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‘Scary Movie’ Trailer Drops and Absolutely No Horror Franchise Is Safe

The killer is back. The jokes are better. And no film is off-limits.  Paramount Pictures has released the first trailer for “Scary Movie,” an unhinged, fourth-wall-busting return to the horror-parody series that helped define an era. The film is set to be released on June 12, 2026, and judging by the trailer, it is ready […]

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ZOMBIES 5 Officially Greenlit as Mermaids Invade Seabrook

Disney is going back to Seabrook. A fifth Zombies film has been greenlit for Disney+ and the Disney Channel, with Malachi Barton reprising his role as Victor, and Freya Skye reprising hers as Nova. Milo Manheim and Meg Donnelly are also reprising their roles as the film’s executive producers, with Trevor Tordjman reprising his role

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Michael B. Jordan Wins Best Actor At SAG’s Actor Awards As ‘Sinners’ Takes Ensemble And Ryan Coogler Makes History Again

Michael B. Jordan scored his first major win of awards season, and arguably the biggest award win of his career so far, as he took home Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role at Sunday night’s SAG Actor Awards. The win gives the Sinners star steam as he heads into the Oscars.

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Black History Month: An HBCU A Day (Fort Valley)

Fort Valley State University is a public land grant university born out of the 1890 Morrill Act. It is located in Fort Valley, GA and sits on a beautiful 1,385-acre campus. The school speaks of its own founding, stating, On November 6, 1895, an interracial group of 15 black men— at least half of whom

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UC Berkeley School of Education receives $500K in summer research grant for HBCU students

UC Berkeley’s School of Education was awarded $500,000 from the 2026 UC-HBCU Initiative grant to support a seven-week summer research experience for undergraduate students from Morehouse College and Talladega College. The program will serve 18 fellows over the course of three years. The grant will be run through a partnership between HBCUs and campus’s Center

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An HBCU Looks to Fill a Gap in Tennessee’s Rural Dental Care

As rural hospitals face declining reimbursement rates and worsening workforce shortages, Tennessee is among the states being hit the hardest. A recent report from the Physicians Advocacy Institute found that from 2019 to 2024, rural Tennessee lost 42% of its independent physicians and 44% of its independent medical practices. Meharry Medical College, a private, historically Black medical

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Jackson State Band Joins ‘MICHAEL’ After Legacy Bowl Buzz

When the Sonic Boom of the South hit the field at the HBCU Legacy Bowl, it felt bigger than a halftime show. It felt… cinematic. Three days later, the speculation has turned into confirmation. Jackson State University’s Sonic Boom of the South is officially part of Lionsgate’s “MICHAEL CELEBRATES: Legacy, Artistry, Culture” campaign. The HBCU

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How Spelman’s Innovation Lab Is Incubating Future Tech Leaders

More than 85 students from Black colleges across the South and east coast descended on Spelman College this weekend for the school’s fourth-annual HBCU Game Jam. Over the three-day event, students attended workshops on game design and development, culminating in a hack-a-thon where student teams spent 24-hours building their own video game. For the first

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Republicans praise U.S. strikes on Iran as Democrats question the administration’s strategy

By Megan Lebowitz Members of Congress split largely along party lines in their assessments of the U.S. and Israeli military strikes on Iran, with Republicans mostly backing the operation and Democrats urging the administration to seek congressional approval and questioning President Donald Trump’s strategy. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said on NBC News’ “Meet the Press” that

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