coming to the service over this next few weeks represent a broad cross-section of comedies and crime dramas that have firmly established themselves as cable television classics — “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” and “Casino” alone are probably enough to keep you busy until spring. March also finds Netflix continuing to serve up new titles straight from the festival circuit, with Alison Klayman’s “Take Your Pills” and Jody Hill’s “The Legacy of a Whitetail Deer Hunter” both coming to home video just a few short days after they debut at SXSW.
For a full list of everything...
- 3/2/2018
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
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