If you thought your commute home during the bomb cyclone was tough, wait until you hear about Liam Neeson's trip home in his new movie, "The Commuter." Director Jaume Collet-Serra joins Cheddar to discuss his fourth collaboration with Neeson in seven years. Find out why Collet-Serra calls the film a spiritual sequel to 2014's "Non-Stop."
The director reveals what he's learned about Neeson during their four shared projects. He explains how he got the tall actor to fit on a set built to resemble a New York commuter train. He tells us why he's so drawn to action movies set on modes of transportation.
Finally, we ask Collet-Serra about Hollywood's hottest headline: Oprah for president. The Spanish-born filmmaker says his international perspective makes him no expert on American politics. However, he also points out that Winfrey wouldn't be the first Commander-in-Chief to come from the world of entertainment.
From Wall Street to Silicon Valley, these are the top stories that moved markets and had investors, business leaders, and entrepreneurs talking this week on Cheddar.
COVID-19 wreaked havoc on women entrepreneurs as already small gains in funding equity were wiped out in 2020, and 2021 projections look grim as well. Cheddar's Michelle Castillo breaks down what could be done to reverse the trend yet again.
Branden Chapman, the chief operating officer for The Recording Academy, spoke to Cheddar about the changes to the 63rd annual Grammy Awards as the latest show to change formats due to the pandemic.
You can’t separate classic New York City architecture from the fire escape. They’re all over.
President Biden tells the nation that July 4 is the goal for a return to normal. Someone paid $69 million for a jpeg. Anti-Semitism in sports. And why do bank transfers take so long?
Christie’s says it has auctioned off a digital collage by an artist named Beeple for nearly $70 million.
As Cheddar celebrates phenomenal women during March, we’re taking a second to highlight a few trailblazers who helped shape the world we live in through science and tech.
The pandemic is forcing women to leave the workforce in droves to care for family at home. Cheddar's Chloe Aiello reports.
Prince William says that his family is not racist, becoming the first British royal to speak out about accusations of bigotry made by Prince Harry and Meghan, his brother and sister-in-law.
Jill and Carlo look back on a year since the pandemic was declared, plus the latest on the stimulus, what's the deal with Roblox, and deepfakes get real.
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