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What to stream: Sabrina Carpenter holiday special, 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' and Rosé goes solo

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What to stream: Sabrina Carpenter holiday special, 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' and Rosé goes solo
ENT

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What to stream: Sabrina Carpenter holiday special, 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' and Rosé goes solo

2024-12-02 13:01 Last Updated At:21:30

Sabrina Carpenter hosting a holiday variety music special on Netflix and Keira Knightley and Ben Whishaw playing a spy and an assassin in the TV series “Black Doves" are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you.

Also among the streaming offerings worth your time as selected by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists: K-pop star Rosé has her first solo full-length album, Tim Burton’s “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” enjoys another afterlife odyssey and BLACKPINK’s Rosé has her first solo full-length album.

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This photo provided by Netflix shows "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter in Los Angeles. (Alfredo Flores/Netflix via AP)

This photo provided by Netflix shows "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter in Los Angeles. (Alfredo Flores/Netflix via AP)

This photo provided by Netflix shows "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter in Los Angeles. (Alfredo Flores/Netflix via AP)

This photo provided by Netflix shows "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter in Los Angeles. (Alfredo Flores/Netflix via AP)

This album cover image released by Island Records shows Lauren Mayberry’s debut solo collection “Vicious Creature.” (Island Records via AP)

This album cover image released by Island Records shows Lauren Mayberry’s debut solo collection “Vicious Creature.” (Island Records via AP)

This album cover image released by Atlantic Records shows Rosé debut solo collection “rosie.” (Atlantic Records via AP)

This album cover image released by Atlantic Records shows Rosé debut solo collection “rosie.” (Atlantic Records via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Fly Me to the Moon". (Apple TV+ via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Fly Me to the Moon". (Apple TV+ via AP)

This combination of images shows promotional art for "Black Doves", left, and "The Sticky" (Netflix/Amazon Studios via AP)

This combination of images shows promotional art for "Black Doves", left, and "The Sticky" (Netflix/Amazon Studios via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice". (Max via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice". (Max via AP)

This image shows a still from the film "That Christmas". (Netflix via AP)

This image shows a still from the film "That Christmas". (Netflix via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Fly Me to the Moon". (Apple TV+ via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Fly Me to the Moon". (Apple TV+ via AP)

This combination of images shows promotional art for "Black Doves", left, and "The Sticky" (Netflix/Amazon Studios via AP)

This combination of images shows promotional art for "Black Doves", left, and "The Sticky" (Netflix/Amazon Studios via AP)

— Thirty-six years after the original, the Deetz family returns to Winter River in Tim Burton’s “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice ” (streaming Saturday, Dec. 7 on Max). There, Lydia (Winona Ryder), still haunted by Beetlejuice (Michael Keaton), is forced into another afterlife odyssey when her teenage daughter (Jenna Ortega) discovers a portal. In her review, AP’s Jocelyn Noveck called it “a joyously rendered sequel that sometimes makes sense, and sometimes doesn’t, but just keeps rollicking.”

— A lowkey reunion of “Love Actually” writer-director Richard Curtis and one of that film’s stars, Bill Nighy, is part of the new Netflix animated movie “That Christmas” (streaming Wednesday). The film was co-written by Curtis (it’s based on his series of Christmas books) and features Nighy as the voice of Lighthouse Bill, one of the Wellington-on-Sea townspeople grappling with a winter blizzard. The storm poses challenges even for Santa, voiced by Brian Cox.

— Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum star in the space race rom-com “Fly Me to the Moon,” about a NASA launch director (Tatum) and a Madison Avenue marketing executive tasked with selling the mission to the moon. The film, which debuted in theaters in July, hits Apple TV+ on Wednesday. In her review, AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr praised it as “lighthearted and breezy with a pleasing screwball energy, giving Johansson the opportunity to use the full wattage of her movie star power.”

— AP Film Writer Jake Coyle

— Does espresso go with eggnog? Find out when Sabrina Carpenter hosts a holiday variety music special that streams on Netflix starting Friday, Dec. 6. “It’s an hour of literal nonsense,” Sabrina told Time magazine about the special. “If people are expecting boring, me singing by a tree, it’s not that. It’s so fun, so chaotic. There are so many guests that I’m excited about.” Those guests include Chappell Roan, Tyla, Shania Twain, Kali Uchis, Quinta Brunson, Cara Delevingne, Kyle Mooney, Nico Hiraga, Megan Stalter, Sean Astin, Owen Thiele and Jillian Bell.

— Lauren Mayberry, vocalist and percussionist from the Scottish pop band Chvrches, makes her solo debut with “Vicious Creature.” The 12 tracks veer from the coffee-house folk of “Anywhere But Dancing” to the punky “Punch Drunk,” the dance-pop of “Change Shapes” and stuttering glam of “Sorry, Etc.” “It’s a mission statement of all things that you like,” she tells us in an interview.

— Mayberry isn’t the only woman setting out alone — BLACKPINK’s Rosé has her first solo full-length album, titled “rosie,” scheduled for release on Friday, Dec. 6. She kicked it off with “APT.,” her collaborative with pop star Bruno Mars. The catchy pop-punk track, inspired by a popular Korean drinking game, known as the “apartment game.” It has spent weeks atop the Billboard Global 200 chart. On Instagram, she previewed the album by saying “I have poured my blood and tears into this album. I cannot wait for you to listen to this little journal of mine.”

— AP Entertainment Writer Mark Kennedy

— In their new Netflix series “Black Doves,” Keira Knightley and Ben Whishaw play old friends who also happen to be a spy and an assassin, that team up to solve a murder (and get revenge) at Christmas. Knightley joked to The Associated Press that the show falls in the “Die Hard” category of holiday entertainment. “It’s like, I’ve spent too much time with my family. I hate them all. I need to watch something blow up!” “Black Doves” debuts Thursday on the streamer.

— Margo Martindale stars in the new Prime Video series “The Sticky,” as a down-on-her-luck woman on the brink of financial ruin who finds herself in a crime ring stealing, of all things, millions of dollars’ worth of maple syrup. It’s inspired by a true story. The dark comedy also stars a delightful Chris Diamantopoulos and Guillaume Cyr. Jamie Lee Curtis is an executive producer and also makes an appearance. It premieres Friday, Dec. 6.

— Alicia Rancilio

— Multiplayer free-for-alls like Overwatch and Apex Legends remain popular online, but it’s been years since a new release has made an impact. Chinese-owned NetEase Games is hoping to shake up the genre by adding superheroes and villains to the formula with Marvel Rivals. The core competition is a battle between two teams of six heroes each. The initial lineup includes marquee names like Spider-Man, Black Panther and Captain America as well as a few cult favorites like Luna Snow and Jeff the Land Shark. Some characters — say Thor, Loki and Hela — can join forces to unleash all sorts of havoc. It’s all free-to-play, and the mayhem begins Friday, Dec. 6, on PlayStation 5, Xbox X/S and PC.

— Lou Kesten

This photo provided by Netflix shows "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter in Los Angeles. (Alfredo Flores/Netflix via AP)

This photo provided by Netflix shows "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter in Los Angeles. (Alfredo Flores/Netflix via AP)

This photo provided by Netflix shows "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter in Los Angeles. (Alfredo Flores/Netflix via AP)

This photo provided by Netflix shows "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter in Los Angeles. (Alfredo Flores/Netflix via AP)

This album cover image released by Island Records shows Lauren Mayberry’s debut solo collection “Vicious Creature.” (Island Records via AP)

This album cover image released by Island Records shows Lauren Mayberry’s debut solo collection “Vicious Creature.” (Island Records via AP)

This album cover image released by Atlantic Records shows Rosé debut solo collection “rosie.” (Atlantic Records via AP)

This album cover image released by Atlantic Records shows Rosé debut solo collection “rosie.” (Atlantic Records via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Fly Me to the Moon". (Apple TV+ via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Fly Me to the Moon". (Apple TV+ via AP)

This combination of images shows promotional art for "Black Doves", left, and "The Sticky" (Netflix/Amazon Studios via AP)

This combination of images shows promotional art for "Black Doves", left, and "The Sticky" (Netflix/Amazon Studios via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice". (Max via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice". (Max via AP)

This image shows a still from the film "That Christmas". (Netflix via AP)

This image shows a still from the film "That Christmas". (Netflix via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Fly Me to the Moon". (Apple TV+ via AP)

This image shows promotional art for the film "Fly Me to the Moon". (Apple TV+ via AP)

This combination of images shows promotional art for "Black Doves", left, and "The Sticky" (Netflix/Amazon Studios via AP)

This combination of images shows promotional art for "Black Doves", left, and "The Sticky" (Netflix/Amazon Studios via AP)

LONDON (AP) — The British government's culture secretary has held talks with the BBC as the broadcaster comes under growing scrutiny after one of its TV hosts drew an angry backlash for dismissing sexual misconduct allegations.

Gregg Wallace, a long-time co-presenter on the cooking contest show “Masterchef,” is facing allegations from multiple women that he made inappropriate sexual comments and behaved inappropriately on set over 17 years.

Wallace, 60, said last week he was stepping away from the show while an investigation was launched into his alleged behavior. But his case received further attention Sunday, when he said in a social media post that the complaints came from “a handful of middle-class women of a certain age."

He added that he had worked on “Masterchef” with thousands of contestants “of all different ages, all different backgrounds, all walks of life” for two decades and “there's been 13 complaints in that time.”

His comments angered some of the women who made complaints against him. A spokesman for Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office described Wallace's remarks as “completely inappropriate and misogynistic.”

The spokesperson said Monday that Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy was seeking assurances from the BBC that the publicly funded broadcaster handled such complaints about workplace culture properly.

The BBC has faced questions on how it handles sexual misconduct allegations and how Wallace had continued to front some of its most popular shows for so long despite the complaints.

Television presenter Aggie MacKenzie, who competed on “Celebrity Masterchef” in 2011, told ITV on Monday that Wallace made “endless smutty jokes” and alleged that “he’s been allowed to carry on in his own sweet way for many, many years.”

She said his comments about his accusers illustrate “how he just has no insight or understanding of how he behaves. He just doesn’t get it.”

Others have alleged that Wallace undressed in front of women working on his shows, made comments about his sex life or made women uncomfortable with sexualized jokes during filming.

The BBC reported that 13 people who worked with Wallace over a range of shows have complained about inappropriate sexual comments from him over 17 years.

It reported that Wallace was warned by his employers after a complaint in 2018, and an internal investigation at the time found his behavior was “unacceptable and unprofessional."

Wallace’s lawyers have denied that he “engages in behavior of a sexually harassing nature.”

The BBC, which has said it has “robust processes” to deal with the issue, declined to comment on Wallace's case because of the ongoing investigation by “Masterchef”'s production company.

FILE - Gregg Wallace at Tramshed in London, Thursday Feb. 16, 2017. (Yui Mok/PA via AP, File)

FILE - Gregg Wallace at Tramshed in London, Thursday Feb. 16, 2017. (Yui Mok/PA via AP, File)

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