The Cast of "Search" Breaks Down Inventive Thriller
Debra Messing, John Cho, and director Aneesh Chaganty talk to Cheddar at the Sundance Film Festival about their new thriller "Search." The film follows a father looking for his lost daughter through various means of technology. The majority of the movie takes place on a laptop screen.
Chaganty says the movie took a year and a half to edit, whereas a typical movie only takes about four months. Cho and Messing were both intrigued by the film's unique storytelling angle and wanted to see if they could pull it off.
Messing, who plays a detective, did a deep dive on California missing person cases to prepare for the role. Cho says he is less technologically challenged as a result of his part.
A Colorado funeral home owner where 115 decaying bodies were found tried to conceal the improper storage of corpses and claimed he was doing taxidermy, according to a suspension letter sent to him by state regulators.
Air travel costs are up but there are ways to make the airport experience better and cheaper. Travel journalist Francesca Page joined Cheddar News to provide how to bring those costs down while traveling, especially ahead of the holiday season.
Senior dogs only have a 25% adoption rate, according to the ASPCA. Josey Miller of Best Friends Animal Society and seven-year-old Christine the Chihuahua joined Cheddar News to discuss the benefits of adopting older pets and to dismiss some myths about taking them home.