Mourning Andre Braugher, parsing the great Netflix data dump, and more of this week's top entertainment stories
A collection of The A.V. Club's biggest entertainment news from the week of December 11

R.I.P. Andre Braugher, star of Homicide: Life On The Street and Brooklyn Nine-Nine
Andre Braugher, the masterful actor who could bring just as hard an edge to drama as he could an uplifting warmth to comedy, has died. That’s according to Deadline, which says the Homicide and Brooklyn Nine-Nine star passed away after a “brief illness.” He was 61. – Sam Barsanti Read More
Netflix released actual viewership data, and apparently everybody watched The Night Agent
Netflix has historically been frustratingly cagey about how many people are actually watching its various shows and movies, choosing instead to insist that things are popular without backing it up with any real numbers—or numbers based on ridiculous metrics that don’t really tell you anything, like “minutes viewed,” which is not how the average person would measure the popularity of… anything. Maybe a painting? But that’s all irrelevant now, possibly thanks to the fact that greater transparency from streamers is one of the things the Writers Guild wanted while on strike, because Netflix has just a massive list of actual viewership data that it’s calling the “What We Watched” report. – Sam Barsanti Read More
David Hyde Pierce just didn’t feel like doing more Frasier, alright?
Against all odds, Paramount+’s Frasier reboot is apparently pretty good (we’ll get around to it someday), but even with Kelsey Grammer’s salad-tossing and egg-scrambling Dr. Crane living in a new town with some young new friends, there’s still a little sting from the lack of David Hyde Pierce’s Niles Crane—a presence so crucial to the original series that Pierce made a meta cameo on The Simpsons as the brother of Grammer’s Sideshow Bob. And now, while promoting his role in the Stephen Sondheim/David Ives musical Here We Are, Pierce has opened up a bit about not appearing in the new Frasier. – Sam Barsanti Read More
Jennifer Aniston recalls her final exchange with Matthew Perry: “He was happy. He was healthy.”
It’s been about six weeks since the death of Matthew Perry, and those who knew and worked closely with him are gradually opening up about their memories with the late actor. The cast of Friends quickly put out a joint statement days after his death, while the individual actors followed with their own social media posts in the following weeks. Now, in a joint interview with her Morning Show costar Reese Witherspoon for Variety, Jennifer Aniston shared some of her final memories with her departed friend. – Drew Gillis Read More