The Boys is one of those shows that draws up controversy with each of its successive seasons. Following a highly entertaining fourth season, filming for the upcoming The Boys season five is already underway.
It turns out Sterling K. Brown was also once offered a role, and I’ve got a guess about which character that might have been. Sterling K. Brown has turned in some fantastic performances in his career,
The actor and creator tried something much less weepy this time: a sci-fi thriller. Still it was “a homecoming on so many levels,” Brown said.
The new Hulu series, starring Sterling K. Brown, is exhilarating in all the right ways, even if it sometimes tips over into ridiculousness.
Brown got a small taste of comic book adaptations when he appeared in 2018's Black Panther as N'Jobu, King T'Chaka's (John Kani) exiled younger brother and T'Challa's ( Chadwick Boseman) uncle. And he's dying to make his return to the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Sterling K. Brown (This Is Us, Paradise) shared he was offered a role in Showrunner Eric Kripke's The Boys - and why he had to pass on it.
Several feet away, Dr. Phil McGraw — a TV talk show host who, along with his camera crew, was embedded with Homeland Security agents as they launched an immigration blitz in the Chicago area on Sunday — opined on the arrest in keeping with his role of de facto spokesman for the operation.
Sterling K. Brown wishes This Is Us creator Dan Fogelman would write him a less tragic role with the release of Hulu's new political series, Paradise.
Sterling K. Brown and James Marsden star in the new political drama Paradise. Here's how you can watch the series on TV and streaming.
Prime Video has given a series order to Sterling Point, a drama from My Old Ass writer-director Megan Park and LuckyChap (Barbie, Maid).
While promoting his new Hulu series "Paradise," Sterling K. Brown reflects on finally taking the No. 1 spot on the call sheet after years of superstition.
This week’s streaming picks include a White House drama (no, not the real one) starring James Marsden, a ghostly US comedy, an underappreciated legal drama and the return of Cameron Diaz.