'Hamnet' and 'One Battle After Another' take top honors at Golden Globes
Paul Thomas Anderson’s ragtag revolutionary saga “One Battle After Another” and Chloe Zhao's Shakespeare drama “Hamnet” took top honors at Sunday’s 83rd Golden Globes, where the up-for-sale Warner Bros. dominated the awards. While the Globes have a tradition of spreading the wealth around, Anderson became just the second filmmaker to ever sweep best film, best director and best screenplay. Only Oliver Stone, for “Born on the Fourth of July,” managed the same feat. Timothee Chalamet won his first Golden Globe for “Marty Supreme.” “Sinners” won for best score and cinematic and box-office achievement.
Inside the Golden Globes: The reunions and moments the telecast didn't show
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Some of the most interesting moments of the Golden Globes happen off camera. During the commercial breaks, the stars rush to socialize, congratulate and catch up and The Associated Press had a seat inside the ballroom to observe it all. Emma Stone was perhaps the star who was out of her seat the most, holding court in a smaller room off to the side where there was a bar, an ever-replenishing supply of decadent desserts and Nobu sushi. There she hung out with Jennifer Lawrence, Yorgos Lanthimos, Kirsten Dunst and more.
‘Sinners’ leads movie nominations for NAACP Image Awards
Ryan Coogler’s pulsating supernatural thriller “Sinners” leads the movie categories in nominations for the NAACP Image Awards. The movie, in which Michael B. Jordan pulls double duty as twins, received 18 nominations, followed by Spike Lee’s “Highest 2 Lowest,” which got nine. In television, “Bel-Air” led with seven nods. The NAACP also announced the five luminaries in movies and music vying for its Entertainer of the Year award: Cynthia Erivo, Doechii, Kendrick Lamar, Michael B. Jordan and Teyana Taylor. Taylor, star of “One Battle After Another,” led individual nominations with six, in music, TV and movies.
Celebrities embrace black and old Hollywood glamour for Golden Globes red carpet
Ariana Grande said goodbye to her “Wicked” character Glinda’s staple color pink and went dark in a black ball gown at the Golden Globes on Sunday. Teyana Taylor and Jenna Ortega were among celebrities opting for classic black. Taylor wore a custom slinky gown that featured a deep low-cut back with a glittery low-hanging bow. Lisa of Blackpink arrived in a semi-sheer goth-inspired look by Jacquemus in black. Ayo Edebiri and Selena Gomez were also in black. The Golden Globes offers insight into how stars will flaunt their fashion prowess throughout awards season.
Golden Globe highlights: Brazil on a streak, Amy Poehler's pod wins and Seth Rogen comes full-circle
The Golden Globes had its share of surprises and sweet moments. Amy Poehler took home the first podcast award, joking about NPR, and Seth Rogen experienced déjà vu, winning after his show “The Studio” depicted the very ceremony just months before. Rose Byrne had a head-scratching moment when she explained her partner was at a reptile expo instead of attending and Wagner Moura won for “The Secret Agent,” continuing Brazil's recent cinematic hot streak. And “Golden” from “KPop Demon Hunters” won best original song. with co-singer and co-songwriter Ejae encouraging viewers to keep striving.
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PBS weekend newscasts shut down due to funding cuts, replaced by single-topic programs
“PBS News Weekend,” the companion to the weekday “NewsHour” program, has signed off, eliminated due to federal funding cuts to public broadcasting. They'll be replaced by two new news programs, focused on science and foreign affairs, beginning next weekend. “PBS News Weekend” had aired Saturday and Sunday since starting in New York in 2013, moving to Washington in 2022. On its final telecast Sunday, anchor John Yang concentrated on the meaty news stories that broke over weekends in recent years, including the Hamas attack on Israel in 2023 and the assassination attempt on Donald Trump in 2024. PBS says the changes don't indicate danger for the weekday “NewsHour” program.
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A$AP Rocky's first full-length album in eight years, “Don’t Be Dumb,” and Matt Damon and Ben Affleck reuniting in Netflix’s “The Rip” are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you. Also among the streaming offerings worth your time for the week of Jan. 12 as selected by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists: The pop-R&B vocalist Madison Beer returns with her third LP, “Locket,” Idris Elba tries to solve a hostage situation on a train in Season 2 of “Hijack” and Will Smith takes viewers on a trip to all seven continents in his new docuseries “Pole to Pole with Will Smith.”
Complete list of 2026 Golden Globe Award winners
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — The revolutionary saga “One Battle After Another” won best picture, musical or comedy at the 83rd Golden Globe Awards. “Hamnet” won best picture, drama, at the ceremony Sunday. “One Battle After Another” entered the night with the most nominations, nine, followed by “Sentimental Value” with eight. Comedian Nikki Glaser hosted the ceremony from the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills. The night marked Glaser’s second consecutive year as host.
Nikki Glaser takes swings at CBS and Leo, goes gentle on Julia in Golden Globes monologue
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Nikki Glaser opened Sunday's Golden Globes with a sharp monologue. She joked about stars possibly being in the Epstein Files and took a jab at CBS for editing a critical “60 Minutes” story. Glaser avoided topics like Venezuela, which she considered already too dated. She told the Associated Press she was struggling to find a joke about Julia Roberts but succeeded with a clever line. Glaser, hosting for the second time, balanced kindness with biting humor. She poked fun at Leonardo DiCaprio’s dating habits, then apologized for making such an obvious joke, saying she had no choice because “we don't know anything about you!”

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