Entertainment Is Broken

Michael Jackson - Fact or Fiction

49 min · 24. Apr. 2026
Episode Michael Jackson - Fact or Fiction Cover

Beschreibung

A new Michael Jackson biopic raises a familiar question… do audiences actually want the truth, or just a great show? This week, Richard Crouse and Sarah Hanlon unpack the new film Michael and the growing trend of biopics that trade accuracy for spectacle. When a story as complex as Michael Jackson’s gets streamlined into a crowd-pleasing concert experience, what gets lost… and does it even matter? They explore the art vs. artist debate, the power of nostalgia, and why some cultural icons remain untouchable—no matter how complicated their legacy becomes. It’s a conversation about storytelling, memory, and the uncomfortable space where fact and entertainment collide.

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Alle Folgen

27 Folgen

Episode Theatres Are Back, Baby Cover

Theatres Are Back, Baby

Are movie theatres finally back? This week on Entertainment Is Broken, Richard Crouse and Sarah Hanlon look at the return of audiences to cinemas, the rise of younger moviegoers, and why Canadian films may be benefiting from a renewed love of the big-screen experience. From indie theatres as community hubs to Canadian success stories like Little Lorraine, Blue Heron, Nirvanna: The Band, The Show, The Movie, and Undertone, Richard and Sarah explore why shared moviegoing still matters in the streaming era. They also talk about Canadian horror, Ginger Snaps, Black Christmas, post-lockdown theatre experiences, and the strange magic that happens when strangers sit together in the dark and watch something weird, funny, scary, or unforgettable. Theatres are back, baby.

Gestern35 min
Episode LISTENER QUESTIONS AND ENTERTAINMENT INSIDER SECRETS Cover

LISTENER QUESTIONS AND ENTERTAINMENT INSIDER SECRETS

Richard Crouse and Sarah Hanlon open the Entertainment Is Broken mailbag to answer listener questions about the strange machinery behind show business. Richard shares what celebrity junkets are really like, from exhausted movie stars answering the same question 40 times in a day to memorable encounters with Meryl Streep, Madonna, and Bill Murray. Sarah breaks down the reality TV machine from her own experience on Big Brother Canada, explaining what feels real, what gets shaped, and why pressure can create drama without producers needing to fake it. Then they tackle the big one: if they could fix one thing about Hollywood or media, what would it be? The answer involves risk, weird movies, smaller budgets, and letting audiences miss things before the next franchise installment arrives.

26. Mai 202620 min
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Is Late Night TV Dying? Colbert, Letterman & Canada’s Talk Show Problem

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Episode When Roasts Stop Being Funny Cover

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