France is once again gripped by football fever -- a year after the men's na...
PARIS - France is once again gripped by football fever — a year after the men’s national team triumphed on the world stage, the women’s team is cruising through the group stages and smashing TV audience records in their own World Cup.
Stadiums are selling out, and TV broadcasters are bumping up the price of advertising slots as millions tune in. Les Bleues’ star players are fast becoming household names. TF1, owned by family-controlled conglomerate Bouygues, described the numbers as a French record for a women’s soccer match.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Heavy storms kill at least two people in Switzerland, France - authoritiesAuthorities said that a tourist has drowned in Switzerland's Lake Geneva after her boat capsized in a driving storm, and another was killed in nearby France after high winds brought down a tree on her campsite.
Read more »
MTV Movie & TV Awards: Dwayne Johnson, Jada Pinkett Smith Celebrated Among PeersHosted by 'Shazam!' star Zachary Levi, this year's ceremony selected the actor and actress to receive the night's top honors.
Read more »
Algeria ex-PM Ouyahia appears in court in second alleged corruption case: state TVAlgerian former prime minister Ahmed Ouyahia appeared in a court in Algiers on S...
Read more »
This Week in TV: 'Yellowstone,' 'Grand Hotel,' 'Alternatino With Arturo Castro'Seven other broadcast shows and a host of cable series also make their summer debuts in the week of June 17.
Read more »
In Historical Lyon, This Emerging Neighborhood Is the Future of FranceBetween the Rhone and Saone rivers, the Confluence district is aesthetically unlike anywhere else in Lyon or even Paris.
Read more »
meet the trans non-binary actor changing tv with netflix’s ‘tales of the city’Garcia is the breakout star of the refreshed adaptation of Armistead Maupin’s beloved LGBTQ book series, and part of a new frontier of queer representation on television.
Read more »