Due to the popularity of certain books, movies and tv shows like Game of Thrones and Harry Potter, certain animals are in danger by people adopting them.
It's a fictional game that requires a magical broom to play. That doesn't stop them from having an actual World Cup though, and next year it's in Round Rock, TX.
The new Wizarding World of Harry Potter is about to open in Hollywood but one new ride is making testers extremely nauseous. Now engineers are scrambling to fix the problem.
This morning’s big Oscar nominations announcement had to contend with an even more major and affecting piece of breaking news. A few days after David Bowie passed into the next dimension, cancer has taken another sixty-nine-year-old Brit from us: esteemed actor Alan Rickman. Flip to the word “arch” in the newest editions of the Oxford Goes To Hollywood dictionary, and there you’ll find a photo of Rickman, single eyebrow raised, his tone of dour bemusement audible even from the printed page. The man gained the most international recognition from a choice role in a certain franchise about a boy wizard, but he was an actor of boundless versatility who gifted audiences plenty of fond moviegoing memories.
He was one of the most refined and talented actors to grace the screen -- and he could play anything. He served his talent well, and he will be sorely missed.
Jim Tavare, who played the proprietor of The Leaky Couldron in "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" stops by the Morning Show to read various excerpts from Harry Potter novels — making one minor change.