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Our best freaking stuff right now:

January 17, 2013
20:09 • 4 months ago
nbcnews:

Paul Haggis says leaving Scientology was ‘a treasonous act’
(Photo: Rock Center with Brian Williams)
In an exclusive interview with Rock Center’s Harry Smith, ex-Scientologist and famed Hollywood director Paul Haggis discusses the controversial church of which he was a member for more than 30 years. He calls the religion a ‘cult’. Haggis is part of author Lawrence Wright’s new book, “Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief.” Wright talked to Rock Center about his new book and Scientology’s controversial history. Rock Center’s two-part report airs Thursday, Jan. 17 at 10pm/9CDT on NBC’s Rock Center with Brian Williams.
Watch the interview.

Hey Harry, did you ask him about the Atlantic ad?

nbcnews:

Paul Haggis says leaving Scientology was ‘a treasonous act’

(Photo: Rock Center with Brian Williams)

In an exclusive interview with Rock Center’s Harry Smith, ex-Scientologist and famed Hollywood director Paul Haggis discusses the controversial church of which he was a member for more than 30 years. He calls the religion a ‘cult’. Haggis is part of author Lawrence Wright’s new book, “Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief.” Wright talked to Rock Center about his new book and Scientology’s controversial history. Rock Center’s two-part report airs Thursday, Jan. 17 at 10pm/9CDT on NBC’s Rock Center with Brian Williams.

Watch the interview.

Hey Harry, did you ask him about the Atlantic ad?

January 16, 2013
15:08 • 4 months ago
nbcnews:

Conrad Bain, Mr. Drummond on ‘Diff’rent Strokes,’ dies at 89
(Photo: Everett Collection)
Actor Conrad Bain, perhaps best known for his role as kindly millionaire Phillip Drummond on “Diff’rent Strokes,” has died at 89, his daughter, Jennifer, has confirmed to Access Hollywood.
Read the complete story.

Nearly as sad as the loss of Mr. Drummond is the fact that he outived most of his TV family. :/

nbcnews:

Conrad Bain, Mr. Drummond on ‘Diff’rent Strokes,’ dies at 89

(Photo: Everett Collection)

Actor Conrad Bain, perhaps best known for his role as kindly millionaire Phillip Drummond on “Diff’rent Strokes,” has died at 89, his daughter, Jennifer, has confirmed to Access Hollywood.

Read the complete story.

Nearly as sad as the loss of Mr. Drummond is the fact that he outived most of his TV family. :/

January 9, 2013
15:37 • 4 months ago
January 8, 2013
16:17 • 4 months ago

We don’t really have a whole lot to say about this one. Jon Stewart hit the nail on the head this time. source

December 7, 2012
11:02 • 5 months ago
Related to the last post, here’s a page from a recent Nielsen study that shows how we mix devices when watching TV these days. (Click for full.)

Related to the last post, here’s a page from a recent Nielsen study that shows how we mix devices when watching TV these days. (Click for full.)

October 12, 2012
18:29 • 7 months ago
The only relevant comparison that I see between your campaign and Friday Night Lights is in the character of Buddy Garrity — who turned his back on American car manufacturers selling imported cars from Japan…Please come up with your own campaign slogan.
Friday Night Lights creator Peter Berg, in an irritated letter to Mitt Romney. Berg is annoyed that the Romney campaign has appropriated a tagline from his TV series—“Clear Eyes, Full Hearts, Can’t Lose”—for use on the campaign trail. “Your use of the expression falsely and inappropriately associates Friday Night Lights with the Romney/Ryan campaign,” Berg writes. “Your politics and campaign are clearly not aligned with the themes we portrayed in the series.” Oddly enough, the author of the book upon which the series is based has endorsed Romney for president. source (pdf)
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July 30, 2012
10:07 • 9 months ago
totalfilm:

 Marvel considering TV series set in Avengers universe
After the phenomenal success of Avengers Assemble, it’s all systems go over at Marvel. Not content with crafting its ambitious set of post-Avengers ‘Phase Two’ movies, the studio is now looking into making a TV series set in the Avengers universe…

Key words: “Fairly loose connection.”

totalfilm:

Marvel considering TV series set in Avengers universe

After the phenomenal success of Avengers Assemble, it’s all systems go over at Marvel. Not content with crafting its ambitious set of post-Avengers ‘Phase Two’ movies, the studio is now looking into making a TV series set in the Avengers universe…

Key words: “Fairly loose connection.”

May 13, 2012
21:02 • 1 year ago
NBC shakes up its schedule, kinda screws over “Community”
We are unashamedly addicted to TV. More importantly, we think it’s important to pay attention to what TV execs do to their lineups; it’s a vicious cycle, our media. They tell us what to watch and we watch it (and then blog about it). Here’s what you need to know about this fall’s NBC schedule, fellow TV nerds:
returnsDespite rumors otherwise, Thursday nights remain mostly intact, with “Parks & Recreation” and “30 Rock” getting reprieves — in the case of Tina Fey’s show, as a 13-episode sendoff season.
changesWhile fan favorite “Community” (currently smarting from a rift between show runner Dan Harmon and actor Chevy Chase) will return, it’ll air Fridays after “Whitney” … which seems downright mean.
exits NBC also axed ”Awake,” “Best Friends Forever” and “Chuck,” along with a few others — but considering what was rumored ahead of time, they seem to have avoided the scorched-earth strategy. source
» Switching networks for a sec: We’d also like to point out that true American staple “CSI: Miami” has been cancelled by CBS, after a surprisingly fast-moving decade on the air. David Caruso’s gravy train just sailed away. *sigh*
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We are unashamedly addicted to TV. More importantly, we think it’s important to pay attention to what TV execs do to their lineups; it’s a vicious cycle, our media. They tell us what to watch and we watch it (and then blog about it). Here’s what you need to know about this fall’s NBC schedule, fellow TV nerds:

  • returnsDespite rumors otherwise, Thursday nights remain mostly intact, with “Parks & Recreation” and “30 Rock” getting reprieves — in the case of Tina Fey’s show, as a 13-episode sendoff season.
  • changesWhile fan favorite “Community” (currently smarting from a rift between show runner Dan Harmon and actor Chevy Chase) will return, it’ll air Fridays after “Whitney” … which seems downright mean.
  • exits NBC also axed ”Awake,” “Best Friends Forever” and “Chuck,” along with a few others — but considering what was rumored ahead of time, they seem to have avoided the scorched-earth strategy. source

» Switching networks for a sec: We’d also like to point out that true American staple “CSI: Miami” has been cancelled by CBS, after a surprisingly fast-moving decade on the air. David Caruso’s gravy train just sailed away. *sigh*

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May 7, 2012
21:23 • 1 year ago
Don’t work too hard on a tweet. When you see people trying to, for example, synthesize two current news stories into one ‘clever’ tweet, it can get pretty clunky and their labor is obvious, rendering their tweet unfunny.
Comedian Rob Delaney • Winner of the first “Funniest Person on Twitter” title from the Comedy Awards. The comedian, whose tweets include misdirections like “Isn’t it fun how many different shapes pasta can be? My wife left me last night,” was awarded this honor on Sunday on Comedy Central. Social media has certainly played an important role in the relationship between comedians and their fans lately; Amy Poehler, however, called Twitter a “mistake waiting to happen.” Is it worth it for comedians to rough the rocky seas of the Internet?  source (viafollow)
April 13, 2012
08:35 • 1 year ago
inothernews:

The Simpsons creator Matt Groening breaks hearts in politely explaining that his animated family’s hometown is not, in fact, modeled after Springfield, Oregon.

Matt Groening knows how to make an Oregonian cry.

inothernews:

The Simpsons creator Matt Groening breaks hearts in politely explaining that his animated family’s hometown is not, in fact, modeled after Springfield, Oregon.

Matt Groening knows how to make an Oregonian cry.

Recent posts and stuff we dig:
March 30, 2012
09:52 • 1 year ago
Hosting with the enemy: Katie Couric takes a bold broadcasting step
From “Today” to “GMA” (for a week): The former CBS News anchor and “Today” co-host is only filling in for “Good Morning America” co-host Robin Roberts while she’s on vacation — but in the process, she’s giving NBC a headache. How did the “Today” newsroom handle this info? A staffer told Fox News: “There were a lot of jaws dropping all over the place. … Then there was a lot of sniping.” But rest assured, morning news enthusiasts, Couric’s appearance is just a one-time thing; she’s prepping for the September debut of her talk show, “Katie.” source
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From “Today” to “GMA” (for a week): The former CBS News anchor and “Today” co-host is only filling in for “Good Morning America” co-host Robin Roberts while she’s on vacation — but in the process, she’s giving NBC a headache. How did the “Today” newsroom handle this info? A staffer told Fox News: “There were a lot of jaws dropping all over the place. … Then there was a lot of sniping.” But rest assured, morning news enthusiasts, Couric’s appearance is just a one-time thing; she’s prepping for the September debut of her talk show, “Katie.” source

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February 15, 2012
21:47 • 1 year ago
This tiny antenna wants to shake up the cable industry
See that thing next to the dime? That’s an antenna. What’s it for, you ask? Well, consider this Barry Diller’s new pet project. The IAC-backed Aereo is an attempt to update broadcast TV for the internet age. With a tiny antenna, part of a bank of other antennas, accessible over the interwebs. The $12-a-month service (only, for now, available in NYC), can stream live broadcast TV to your computer, phone, tablet, Apple TV or Roku and allows you to timeshift programming, DVR-style, using an individualized cloud-based interface. It solves a longstanding problem — watching live TV away from a giant screen is an ugly, super-regulated experience (or if you’re willing to go illegal, an ad-and-spyware-ridden one), and cable costs an arm and a leg and gives you a lot of channels you don’t want. Aereo gets around this problem thanks to the way it handles itself, essentially working around certain legal decisions, which make it so they don’t have to pay the licensing fees cable companies do. (It’s only broadcast TV for now, though it’s feasible they could do cable with this model, too.) Would you pay $12 a month for this? (Edit for clarity)

This tiny antenna wants to shake up the cable industry

See that thing next to the dime? That’s an antenna. What’s it for, you ask? Well, consider this Barry Diller’s new pet project. The IAC-backed Aereo is an attempt to update broadcast TV for the internet age. With a tiny antenna, part of a bank of other antennas, accessible over the interwebs. The $12-a-month service (only, for now, available in NYC), can stream live broadcast TV to your computer, phone, tablet, Apple TV or Roku and allows you to timeshift programming, DVR-style, using an individualized cloud-based interface. It solves a longstanding problem — watching live TV away from a giant screen is an ugly, super-regulated experience (or if you’re willing to go illegal, an ad-and-spyware-ridden one), and cable costs an arm and a leg and gives you a lot of channels you don’t want. Aereo gets around this problem thanks to the way it handles itself, essentially working around certain legal decisions, which make it so they don’t have to pay the licensing fees cable companies do. (It’s only broadcast TV for now, though it’s feasible they could do cable with this model, too.) Would you pay $12 a month for this? (Edit for clarity)

December 6, 2011
12:30 • 1 year ago

timemagazine:

“In 1963, I did a documentary on Willie Mays, the world’s best baseball player and one on Charlie Brown, the world’s worst. We sold the Mays documentary, but never sold the Charlie Brown documentary. Three years later, TIME Magazine put the [Peanuts] characters on its cover and we got calls from advertisers and networks asking if we were still thinking of doing an animated show, and that’s what led us to A Charlie Brown Christmas.

We had done a couple of minutes of animation in the documentary but people said, “You can’t have kids who talk like adults.” We had given up, but when Coca-Cola called after the TIME cover they asked if we’d ever thought of doing a Christmas show and I lied and said, “Oh, absolutely.” So they asked us to send them an outline on Monday. I called Schulz on the phone and said, “I think I just sold A Charlie Brown Christmas,” and he said, “What’s that?” and I told him, “It’s something you’re going to write tomorrow.”

When we first did the Christmas special the network thought it was awful. There was a TIME Magazine writer who wanted to see it and they told me that I’d better not let him see it, but I said, “It’ll be worse if we don’t.” So I sit in the room alone with the TIME magazine critic as he watches and he doesn’t say a word, doesn’t take any notes, gets up and leaves. I said, “Oh my God, we’re dead.” Two days later the review came out and it was a whole page calling it the greatest cartoon ever made. I remember it saying, “it’s going to run for 100 years.” TIME Magazine saved our butts. Twice.”

- Longtime Peanuts TV specials producer Lee Mendelson in an interview with TIME

In which Time Magazine took a sparsely-decorated tree and made it shine.

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