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Hot Off The Press: The Latest TV News and Information - Page 2583

post #77461 of 87293
Maybe its payback for all that intentionally added grainyuck.

& that also wouldnt be a good sign for when the walking dead shows up in a future bracket.
post #77462 of 87293
LOL@Twin Peaks beating BSG. As if Buffy beating Deadwood wasn't enough...

I'll just quote this...

Quote:
Originally Posted by dad1153 View Post

Even BSG’s weaker links (Helo, Hera, Dee) can act circles around much of the Peaks cast, and they had the harder job.

Hera? Hera?!?! The kid who had a total of like 2 lines? Seriously?
post #77463 of 87293
^^^ Hey, I didn't say that! The writer for NY Magazine/Slate.com said that, don't get me mixed-up with her insanity.

TV Notes
History Orders First Scripted Series — ‘Vikings’ From MGM TV And Michael Hirst
By Nellie Andreeva, Deadline.com - Mar. 13, 2012

History is making its first foray into scripted series with Vikings, a 10-episode drama from MGM TV and The Tudors and Camelot masterminds Michael Hirst and Morgan O’Sullivan. The series, which will chronicle the world of the mighty Norsemen who raided, traded and explored during medieval times, will premiere in 2013. It will be filmed in Ireland at O’Sullivan’s newly build Ashford Studios, with location shoots throughout Northern Europe. “This is an amazing crossroads for History embarking on our first scripted series,” said the channel’s general manager Nancy Dubuc. “People think they know about the Vikings – we see references to them all the time in our popular culture from TV commercials to football teams – but the reality is so much more fascinating and complex, more vivid, visceral and powerful than popular legend.”

This is the highest-profile TV project to come out of MGM since it was rebuilt post-bankruptcy. “There is no better way to introduce the world to the new MGM Television Studios than with a powerful and epic drama like Vikings,” said Roma Khanna, President of MGM’s TV Group and Digita. The project was put in development at MGM last spring with the goal to go straight-to-series on a 10-episode first-season order. Hirst, creator of Showtime’s The Tudors and co-creator of Starz’s Camelot, created Vikings and will executive produce with O’Sullivan, John Weber and and producers/managers Sherry Marsh and Alan Gasmer. It will be an Ireland-Canada co-production in the mold of O’Sullivan’s production model for The Tudors and Camelot, with his World 2000 Ireland-based production company re-teaming with Weber’s Canadian-based Take 5 Prods. In Canada, Vinkins will air on Shaw Media’s History Television. MGM will distribute internationally, outside of Ireland and Canada.

Vikings follows the adventures of Ragnar Lothbrok, an actual historical figure, and the greatest hero of his age. The series tells the sagas of Ragnar’s band of Viking brothers and his family, as he rises to become King of the Viking tribes. As well as being a fearless warrior, Ragnar embodies the Norse traditions of devotion to the gods – legend has it that he was a direct descendent of Odin, the god of war and warriors. According to History, the series “will boast a polished, stylized look that pushes the boundaries of television drama” and “will feature “imaginatively choreographed battles that emphasize individual points of view, strategies and ruses rather than mindless, graphic slaughter.”

http://www.deadline.com/2012/03/hist...michael-hirst/
post #77464 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by dad1153 View Post

^^^ Hey, I didn't say that! The writer for NY Magazine/Slate.com said that, don't get me mixed-up with her insanity.

LOL. I think everyone knows you're not that crazy.
post #77465 of 87293
TV Notes
'America's Most Wanted' Renewed for 20 More Episodes by Lifetime
By Tim Kenneally, TheWrap.com - Mar. 13, 2012

"America's Most Wanted" host John Walsh has been given 20 more chances to help put the nation's bad guys behind bars.

Lifetime, which picked the series up after it was canceled by Fox last May, has ordered 20 more episodes of the series, the network said Tuesday.

Since premiering on Lifetime on Dec. 2, "America's Most Wanted" has delivered a year-over-year boost in its Fridays at 9 p.m. timeslot, increasing in the time period by 63 percent among adults 25-54 and 35 percent among women 25-54.

"This is great news for the people I fight for and horrible news for the criminals we're working hard to capture," Walsh said of the renewal. "Lifetime and its viewers have been great partners of 'America's Most Wanted' and we're going to keep the heat on those who think they can run, but they certainly can't hide.

Rob Sharenow, executive VP programming for Lifetime, praised the show, saying that it "has made an immediate impact on Lifetime and, more importantly, John Walsh's courageous fight to raise much needed awareness of many overlooked crimes and bring justice to those who commit them.

"America's Most Wanted" began its relationship with Lifetime just in time for its 25th season.

http://www.thewrap.com/tv/article/am...lifetime-36213
post #77466 of 87293
Tech/Business Notes
After 244 Years, Encyclopaedia Britannica Stops the Presses
By Julie Bosman, The New York Times' 'Media Decoder' Blog - Mar. 13, 2012

After 244 years, the Encyclopaedia Britannica is going out of print.

Those coolly authoritative, gold-lettered reference books that were once sold door-to-door by a fleet of traveling salesmen and displayed as proud fixtures in American homes will be discontinued, company executives said.

In an acknowledgment of the realities of the digital age — and of competition from the Web site Wikipedia — Encyclopaedia Britannica will focus primarily on its online encyclopedias and educational curriculum for schools. The last print version is the 32-volume 2010 edition, which weighs 129 pounds and includes new entries on global warming and the Human Genome Project.

“It’s a rite of passage in this new era,” Jorge Cauz, the president of Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc., a company based in Chicago, said in an interview. “Some people will feel sad about it and nostalgic about it. But we have a better tool now. The Web site is continuously updated, it’s much more expansive and it has multimedia.”

In the 1950s, having the Encyclopaedia Britannica on the bookshelf was akin to a station wagon in the garage or a black-and-white Zenith in the den, a possession coveted for its usefulness and as a goalpost for an aspirational middle class. Buying a set was often a financial stretch, and many families had to pay for it in monthly installments.

But in recent years, print reference books have been almost completely overtaken by the Internet and its vast spread of resources, including specialized Web sites and the hugely popular — and free — online encyclopedia Wikipedia.

Since it was started 11 years ago, Wikipedia has moved a long way toward replacing the authority of experts with the wisdom of the crowds. The site is now written and edited by tens of thousands of contributors around the world, and it has been gradually accepted as a largely accurate and comprehensive source, even by many scholars and academics.

Wikipedia also regularly meets the 21st-century mandate of providing instantly updated material. And it has nearly four million articles in English, including some on pop culture topics that would not be considered worthy of a mention in the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Mr. Cauz said that he believed Britannica’s competitive advantage with Wikipedia came from its prestigious sources, its carefully edited entries and the trust that was tied to the brand.

“We have very different value propositions,” Mr. Cauz said. “Britannica is going to be smaller. We cannot deal with every single cartoon character, we cannot deal with every love life of every celebrity. But we need to have an alternative where facts really matter. Britannica won’t be able to be as large, but it will always be factually correct.”

But one widely publicized study, published in 2005 by Nature, called into question Britannica’s presumed accuracy advantage over Wikipedia. The study said that out of 42 competing entries, Wikipedia made an average of four errors in each article, and Britannica three. Britannica responded with a lengthy rebuttal saying the study was error-laden and “completely without merit.”

The Britannica, the oldest continuously published encyclopedia in the English language, has become a luxury item with a $1,395 price tag. It is frequently bought by embassies, libraries and research institutions, and by well-educated, upscale consumers who felt an attachment to the set of bound volumes. Only 8,000 sets of the 2010 edition have been sold, and the remaining 4,000 have been stored in a warehouse until they are bought.

The 2010 edition had more than 4,000 contributors, including Arnold Palmer (who wrote the entry on the Masters tournament) and Panthea Reid, professor emeritus at Louisiana State University and author of the biography “Art and Affection: A Life of Virginia Woolf” (who wrote about Virginia Woolf).

Sales of the Britannica peaked in 1990, when 120,000 sets were sold in the United States. But now print encyclopedias account for less than 1 percent of the Britannica’s revenue. About 85 percent of revenue comes from selling curriculum products in subjects like math, science and the English language; 15 percent comes from subscriptions to the Web site, the company said.

About half a million households pay a $70 annual fee for the online subscription, which includes access to the full database of articles, videos, original documents and to the company’s mobile applications. At least one other general-interest encyclopedia in the United States, the World Book, is still printing a 22-volume yearly edition, said Jennifer Parello, a spokeswoman for World Book Inc. She declined to provide sales figures but said the encyclopedia was bought primarily by schools and libraries.

Gary Marchionini, the dean of the School of Information and Library Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said the fading of print encyclopedias was “an inexorable trend that will continue.”

“There’s more comprehensive material available on the Web,” Mr. Marchionini said. “The thing that you get from an encyclopedia is one of the best scholars in the world writing a description of that phenomenon or that object, but you’re still getting just one point of view. Anything worth discussing in life is worth getting more than one point of view.”

Many librarians say that while they have rapidly shifted money and resources to digital materials, print still has a place. Academic libraries tend to keep many sets of specialized encyclopedias on their shelves, like volumes on Judaica, folklore, music or philosophy, or encyclopedias that are written in foreign languages and unavailable online.

At the Portland Public Library in Maine, there are still many encyclopedias that the library orders on a regular basis, sometimes every year, said Sonya Durney, a reference librarian. General-interest encyclopedias are often used by students whose teachers require them to occasionally cite print sources, just to practice using print.

“They’re used by anyone who’s learning, anyone who’s new to the country, older patrons, people who aren’t comfortable online,” Ms. Durney said. “There’s a whole demographic of people who are more comfortable with print.”

But many people are discovering that the books have outlived their usefulness. Used editions of encyclopedias are widely available on Craigslist and eBay: more than 1,400 listings for Britannica products were posted on eBay this week.

Charles Fuller, a geography professor who lives in the Chicago suburbs, put his 1992 edition on sale on Craigslist last Sunday. For years, he has neglected the print encyclopedias, he said in an interview, and now prefers to use his iPhone to look up facts quickly. He and his wife are downsizing and relocating to California, he said, and the Encyclopaedia Britannica will not be coming with them, a loss he acknowledges with a hint of wistfulness.

“They’re not obsolete,” Mr. Fuller said. “When I’m doing serious research, I still use the print books. And they look really beautiful on the bookshelves.”

http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.co...imes&seid=auto
post #77467 of 87293
TV Notes
On The Air Tonight
WEDNESDAY Network Primetime/Late Night Options
(All shows are in HD unless noted; start times are ET. Network late night shows are preceded by late local news)

ABC:
8PM - The Middle
8:30PM - Suburgatory
9PM - Modern Family
9:31PM - Happy Endings
10PM - Revenge for Real
* * * *
11:35PM - Nightline (LIVE)
Midnight - Jimmy Kimmel Live! (Jonah Hill; The Crystal Method performs with Martha Reeves)

CBS:
8PM - Survivor: One World
9PM - Criminal Minds
10PM - CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
* * * *
11:35PM - Late Show with David Letterman (Martin Short; The Ting Tings perform)
12:37AM - Late Show with Craig Ferguson (Regis Philbin)

NBC:
8PM - Whitney
8:30PM - Are You There, Chelsea?
9PM - Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
(R - Feb. 15)
10PM - Rock Center with Brian Williams
* * * *
11:35PM - The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (Channing Tatum; NFL player Drew Brees; Meat Loaf performs)
12:37AM - Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (Tracy Morgan; NFL player Tim Tebow; All-American Rejects perform; announcer Deion Sanders)
(R - Feb. 1)
1:36AM - Last Call with Carson Daly (Boxing trainer Freddie Roach; rapper Danny Brown; Ed Sheeran performs) SD
(R - Feb. 8)

FOX:
8PM - American Idol (LIVE, 120 min.)

PBS:
(check your local listing for starting time/programming)
8PM - Nature: What Females Want and Males Will Do (R - Apr. 13, 2008)
9PM - NOVA: Dogs Decoded
(R - Nov. 9, 2010)
10PM - Niagara Falls
(R - Jul. 5, 2006)

UNIVISION:
8PM - Una Familia Con Suerte
9PM - Abismo de Pasión
10PM - La Que No PodÃ*a Amar

THE CW:
8PM - One Tree Hill
9PM - America's Next Top Model: British Invasion

TELEMUNDO:
8PM - Una Maid en Manhattan
9PM - Corazón Valiente
10PM - Relaciones Peligrosas

COMEDY CENTRAL:
11PM - The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (Rachel Weisz)
11:31PM - The Colbert Report (Political adviser Mark McKinnon)

TBS:
11PM - Conan (Jon Hamm; Melissa Rauch; Kumail Nanjiani)

E!:
11PM - Chelsea Lately (Anne Hathaway; actor Jason Momoa; Sean O'Connor performs)
(R - Aug. 16)
post #77468 of 87293
TV Notes
Wednesday's Highlights: 'Monster Man' on Syfy
By Los Angeles Times' 'Show Tracker' Blog - Mar. 13, 2012

[ALL TIMES LISTED ARE PACIFIC TIME]

HOLLYWOOD SPECIAL EFFECTS are the focus of the new behind-the-scenes series Monster Man, at 11 p.m. on Syfy. With Roy Knyrim, Constance Hall and Cleve Hall.

SERIES

The Middle:
Brick (Atticus Shaffer) takes a newspaper delivery job from the town's veteran newsman (Ed Asner) to earn money in this new episode (8 p.m. ABC).

American Idol: The finalists perform in this new episode (8 p.m. Fox).

Criminal Minds: Rossi (Joe Mantegna) and his colleagues are in Seattle to investigate the mysterious murders of married couples who were serving as foster parents, while Garcia (Kirsten Vangsness) thinks her boyfriend (Nicholas Brendon) is about to pop the question, and she's terrified. Teri Polo guest stars in this new episode (9 p.m. CBS).

America's Next Top Model: The models must create an ad campaign, which includes casting, styling and providing props. Cat Deeley takes a turn as a guest judge (9 p.m. KTLA).

Interior Therapy With Jeff Lewis: The seemingly obsessive-compulsive house flipper embraces a new role as home therapist in this new spinoff series premiering tonight (9 p.m. Bravo).

South Park: The raunchy animated comedy returns with a new episode (10 p.m. Comedy Central).

Face Off: In the season finale of the special effects/makeup series, the contestants must create three original characters from a specific genre that will perform in a dance (10 p.m. Syfy).

Psych: Shawn and Gus (James Roday, Dule Hill) investigate the attempted murder of a contestant on a dating show similar to The Bachelorette, in which men compete for the affections of a woman with whom they've crossed paths in the past. Greg Grunberg, Wayne Brady and Mike The Miz Mizanin guest star in this new episode (10 p.m. USA).

SPORTS

College basketball: NCAA first round play-in:
Lamar vs. Vermont (3:30 p.m. Tru); California vs. South Florida (6 p.m. Tru). NIT first round: (4 p.m. ESPN2; 6 p.m. ESPN2).

Pro basketball: The Lakers visit the New Orleans Hornets (5 p.m. KCAL); the Atlanta Hawks visit the Clippers (7:30 p.m. FSN).

Hockey: The Detroit Red Wings visit the Ducks (7 p.m. FS Prime).


http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/show...n-on-syfy.html
post #77469 of 87293
TV Notes
Did NBC miss the boat on 'Downton Abbey'?
By Bob Fernandez, Philadelphia Enquirer

Comcast Corp.'s NBC television network desperately needs more prime-time hits. But did it let one slip away?

It seems like it.

NBC passed on current cultural favorite Downton Abbey, produced by NBCUniversal's Carnival Films studio in London, believing that American audiences wouldn't have the appetite for a very British historical drama set in a country manor in Edwardian England.

Instead, Downton Abbey found a grateful home on public television, as part of the Masterpiece lineup. Spoofed on Saturday Night Live this year and rated No. 2 nationally at 9 p.m. Feb. 5, the night of the Super Bowl (aired by NBC), Downton has been a stunning success for PBS.

On Feb. 19, 5.4 million viewers watched the season finale, capturing a 3.5 national Nielsen rating and making it the highest-rated PBS show since the premiere of Ken Burns' National Parks in September 2009, PBS says.

"They may have second thoughts about letting it go to PBS," Brad Adgate, senior vice president of research at Horizon Media, said of NBC. Downton Abbey probably never would have rated No. 1 in prime time for NBC, but it could have built a solid viewership and brought other benefits to the network's tarnished reputation.

In an era of reality shows and poorly staged TV dramas, Downton Abbey "gets a lot of critical acclaim, so it's a prestigious show," Adgate said, noting that the series appeals to a sophisticated and urban, though older, audience. Facing aging demographics, network television has been seeking shows that appeal to younger audiences.

NBC has improved its prime-time showing recently with Sunday Night Football, the Super Bowl, and The Voice, Adgate said. But the network still has big holes to patch. The 10 p.m. Thursday time slot is one of them. Between 1981 and 2009, NBC aired just three shows in that slot: Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, and ER. By contrast, the network has carried three shows in that slot since September: Prime Suspect, The Firm, and Awake.

An NBC official said last week that the network had been delighted at the success of Downton Abbey for its sister company and that the decision not to air the show in the United States was made under a previous NBC administration.

Comcast acquired control of NBC Universal Inc. in early 2011 and vowed that it would revive the sagging fortunes of the NBC TV network, which suffered under former owner General Electric Co. The Philadelphia cable company replaced many top entertainment honchos, and now former Comcast executive Steve Burke heads the news and entertainment conglomerate. Comcast officials have said that if they can fix NBC TV, there is potential to earn hundreds of millions of dollars in profit.

But even current NBC executives could have overlooked Downton Abbey's potential, NBC acknowledged. The official said it was hard to imagine any network - including PBS - thinking Downton would become a hit.

As a practical consideration, there seems to be doubt that Downton Abbey could sustain 22 episodes over a TV season, which is necessary for a U.S. network. Seven Downton episodes aired on PBS this year.

That said, NBC seems to be reconsidering the accepted network-TV wisdom. Bob Greenblatt, the new head of entertainment for NBC, developed the period dramas The Tudors and The Borgias at the cable channel Showtime. While at Showtime, Greenblatt also developed a series about the Vanderbilts with the writer Julian Fellowes, creator of Downton Abbey.

NBC is experimenting with pilots for a western, an epic pirate tale about Blackbeard, and a Dracula story set in 19th-century England. Greenblatt, the NBC official said, knows the virtues of such shows - they just have to be broad enough to work for broadcast TV.

Downton Abbey executive producer Gareth Neame said in a phone interview last month that he was filming a third season, and that though the series is a historic drama, it's fast-paced and told in a modern way. One model for the series was The West Wing, he said.

Though a Brit, Neame boasts a Hollywood pedigree. His grandfather, Ronald Neame, had a four-decade career as a cinematographer, producer, screenwriter, and director. His most acclaimed credit was as director of The Poseidon Adventure, released in 1972.

Gareth Neame believes the success of Downton Abbey could lead to a more receptive audience for the historic-drama genre among U.S. TV executives.

As for PBS, he said, "they have always been there for British producers. They don't have the biggest checkbook, but they are consistent."

http://articles.philly.com/2012-03-1...nbc-executives
post #77470 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by dad1153 View Post

TV Notes
Did NBC miss the boat on 'Downton Abbey'?
By Bob Fernandez, Philadelphia Enquirer

Comcast Corp.'s NBC television network desperately needs more prime-time hits. But did it let one slip away?

It seems like it.

Not really. We've seen plenty of examples of how just being on a different network changes the viewers numbers.

On PBS Abbey instantly hit plenty of the stuffy, literary types that the show appeals too. Place it on NBC where that demo rarely treads and it would have bombed.

Apparently changing three letters in a network name is enough to confuse or repulse an audience.
post #77471 of 87293
TV Notes
Move over, Kardashians: The Eastwoods are heading to E!
By Michelle Profis, EW.com's 'Inside TV' Blog - Mar. 13, 2012

Looks like the Eastwoods are the next celebrity family to land their own reality show: E! announced today that the new series, Mrs. Eastwood & Company will debut in May.

But rather than a deeper look into the life of esteemed actor and director Clint Eastwood, the series will focus on his wife Dina, their teenage daughters Francesca and Morgan, and Overtone': the all-male, six member South African vocal group that Dina manages (hence the Company.)

Nothing is more important to me than family - no matter how you define that, Dina Eastwood said in a statement. People might be surprised by how we live our lives and our unconventional approach, and I also believe that it's hard not to fall in love with my band, Overtone.'

I'm really proud of my family, Clint Eastwood said. They are a constant source of inspiration and entertainment.

http://insidetv.ew.com/2012/03/13/cl...s-reality-sho/
post #77472 of 87293
TV Notes
William Petersen Plots TV Return with GK-TV
By Lesley Goldberg, The Hollywood Reporter's 'Live Feed' Blog - Mar. 13, 2012

More than two years after departing CBS' CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, William Petersen is plotting his return to the small screen.

Petersen has teamed with GK-TV to develop an hourlong crime drama series titled Hurt People, in which he would star and executive produce, GK-TV said Tuesday.

Based on an original script by Peter Macmanus (Hollywoodland), the series revolves around Hollis Brown (Petersen), a longtime hitman employed by the crime family who killed his wife. Brown has been brought in to hunt down his estranged daughter, who is intent on destroying those responsible for her mother's death.

Petersen and Macmanus would exec produce alongside CSI EP Cynthia Chvatal as well as GK-TV's Graham King, Tim Headington and Craig Cegielski. Beth Stine is on board as a supervising producer.

Hurt People would mark Petersen's first starring gig since he departed his role as Gil Grissom on CSI. The series has featured a number of high-profile actors -- Laurence Fishburne, Ted Danson, Elisabeth Sue -- in its bid to fill the void left by his departure from the series.

Petersen and Macmanus are repped by UTA.

In addition to Hurt People, GK-TV is also developing Port Royal from The Walking Dead EP Gale Anne Hurd for FX. Its Camelot effort for Starz was canceled after one season despite record ratings for the cable network.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/liv...n-gk-tv-299232
post #77473 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by dad1153 View Post

TV Notes
Did NBC miss the boat on 'Downton Abbey'?
By Bob Fernandez, Philadelphia Enquirer

Comcast Corp.'s NBC television network desperately needs more prime-time hits. But did it let one slip away?

It seems like it.

NBC passed on current cultural favorite Downton Abbey, produced by NBCUniversal's Carnival Films studio in London, believing that American audiences wouldn't have the appetite for a very British historical drama set in a country manor in Edwardian England.

They're joking, right? Intelligent, sophisticated programming succeeding on any American network outside of PBS? Yeah right!

I'm sure Downtown Abbey would have worked out great being trimmed down to 42 minutes an episode with atmosphere breaking commercials jammed in there with an episode of Fear Factor aired directly afterwards.
post #77474 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by dad1153 View Post

TV Notes
Did NBC miss the boat on 'Downton Abbey'?
By Bob Fernandez, Philadelphia Enquirer

Comcast Corp.'s NBC television network desperately needs more prime-time hits. But did it let one slip away?

It seems like it.

Well NBC may not be the only one to miss this boat. Anyone else who has NEVER seen this show besides me? Sounds like I am too far behind to catch up now.
post #77475 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by VisionOn View Post

Not really. We've seen plenty of examples of how just being on a different network changes the viewers numbers.

On PBS Abbey instantly hit plenty of the stuffy, literary types that the show appeals too. Place it on NBC where that demo rarely treads and it would have bombed.

Apparently changing three letters in a network name is enough to confuse or repulse an audience.

The Big Four passed on "The Soprano's" too. Think we would be waxing poetic about it as we do had it aired on FOX?
post #77476 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by scorpiontail60 View Post

I'm sure Downtown Abbey would have worked out great being trimmed down to 42 minutes an episode with atmosphere breaking commercials jammed in there with an episode of Fear Factor aired directly afterwards.

You forgot to mention the English English subtitles they would have added :P

xnappo
post #77477 of 87293
Nielsen Notes (Broadcast)
Telemundo's got a heartthrob: 'Corazon'
New telenovela sets a record with 1.02 million 18-49s
By Toni Fitzgerald, Media Life Magazine - Mar. 14, 2012

Univision long ago passed the CW to become the No. 5 broadcast network.

It looks as though Telemundo, the No. 2 Spanish-language network behind Univision, expects to do the same some day.

Telemundo has positioned itself as a rival to the young-skewing CW as its ratings grow, and it's occasionally even beating its English-language competitor.

Last week was one of those occasions.

With the CW largely, though not completely, in repeats, Telemundo's new telenovela "Corazon Valiente" logged a considerable advantage over the CW in younger viewers in the 9 p.m. timeslot.

The first four episodes of "Corazon," which bowed March 6, a Tuesday, averaged 1.02 million adults 18-49, up 57 percent over the network's February average in that slot, and 1.7 million total viewers.

It marked the first time that a Telemundo novela has averaged at least 1 million 18-49s in that timeslot since the network first began using Nielsen's national people meter service six years ago.

It also gave Telemundo a sizeable advantage over the CW, which "Corazon" outdrew by an average of 80 percent each night in 18-49s and 101 percent in 18-34s, the CW's target demo.

"Corazon," about childhood friends who reunite as grown women, had the third-best premiere week of any Telemundo novela, and the network even beat ABC and CBS (which aired mostly reruns) in several local markets in 18-34s and 18-49s.

The victories say almost as much about the competition as they do about Telemundo. The latter is having a good year, and the CW is having a tough one.

The CW's viewership is off across virtually all demographics versus last year, and its highly touted new dramas, "Hart of Dixie" and "Ringer," which both got decent reviews, have earned mediocre ratings.

The network remains well ahead for the season with an average 1.76 million viewers and a 0.8 18-49 rating to Telemundo's 1.34 million and 0.5

But while it's still unusual for Telemundo to finish ahead of the CW for the night in the younger demographics, it's no longer unheard of.

Even before "Corazon's" premiere, Telemundo was seeing ratings gains. The network had its best-ever February sweeps among total viewers, due in part to the success of another telenovela, "Una Maid en Manhattan."

An adaptation of the 2002 Jennifer Lopez movie, "Maid" improved Telemundo's 8 p.m. average by 51 percent last month.

Year to date, Telemundo is up double-digit percentages in total viewers and 18-49s.

* * * *

In broadcast ratings for the week ended March 11:

Among adults 18-49, Fox was first for the week with a 2.4 average rating and a 7 share, followed by CBS at 2.0/6, NBC at 1.8/5, ABC at 1.6/5, Univision at 1.3/4, Telemundo at 0.6/2, CW at 0.4/1, ION and TeleFutura at 0.3/1 and Estrella and Azteca at 0.1/0.

Top five English-language Big Five shows (18-49s): 1. NBC's "The Voice" 6.2; 2. Fox's "American Idol-Wednesday" 5.7; 3. CBS's "The Big Bang Theory" 5.1; 4. Fox's American Idol-Thursday" 4.9; 5. CBS's "The Big Bang Theory" 3.9.

Top five English-language Big Five shows (total viewers): 1. Fox's American Idol-Wednesday" 18.69 million; 2. Fox's American Idol-Thursday" 17.27 million; 3. NBC's "The Voice" 16.85 million; 4. CBS's "Person of Interest" 15.67 million; 5. CBS's "The Big Bang Theory" 15.05 million.

Top five time-shifted English-language Big Five shows (18-49s, by Live+SD versus Live+7 playback, week ended Feb. 26): 1. ABC's "Modern Family" 2.8 increase (up 58.3 percent); 2. CBS's "The Big Bang Theory" 1.7 increase (up 32.1 percent); 3. ABC's "Grey's Anatomy" 1.6 increase (up 51.6 percent); 4. Fox's "New Girl" 1.5 increase (up 50.0 percent); 5. NBC's "The Office" 1.5 increase (up 5.7.7 percent).

Show on the rise: NBC's "Smash," Monday 10 p.m. The new drama surged against ABC and CBS reruns, rising 17 percent week-to-week among 18-49s from a 2.3 rating to a 2.7.

Show on the decline: CBS's "The Good Wife," Sunday 9 p.m. The third-year drama posted a 1.7 among 18-49s, off 11 percent from a 1.9 the previous week.


http://www.medialifemagazine.com/art...-Corazone-.asp
post #77478 of 87293
Nielsen Notes (Cable)
Once so hot, 'Jersey Shore' is now fading
MTV hit slides to a season-low 4.84 million total viewers
By Toni Fitzgerald, Media Life Magazine - Mar. 14, 2012

Two weeks from tomorrow MTV will launch its first "Jersey Shore" spinoff, "The Pauly D Project," to be followed later this year by a show starring Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi and fellow boozer Jenni "JWoww" Farley.

Perhaps MTV, which announced the shows last year, should have rushed into production a bit faster, because "Shore" has lost its momentum, and it's unclear what that will mean for the spinoffs.

Season five of "Shore" hit a season low last week with 4.84 million total viewers, according to Nielsen.

That's still a big audience for any cable show, but it's down 36 percent from the season premiere in January, which drew 7.6 million viewers.

"Shore" has lost nearly half its audience since last August, when it drew a record 8.8 million viewers for the season four premiere.

All this is to say that while "Shore" is still a hit, its best days are behind it, which may not be the best time to launch one, let alone two, spinoffs.

The problem with "Shore" is its repetitive nature. In every episode Snooki will drink, Mike "The Situation" Sorrentino will say something stupid, the gang will tan and work out, and two cast members will get into a fight (that is the variable; different people fight each week).

Five seasons in, that gets dull, no matter how unintentionally funny and clueless the "Jersey" crew may be.

MTV's idea for the spinoffs was to provide a deeper character portrait of the reality stars, but alas what you see seems to be all you get from these twentysomethings.

A full hour focused on Pauly, Snooki or JWoww may prove too much for people already tuning them out in smaller doses.

Perhaps a better approach for MTV would have been to stick to its original idea of finding a new group of "Shore" castmates to follow.

That could still happen, but probably not until MTV has played out all of its spinoff scenarios, and it still has a program in development for Sorrentino.

* * * *

In cable ratings for the week ended March 11:

Top five networks in primetime (18-49s): TBS, USA, History, A&E, TNT.

Top five networks in primetime (total viewers): USA, Disney Channel, History, TBS, Fox News Channel.

Top five cable news networks in primetime (25-54): Fox News Channel, MSNBC, CNN, HLN, CNBC.

Top five cable news programs (total viewers): 1 Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor" (Monday, 8 p.m.); 2. Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor" (Wednesday, 8 p.m.); 3. Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor" (Thursday, 8 p.m.); 4. Fox News Channel's "AEHQ: Super Tuesday" (Tuesday, 9 p.m.); 5. Fox News Channel's "AEHQ: Super Tuesday" (Tuesday, 8 p.m.)

Top movie (18-49s): TBS's "The Hangover" (Saturday, 8 p.m.) 1.39 million.

Top sporting event (total viewers): ESPN2's "NASCAR Nationwide Series" (Saturday, 4:56 p.m.) 2.51 million.

Shows making the top 10 among 18-34s, 18-49s and 25-54s: USA's "WWE Entertainment" (Monday, 9 p.m.); AMC's "The Walking Dead' (Sunday, 9 p.m.); MTV's "Jersey Shore" (Thursday, 10 p.m.); History's "Pawn Stars" (Monday, 10 and 10:30 p.m.);

Show on the rise: History's "Pawn Stars," Monday, 10 p.m. The 10 p.m. episode of the reality hit averaged 2.79 million viewers 18-49, up 21 percent from 2.30 million the previous week.

Show on the decline: Discovery Channel's "Gold Rush" Friday, 9 p.m. A special episode of the show, which took a deeper look at the miners, averaged 1.41 million viewers 25-54, off 38 percent from the previous week's 2.29 million.


http://www.medialifemagazine.com/art...now-fading.asp
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Critic's Notes
Sweet (and sublimely sick) 16 for 'South Park'
Creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone head into 'South Park's' 16th season with plenty of life left in mining wisdom from crude laughs.
By Robert Lloyd, Los Angeles Times - Mar. 13, 2012


"South Park" begins its 16th season Wednesday on Comedy Central.
(Picture: Comedy Central)


"South Park," a cartoon that is and isn't about four little boys in a Rocky Mountain hamlet, begins its 16th season Wednesday on Comedy Central.

Sixteen years of "South Park it began so long ago that Patrick Duffy was the subject of a joke in its second episode sounds even more amazing than 23 years of "The Simpsons," given the younger show's habitual profanity, vulgarity and violence. But that is also obviously part of its appeal and, indeed, often its very point.

What's kept both these small-town allegorical comedies valuable and viable over their long runs are qualities they share: a disregard for empty authority, skepticism regarding beliefs not based in fact, an impatience with hypocrisy and cant, and the happy realization that the worst aspects of humans both as individuals and (especially) as institutions can be played for big laughs. And if "The Simpsons" is the warmer of the two series, that is all right with "South Park."

Eric Cartman (perennially enraged sociopathic conniver) speaks with a character clearly meant to be Bart Simpson (in "Cartoon Wars, Part II" Season 10):

Bart-like boy: "I'm a pretty bad kid."

Cartman: "What's the worst thing you've ever done?

"I stole the head off a statue once."

"Wow. That's pretty hard-core, jeez. That's like this one time, I didn't like this kid, so I ground his parents up into chili and fed it to him." (So he did, in "Scott Tenorman Must Die," from Season 5.)

With its famous six-day production process, "South Park" is also the more topical cartoon in 2008, it aired an election-themed episode that quoted from President Obama's victory speech the day after he won. Creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone like to name names, of both people and the corporations who are now people too, the specificity of their targets prompting the disclaimer that opens every episode: "All characters and events in this show even those based on real people are entirely fictional."

Although it takes an army, running at a sprint, to bring "South Park" to life, to an extent rare for television it remains very much the work of its creators, who script, direct and produce the episodes and provide the voices for all the male main characters. It lends the show a consistent, which is not to say unevolving, vision.

And though its semi-homemade look a computerized interpretation of the construction-paper/felt-board look of the pilot has grown somewhat more refined in order to keep pace with (if always several steps behind) advances in TV technology, a kind of garage-rock/uncle's barn homeliness maintains. It is certainly not a show that feels worked over or which appears to suffer from second thoughts.

I was not a fan to begin with. It seemed to me at first that Parker and Stone were merely showing off, like children pulling down their pants or saying bad words at a grown-up party. (The pilot episode concerned alien anal probes and was full of bad words so, really, that was not too far off the mark.)

But eventually I began to see a method in its crudeness, and its excesses as the road to a palace of wisdom that is, when it was not just pulling down its pants and saying bad words. (Comedy Central bleeps the conventionally most objectionable language, but almost every episode is available uncensored at the show's home page, http://www.southparkstudios.com.)

If "South Park" is vulgar partly to make a point about vulgarity, and provocative to make a point about the right to be provocative, it is also vulgar and provocative for the sake of being vulgar and provocative. At times, it's simply mean calling Sarah Jessica Parker a "transvestite donkey witch," for example.

Anything less would be, in a way, disingenuous. The series' deep and shallow streams run side by side, as in the fifth-season episode "It Hits the Fan," in which a common slang word for feces is pronounced 162 times (an onscreen counter keeps track). There are myriad interlacing points made about language and society and media; but it's funny because they keep using that word.

The theme was revisited and elaborated upon last season in a pair of dark and moving episodes in which Stan, having turned 10, begins to lose his taste for life he is diagnosed as suffering from "cynicism" and, in a metaphor made brilliantly concrete, has begun to see the world and its products literally as excrement. "When all the things that made you laugh just make you sick, how do you go on when nothing makes you happy?" he wonders.

There is something quite breathtaking, and I mean this seriously, about the poignancy Parker and Stone achieve by filling the screen with pictures and sounds of defecation. Oddly, it feels like ... maturity.

The episodes that followed suggest that, like the death that used to regularly come to Kenny, Stan's affliction is not permanent. But it's clear that "South Park," which has been renewed through 2016, has territory left to explore and has not lost its capacity to $%@#$ with us.

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment...,6203003.story
post #77480 of 87293
TP over BSG what a frakkin joke. please quit posting that thing
post #77481 of 87293
^^^ Sorry, I'm just the messenger.

Critic's Notes
Why Raising Hope Is Fox’s Parks and Rec
By Margaret Lyons, New York Magazine's 'Vulture' Blog - Mar. 13, 2012

A charismatic petite blonde woman, a gruff gentleman prone to dispensing hardscrabble wisdom, a sarcastic brunette who falls for a doofy guy, a steady influx of weirdo lovable townies — they all make for an ensemble of earnest oddballs trying to do the right thing on their low-rated single-camera comedy. But it's not Parks and Rec. It's Raising Hope. And it's just as good.

A summary for the uninitiated or wrongfully resistant: Lucas Neff stars as Jimmy, a high-school dropout single dad who lives with his parents (Martha Plimpton and Garrett Dillahunt) and grandmother (Cloris Leachman) and recently, after two seasons of pining, got together with his dream girl Sabrina (Shannon Woodward), whom he works with at the grocery store. The show's cartoonishness balances out its abiding sincerity: Yes, everyone is sleeping with pantyhose on their heads to prevent spiders from crawling into their ears, but that's only as a demonstration of their love and devotion to one another, and Jimmy's attempt to make Sabrina feel understood. The show is a lot like creator Greg Garcia's previous series, the massively underrated My Name Is Earl, but Hope is more family-centric and ensemble-driven.

Much like Parks or Happy Endings, but also in the tradition of, say, Roseanne or Malcolm in the Middle, Hope finds its humor in goofy spins on relative mundanity. Taking a GED course is not particularly hilarious, but what if the course is taught by a vindictive former teacher who rephrases every word problem to be about your poor life choices, and the only reason you're taking the class is because your family is enmeshed in a contest to prove who's the smartest? Well, maybe then.

So why doesn't the show enjoy the same buzz or fandom? Where are the Raising Hope fan art Tumblrs, the dozens of .gifs recounting the show's best moments, the Trader Joe's employees using Hope jokes in their store placards? Why isn't Raising Hope cool?

A couple of factors probably contribute: It's a family-set show, it's on Fox, and it's about poor people, so it doesn't seem trendy. And yet, Hope has all the markers of comedy hipness: irreverence, a fascination with quirkiness, running in-jokes that reward eagle-eyed fans, good guest stars, a darling romance, and quotable bon mots. It's not cynical, and the characters seem to care for each other. There's even a cute baby. Like the buzzier Parks, Hope had a good first season but is really finding its footing in its second, backing off on some of its overdone bits (like Maw Maw being salty) and finding a more comfortable rhythm.

And in the trendiest move of all, Hope is a bubble show that's been bounced around the schedule and is nearing the end of its season without a renewal. Which makes now the perfect time to get onboard, because as Party Down fans can tell you, there's nothing cooler than a canceled show.

http://www.vulture.com/2012/03/raisi...s-rec-fox.html
post #77482 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by jamieva View Post

TP over BSG what a frakkin joke. please quit posting that thing

I agree. Flush it; it's ridiculous. The guy is just using this thing to generate web traffic and has no idea what he's talking about. Kind of like the Emmy voters being comprised mostly of old white guys who don't actually watch much TV (true).
post #77483 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by archiguy View Post

Kind of like the Emmy voters being comprised mostly of old white guys who don't actually watch much TV (true).

Are you saying that white people (or old people) aren't good judges of quality television? If you're not, then I'm not sure why you brought up the race (or age) of Emmy voters.
post #77484 of 87293
Critic's Notes
'Mad Men' comes to PaleyFest to talk happiness, douchebags and the endgame
Few hints about season 5, but lots of reflection on what's come before
By Alan Sepinwall, HitFix.com - Mar. 14, 2012

"Mad Men" finally returns to television next Sunday, March 25 at 9 p.m., but because creator Matthew Weiner is so paranoid about spoilers (and has a much broader definition of the concept than almost any other showrunner), the "Mad Men" panel at PaleyFest spent virtually the entire time looking back, not forward. Fans got to watch last season's finale, "Tomorrowland," and though moderator Elvis Mitchell tried to prod Weiner for a few details about the upcoming season, the biggest tidbit the show's creator revealed is that (spoiler alert!) Lane Pryce will become a Mets fan.

But with almost the full cast on-hand (Elisabeth Moss and Christina Hendricks had other commitments), there was plenty of time to reflect on where we left the characters when "Tomorrowland" aired 17 months ago, to learn a bit about how the actors see their Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce alter egos, and to get a few amusing anecdotes along the way. Among the highlights:

* Because the crowd had just watched "Tomorrowland," there was a lot of discussion of Don's impulsive decision to propose to Megan, what that means for him, etc. Jon Hamm said he was glad that the season ended on a note of hope after Don had been in a downward spiral all year. Weiner said when he directed the scene where Don told his co-workers about the engagement, he filmed the reaction shots first, and the other actors mostly seemed frozen. Then he turned the camera around to see what they were so stunned by, and it was Hamm smiling as broadly as he ever has playing the role, which unnerved everyone. Hamm also enjoyed last season's "The Summer Man," where Don keeps a journal of his attempts to drink less, because, "It was refreshing to actually get to say those things and go through those emotions as a character who had really been wrung out."

* Speaking of reaction shots, John Slattery got a lot of laughs recapping the filming of the blackface scene from the season 3 episode "My Old Kentucky Home," and how he wishes they had filmed the reaction shots first, as his co-stars and the extras were all suitably horrified at their first glimpse of him. He also admitted that he couldn't exactly ask Weiner to take it out of the script: "You can't ride the girl in her underwear singing cowboy sings and then say, 'No, I won't do the blackface.'"

* Rich Sommer introduced the word of the night when he said his reaction to "Tomorrowland" was to ask, "When, exactly, did Harry become such a douchebag?" Various other actors would try to seize the douchebag mantle for their character (Jay R. Ferguson thought "the douche torch had been passed to Stan"), but it kept coming back to Sommer, who said he didn't actually think Harry had changed all that much from the first season. ""I think if you took Harry Crane from episodes in season 1 and put him into the situation he's in now," he said, "I don't think he would've been any different. He was just under a thumb before. He just has freedom to be who he truly is." Weiner said that Harry had become incredibly important to the agency, but Sommer has no illusions about his own position within the series: "I still think it'll be a show about Don Draper. Harry just might have more important places to go when he leaves a scene."

* Kiernan Shipka, who plays Sally Draper, once again proved herself to be more composed and articulate than many actors twice her age or more. When Weiner asked whether she felt Sally was more like her mother or father, Shipka observed, "I think she's more like her own person." The crowd applauded, and Sommer interjected, "If you guys are going to applaud every time Kiernan says something smart, then you will be applauding all night. She'll definitely say the smartest things out of everyone."

* As for Sally's mom, the audience Q&A brought up how much fans dislike Betty, and January Jones quipped that "People run away from me on the street all the time. They're worried about me being a mother now." Weiner defended Betty, insisting that her open-handed slap of Sally's face last season wasn't that unusual for the period ("Oh, she's a monster! Lock her up!" he said sarcastically), and said that Betty had just cause to fire Carla for letting creepy, older Glen be around Sally despite her orders not to. (Though he did admit that Betty should have let Carla say goodbye to the kids.)

* The contract Weiner negotiated during the hiatus should take the show through the seventh season, which he confirmed is their current plan of when to end the show. "My whole thing is, I don't want to overstay our welcome, and it's really hard to do (the show)." He said that he and writer/producers Marie and André Jacquemetton had discussed what they want to do over the final season, but "there's no master plan." With each season so far, he's tried to end it in such a way that if the show didn't continue, that finale would feel like a good ending. Noting that people ask him about the ending all the time and seem anxious that he has something specific in mind, he joked, "I know everything, exactly how it's going to go."

Again, "Mad Men" is back on the 25th. It sounds like the premiere is the only episode AMC will be sending out in advance this season, so future episode reviews will come sometime on Monday, but you should have my thoughts on the first one that night.

http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/whats-al...nd-the-endgame

* * * *

Critic's Notes
Watch The 'Community' PaleyFest panel
Singing! Dancing! Oscars! And Britta!

The Hulu archive of the "Community" PaleyFest panel that I moderated has gone up earlier than expected. If you didn't get to attend in New York or LA, or to watch the Livestream feed, you can see it now, embedded below.

The Hulu version, like the Livestream feed, doesn't include the episode they screened, but I should warn everyone that I do ask a couple of questions (one to Yvette Nicole Brown, and the other to either Danny Pudi or Dan Harmon, but specifically about Abed) that gives away things that happen at the end of the episode. So if you want to know nothing before "Urban Matrimony and the Sandwich Arts" airs this Thursday night at 8, save this to watch after.

But whenever you watch, enjoy the fake stripteasing, Jim Rash showing off his hardware, the singalong, Gillian Jacobs almost Britta'ing the "Remedial Chaos Theory" dance, and a lot more. [CLICK LINK BELOW]

http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/whats-al...aleyfest-panel
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TV Notes
Has The Clock Stopped Ticking On ’24′ Movie?
By Mike Fleming, Deadline.com - Mar. 14, 2012

EXCLUSIVE: I’m hearing that fans of the Fox series 24 are going to have to continue waiting for the long-awaited 24 feature film. 20th Century Fox isn’t going forward with the film this year. It hadn’t been greenlit, but it was scheduled to get going in late March, with Kiefer Sutherland jumping into Jack Bauer mode when his new series Touch goes on hiatus in April. The studio was zeroing in on a director — Antoine Fuqua was the most recent conversation I’d heard of — when the decision was made this week to not go forward, at least this year.

There are rumors this came down to budget and that Sutherland is upset because he was sparked up to resume his role as the rough-and-tumble government operative, who over eight seasons prevented numerous apocalyptic terror attacks. Studio insiders tell me Fox wasn’t convinced it had enough time to complete the film before Sutherland has to go back to work on Touch‘s second season, and didn’t want to rush and neither did Sutherland. The picture is being produced by Imagine Entertainment’s Brian Grazer and Sutherland and they have a script written by Billy Ray, and polished by Mark Bomback. It’s ready to go.

The big question is whether Fox will continue working on the film and readying it for Sutherland’s next hiatus. Having been a big fan of the series, I am disappointed. I’ve heard that Ray constructed the script to play out in a three-picture arc. Maybe it was the real-time format, or perhaps the writing and endless cliffhangers, but the twists and turns and intensity created a blood pressure-spiking viewer experience that was unmatched — at least until AMC unveiled The Walking Dead. It seems a natural transition to features, with the potential to turn into a Die Hard-type action franchise.

Giving the picture some hope is Grazer’s inability to take no for an answer. American Gangster was scrapped and then came back together and turned into a memorable crime drama. And Grazer, Ron Howard, Akiva Goldsman and Stephen King are now firming up a deal for The Dark Tower at Warner Bros, which will put the picture on course to begin production in the first quarter of 2013 after Universal last year rejected the ambitious plan to make three movies and two limited-run TV series that could land at HBO.

UPDATE: The 24 movie postponement broken by Deadline this morning, is getting interesting.Word is racing around agency circles that Kiefer Sutherland was not only unhappy about the pic’s postponement, but also what I’d heard was a $1 million offer to play Jack Bauer in a deal that was heavily backloaded to reward success. Insiders said that Sutherland would have gotten at least $2 million, though that was below his original $5 million and then $3 million ask. Fox wanted a budget around $30 million, while the filmmakers wanted $45 million to $60 million. Fox’s idea was always to make the film at a cost, and reward in the upside. The studio’s proposal, made a couple weeks ago, wasn’t addressed until this week, and when the crap hit the fan yesterday, the studio felt there wasn’t enough time to pull the picture off in seven weeks of prep. The studio was following its experience with X-Files, a TV property turned into a hit film, but made at a cautious budget. I’m told that Fuqua hadn’t yet been approved by Sutherland, but that Sutherland, Imagine and Fuqua stood to reap up to about 25% of the proceeds after breakeven, to make up for the low upfront payments. Fuqua would have gotten north of $1 million, but not as much as Sutherland. Reached out for comment to Sutherland and Imagine this morning, but no one returned yet.

http://www.deadline.com/2012/03/has-...g-on-24-movie/
post #77486 of 87293
TV Notes
Filming continues on 'Luck' in wake of third horse death
By Lynette Rice, EW.com's 'Inside TV' Blog - Mar. 14, 2012

Filming that does not involve horses will continue on HBO's critical fave Luck while the American Humane Association investigates the death of a third animal on the show's Southern California set.

The first-year drama from David Milch and Michael Mann has already earned a second-season pickup, so production was underway on the second of 10 new episodes when a horse was injured and euthanized Tuesday at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia. The animal reared and fell back while on its way to a racetrack stable a common occurrence in stable areas every year, according to a state racing board doctor. Still, a routine necropsy will be conducted and the AHA will investigate.

An AHA safety representative was at the track when the accident occurred, and according to an HBO spokesperson, as always, all safety precautions were in place. The rep said that the network is deeply saddened by the animal's death.

Last month, it was revealed that two horses died during the filming of season 1 in 2010 and 2011.

Nine episodes of Luck, which stars Dustin Hoffman and Nick Nolte, were ordered for the first season; the eighth will air next week. HBO ordered 10 more for a second season shortly after the official premiere garnered good reviews and decent ratings: the debut episode attracted 3.3 million viewers during multiple airings. The audience for subsequent episodes has dwindled, however, settling in at about 600,000 viewers.

http://insidetv.ew.com/2012/03/14/hbo-luck-horse-died/
post #77487 of 87293
TV Review
'Monster Man' (SyFy)
Up to His Neck in Blood, Shark Heads and Deadlines
By Neil Genzlinger, The New York Times - Mar. 14, 2012

It seems impossibly retro in this computer-generated age, but at least one guy is still creating creepy movie effects out of resin and blood bottles.

His name is Cleve Hall, and he's the title figure of Monster Man, a workplace reality series that has its premiere on Wednesday night on Syfy. It's not a great show, but it's interesting in an experience-it-before-it-vanishes sort of way.

Mr. Hall, whose co-workers include his two daughters and his former wife, dresses the part, affecting a B-movie goth look that includes yellow eyes. In the first episode he has two projects on his plate: conjoined twins who have to rip themselves apart and a two-headed shark that has to munch on bathing beauties.

The show unfortunately lapses into trumped-up family tensions and equally trumped-up races against the clock, wearyingly familiar gimmicks for these types of series.

Mr. Hall and his daughter Constance, who is his effect-designing equal, clash a lot, or pretend to. And on both projects the crew hurries to meet a deadline with the urgency of a medical team bringing a heart to a dying patient. Who cares about your deadlines? It's only a movie, as they say, or in this case, two movies.

But amid the same old, same old you do get the pleasure of hearing Mr. Hall reach important realizations, like this: In order for the two-headed shark to wreak as much damage as possible, the jaws had to be kept as separate as possible. And then there is the delightful on-set instruction he gives to the two bikini-wearing actresses who end up in the shark jaws:

Girls, get your mouthfuls of blood. When the jaws come down on you, spurt.

MONSTER MAN
Syfy, Wednesday night at 11, Eastern and Pacific times; 10, Central time.


http://tv.nytimes.com/2012/03/14/art...ref=television
post #77488 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by moob View Post

LOL@Twin Peaks beating BSG. As if Buffy beating Deadwood wasn't enough...

I'll just quote this...


Hera? Hera?!?! The kid who had a total of like 2 lines? Seriously?

Maybe meant Gaeta?
post #77489 of 87293
^^^ Well, she's his daughter... daddy's little (Cylon-human hybrid) girl!

Critic's Notes
The Greatest TV Drama of the Past 25 Years, Round One: Mad Men vs. Lost
By Dave Holmes, New York Magazine's 'Vulture' Blog - Mar. 14, 2012

For the next three weeks, Vulture is holding the ultimate Drama Derby to determine the greatest TV drama of the past 25 years. Each day a different notable writer will be charged with determining the winner of a round of the bracket, until New York Magazine TV critic Matt Zoller Seitz judges the finals on March 23. Today's first-round battle: TV host and Vulture recapper Dave Holmes judges Mad Men versus Lost. You can place your own vote on Facebook or tweet your opinion with the #dramaderby hashtag.

You’ve surrendered whole weekends to the DVDs. You’ve literally talked about them around the water cooler. Lost and Mad Men are two perfect examples of our current new Golden Age of Television — shows that have inspired not only loyal followings, but also countless books, podcasts, college courses, and one tasteful collection of reasonably priced workwear at Banana Republic. But only one show can win here. So let’s discuss them, starting with the time-traveling polar bear in the room: Lost.

In this Chuck Lorre–The Bachelor–NCIS: Special Victims Unit network-TV environment, it’s almost impossible to believe someone even got a meeting at ABC about a show with a smoke monster. I can’t think of a more ambitious television show than Lost, and its pilot — the most expensive in television history at the time – raised questions that kept us returning to the program, even when it was clear we weren’t going to get the answers. Its success meant even your dumbest friends were talking about flash-sidewayses, The Numbers, and faith versus reason. Lost made 2004 a deeply weird time.

We’d never seen anything quite like Lost, and though many have tried to be The Weird Show since, nothing has made the supernatural more palatable. It was, quite simply, the most batshit, mind-bendingly crazy smash-hit network show ever. Seriously, do this: Call your parents and explain the show to them. I’ll wait. See? They were out before you even got to the hatch.

But the creators of Lost — J.J. Abrams, Damon Lindelof, and first-to-make-it-off-the-island Jeffrey Lieber — knew that, as crazy and complicated as the show would get, TV audiences were intelligent enough to follow along. This was a show that had at least three separate realities going all at once, and yet was frequently TV’s top-rated drama. It gave a person faith — not just in showrunners Lindelof and Carlton Cuse's ability to juggle competing narratives, but in our fellow audience members’ ability to keep track of what was going on. And the show’s left-field twists weren’t employed as some kind of Lady Gaga–style, weirdness-for-weirdness’s-sake crutch; such choices actually moved the story forward. Season one laid so much on the table with such confident storytelling, it established trust between the viewer and the creators, so much so that when the producers introduced time travel — four seasons in! — you would just sit back and say: “Oh, well, of course.”

Moving from hatches and smoke monsters to scotches and chain-smokers: Who among us had high hopes for a basic-cable workplace drama about misogynist executives in an early-sixties advertising agency? There’s no time travel on Mad Men, but, in some ways, it’s just as weird as Lost, anchored by creator Matthew Weiner’s subtly progressing narratives, Albee-esque dialogue, and morally elastic protagonists. Yet, like the Lost boys, Weiner has always trusted his audience to stick with him. And, on a macro level, that’s perhaps the most notable shared trait between these two shows: They both make us feel so damn smart right there on our couches.

But let’s break down the shows even further, beginning with their cast of characters. We must start with our leading men. Jack Shephard and Don Draper are both reluctant leaders with mysterious pasts and difficult fathers, each trying to keep his new family together. History will vindicate Matthew Fox, despite what Seth Rogen’s Knocked Up character might claim: His Jack, literally picked out of thin air for a leadership role he never wanted, is fully believable, human, and frequently shirtless. Isn’t this what we ask for in our protagonists? Much is made of Jack’s role as a man of science (in opposition to Locke, the man of faith) but ultimately he is, out of necessity, a man of action.

Don Draper, on the other hand, is a man of words, constantly massaging and manipulating. And Jon Hamm, on the other hand, is Jon Hamm. Does anything more need to be said at this point? He basically jumped out of the screen with a kind of fully adult masculinity and intelligence that we haven’t seen since Robert Mitchum, and the goofball extracurricular work he’s put in since season one (SNL, 30 Rock, Bridesmaids, comedy podcasts galore) has underscored the chops he’s brought to inhabiting Don Draper. This is not just a steely, slick hunk they found who fit the wool suits. His depth is never so clear as when Draper visits California and shucks off his besuited control, loosening up as Dick Whitman; it reveals the feat of this actor playing an actor. By contrast, Matthew Fox’s Jack comes off a bit dour, maybe owing to the relative scarcity of good Scotch on the Island.

Lost and Mad Men are both, in their ways, workplace dramas, and as such, they have massive, strong supporting casts. But Lost’s call sheet kept growing and growing, as Others and Tailies and Jeff Fahey popped up; such characters, spread across time and multiple universes, often didn’t have much more to do but glower and represent. But while Sterling Cooper’s client list has grown, the show has kept the focus on the (workplace) family, allowing seemingly peripheral players like Sal Romano, Harry Crane, and Lane Pryce to thrive. It could just be a matter of setting: Mad Men’s pre-sexual-revolution New York simply gives its characters an enclosed, heated space in which to interact with each other in a recognizably human way. On Lost, characters were often separated by time and space, and sometimes whisked away altogether for weeks on end. (“Waaaaaaalt! Waaaaaaalt?”)

Both shows also excel at slowly unraveling those characters’ backstories. From the start, Lost moved confidently back and forth in time and trusted us to keep up. “Walkabout,” from season one, is a perfect example: John Locke — whose on-the-nose name is the most notable example of the show’s occasional heavy-handedness — is the only one of our castaways who seems to be liberated by being stranded on an island, and the flashbacks into his life before the crash show us why. An alpha on the island, Locke was a victim in his previous life, saving up for years to go on a walkabout he’s denied at the last minute. In the episode’s closing moments, we learn that the pre-Island Locke had been confined to a wheelchair. It was one of those moments where you actually say the word AH! out loud, your wonder only slightly diminished by the fact that it would take forever to explain how he got in that chair in the first place.

Mad Men has its own mysteries: We still don’t know whether Don and Joan ever did it, or just how much Betty was in the dark about Don’s various sextracurricular activities, or get a good look at the tryst between Roger and a young Mrs. Blankenship. And we probably never will. With the exception of the occasional Dick Whitman flashback or conversational aside, Mad Men keeps moving forward. Its characters can’t suddenly drop into the desert or wind up in a magical pyramid; they’re rooted firmly in recent history. There’s only one consistent reality here, and it’s ours. Mad Men moves forward, not sideways, into the time of Medgar Evers and Lee Harvey Oswald (neither of whom, I presume, will ever be discovered pushing buttons in a hatch). We may not know where the characters are going, but at least we can relate, in some small way, to the times in which they live.

Ultimately, these are both shows about families that find each other. Mad Men’s season four masterpiece “The Suitcase” is essentially a two-person show with Elizabeth Olsen’s Peggy blowing off her parents and boyfriend to brainstorm, drink, and spar with Don, and it works because despite his brusqueness, he sees her potential as a copywriter. In his almost fatherly way — but who can tell with Don? — he helps her realize her true self. Lost kept coming back to the pain of isolation as a theme; no character could survive alone. Sayid couldn’t make it on his own in season one; Charlie couldn’t find satisfaction until he created a family with Claire and Aaron; and Desmond, stranded in the hatch, almost killed himself, until he read the words that sum up the show for me: “ ... all we really need to survive is one person who truly loves us.” And it was the connections these souls had to each other that allowed them to pass into the next life, according to the finale. (I think.)

Against Mad Men, Lost suffers two major handicaps. First, a major-network hit demands a grueling pace, output, and constant escalation that is less of a factor at a basic-cable boutique. The upending and hyper-tantalizing cliffhanger at the end of Lost’s season-one finale — in which Walt gets kidnapped and Jack and Locke finally blow off the lid of the hatch, then peer into a teasingly bottomless tunnel — is some of the best, most frustratingly compelling television I have ever seen, throwing out question after question and bulldozing the walls around the world we’d been shown. But fans' voices go up an octave when they talk about season three, which began with Kate and Sawyer's never-ending prison flirtation; the show seemed suddenly aware that it would be on for a few more seasons than it originally thought it would be, and the pacing of those questions’ answers slowed down even as the story got a little bit too busy for its own good, adding more mysteries to the mythology. If the creators had a Matthew Weiner kind of deal, under which they could have put out shorter seasons when they were good and ready, who knows how tight Lost could have been?

And then there is the ever-divisive finale, which left a vocal fan faction apoplectic, claiming that all the questions left unanswered earned the show retroactive demerits: After all, Evel Knievel didn't get points for leaping over the Snake River just because he announced he could do it. And yet there was also the satisfied camp, who believed that the Oceanic Class of '04 reunion in Heaven was the perfect closure for the castaways' tortured journeys. Either way, as judge I will order the finale stricken from the record. (Order! I demand order in my courtroom!) The finale factor makes for an unfair comparison, as Mad Men has not yet reached its endpoint: Finales of beloved dramas are dangerously combustible (Lindelof and Cuse were working with a higher-grade dynamite than that which blew up Arzt), and Weiner has not proven that he can satisfactorily bring Don Draper's story to a close. He has recently said that he has a last scene in mind: Who's to say it's not Don and Peggy finding out that Sterling Cooper was the afterlife? (It would certainly explain all the ramification-free smoking.)

And yet, even with Lost's conclusion removed from consideration, Mad Men wins. At its best, Lost was a blockbuster summer movie every week, the best kind of blockbuster: a frantic, cryptic, addictive, wonderfully imaginative adventure. It triggered hours of brow-furrowing online debates about the meaning of all those totems, asides, comic books, records and millions of other clues real and imagined. But ultimately, the "meaning" was all about the plot. Mad Men is about what we mean. It is set in nearly as exotic a land as the Lost jungle, but every un-PC, pointed, shrill remark or act of repressed discontent, every manipulative ad campaign, every wish fulfilled and not, every grope and every gasp, shines a revealing light onto our contemporary, allegedly more evolved world.

Lost held a regular debate between faith and reason, but these opposing viewpoints served mainly as antagonistic character traits; they didn't seep into our own realities. (Unless, of course, you are stranded on a magical island with magically repaired legs, in which case: apologies. Also: Get a load of you!) Mad Men also holds an ongoing debate between faith and reason: Dick Whitman had faith that if he could only collect all the trappings of success — corporate office, trophy wife — then he would be a new, happier, more worthwhile person. And as Don Draper, the strived-for personification of those wants, Whitman wrestles to subdue the suspicions that there is something important beyond simply creating an illusion. Mad Men plays to an upscale audience, and disconcertingly picks at their very existence. It's exhilarating to visit a world governed by magic numbers; but it's more satisfying to visit a world in which numbers don't solve anything.

WINNER: MAD MEN

Dave Holmes hosts shows on TV (FX, H2, many more) and the internet. He blogs at daveholmes.tumblr.com, tweets at @daveholmes, and performs at LA's Upright Citizens Brigade and IO West theaters.

http://www.vulture.com/2012/03/great...-one-lost.html
post #77490 of 87293
Quote:
Originally Posted by Amnesia View Post

Are you saying that white people (or old people) aren't good judges of quality television? If you're not, then I'm not sure why you brought up the race (or age) of Emmy voters.

Um, no. I was simply referencing the oft-repeated criticism of Emmy voters we often see in this thread and in other entertainment news. As a group, they are reputed to be homogeneous, older, and don't watch a lot of TV, which is why their choices so often seem ridiculous to people that do watch a lot of TV. That's it. Please don't read anything else into it as it was simply a throw-away remark to emphasize how stupid that poll is.
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