News

The horrors surrounding "Happy Face" are bone-chillingly true. The Paramount+ crime drama series delves into the seemingly all-American upbringing of Melissa G. Moore, which is terrifyingly ...
NEW YORK (AP) — The new Paramount+ series “Happy Face” has all the elements of a gripping true-crime yarn: A serial killer, his estranged daughter, a race to get an innocent man off death row.
A fresh true crime series is about to delve into the life of the notorious Happy Face Killer and his complex relationship with his daughter. The series, named Happy Face, will be available for ...
By Mikey O'Connell TV Features Editor In Paramount+‘s Happy Face, all the murder happens in the past and off camera, but that doesn’t mean the people behind it aren’t trying to unnerve ...
Then she goes to work as a makeup artist on The Dr. Greg Show, a manipulative self-help series that proves that Happy Face is more fearful of name-checking Dr. Phil than a vicious serial killer.
In this week’s newsletter, Screen Gab editor Matt Brennan gets insight from “Happy Face” showrunner Jennifer Cacicio about her approach to telling a serial-killer story — plus, streaming ...
The series is inspired by the true story of Keith Hunter Jesperson, infamously known as the Happy Face Killer. His case dates back to the 1990s when he took the lives of multiple women.
In the upcoming Paramount+ suspense series, Dennis Quaid plays 1990s serial killer Keith Hunter Jesperson, otherwise chillingly known as the “Happy Face Killer.” The veteran actor, who ...
If serial killers are your thing, Paramount+ has a true crime drama for you. But Daniel Fienberg (The Hollywood Reporter) isn't as impressed, calling the show "entirely misconceived." He adds that ...