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Joshua Alston
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Oct 15, 2009 12:00 PM
Now that ABC’s new sci-fi drama FlashForward has been given a full-season pickup (a plump 25-episode order rather than the standard 22), it’s time to decide whether I plan to be around for the entire season. The premise definitely whetted my appetite: everyone on Earth blacks out for 2 minutes and 17 seconds, during which they get a preview of what’s to come for them six months in the future. Will knowing what happens in the future give them a shot at changing it? What if they don’t want it changed? There’s a lot to plumb, questions about fate and choice that would seem to lend themselves well to a series. But so far, I’m not sure FlashForward is making good on its promise.
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Katie Baker
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Oct 14, 2009 07:44 PM
by Katie Baker
There are many charming things about Glee, Fox TV’s quirky new
fall comedy about a troupe of high-school misfits with gorgeous voices
and hearts of gold. There are the one-liners that cheerleading coach
Sue Sylvester lobs like poisoned pom-poms at her colleagues. There’s
the winsome Afterschool Special sincerity of teachers Emma and
Will. Best of all, there’s the glee club itself—baby diva Rachel,
budding gay Kurt, artsy jock Finn—those fresh-faced kids with the
fantastic vocal cords whose renditions of songs both retro and rap make
for some serious chills down the spine.
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Newsweek
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Oct 14, 2009 11:08 AM
by Malcolm Jones
Geoff
Muldaur is a reluctant headliner. You’ll find his name as the leader of
the Texas Sheiks on the spine of the CD case, but the front cover of
the new album just says “Texas Sheiks.” Likewise, while he is far and
away the best and most unique vocalist on the album—this is the man who
inspired Richard Thompson to say, “There are only three white blues
singers, and Geoff Muldaur is two of them”—he seems more than content
to equally share vocal duties with the rest of the band. He’s made his
share of solo records, in a career that stretches back to the '60s, but
they are outnumbered by the collaborations he’s been part of—with the
Jim Kweskin Jug Band (a band that inspired everyone from the Lovin’
Spoonful to the Grateful Dead), with his former wife, Maria Muldaur,
with a Woodstock ensemble that included Paul Butterfield, Ronnie Barron
and Amos Garrett, and most recently as the arranger catalyst for a big
band recreation/reinterpretation of the music of '20s jazz great Bix
Beiderbecke. Oh, and many year ago, his definitive version of the song
“Brazil” inspired and sustained Terry Gilliam on his way to making the
film of the same name. Muldaur gets around, he just doesn’t seem to
like to stand out.
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Newsweek
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Oct 14, 2009 09:28 AM
by Nicki Gostin
Mario Lopez is a busy guy these days. Not only is he the host of Extra, but he’s reprising his role as Dr. Mike Hamoui on Nip/Tuck, which returns for its sixth and final season Wednesday. Oh yeah, and he also has those impressive abs to maintain. He spoke with Nicki Gostin.
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Carl Sullivan
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Oct 13, 2009 08:19 PM
When members of the Tectonic Theater Project
descended on Laramie, Wyo., a few weeks after the murder of gay college
student Matthew Shepard in 1998, local residents didn’t quite know what
to make of the actors and writers trolling around town with tape
recorders. They weren’t “real” journalists, after all. When told that
the troupe would be writing a play about Shepard’s death based on their
interviews, some citizens shrugged—what would the effort really amount
to? Some might have imagined a shoestring production in some dark
basement on the Lower East Side of New York, said Moisés Kaufman,
Tectonic’s cofounder and artistic director.
But when the drama group showed up in town 10 years later for a follow-up, that initial work, The Laramie Project,
had become one of the most frequently produced plays in America, and
Shepard’s death had come to define the community in ways Laramie could
not have imagined in those first raw months after the killing. This
time, “people were editing themselves a lot more,” Kaufman said—if they
consented to interviews at all. The local newspaper even ran a pointed
editorial aimed at Tectonic's efforts: “Laramie is a community, not a
project.”
That reticence and veiled hostility are very much a part of the troupe's new work Laramie, 10 Years Later,
which debuted with a reading in New York on Monday night, the 11th
anniversary of Shepard's death, and simultaneously in 150 other
theaters in all 50 states and in 14 countries.
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Newsweek
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Oct 13, 2009 06:41 PM
by Nicki Gostin
Kelly Osbourne has surprisingly become the frontrunner on this season
of Dancing With the Stars. But the reality-TV star who became famous at
16 when she appeared on The Osbournes with her rock-star dad
Ozzy, mom Sharon, and brother Jack has had her share of troubles. She’s
been in rehab more than once for an addiction to prescription pills and
tried to control her weight by using ADD medications including Ritalin.
Fortunately, now she’s clean, engaged to model Luke Worrall and having
the time of her life. She spoke to Pop Vox.
When you danced the first time on DWtS you made me cry.
Aw, thanks.
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Seth Colter Walls
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Oct 13, 2009 02:42 PM
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Ramin Setoodeh
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Oct 9, 2009 04:00 PM
In the winter of 2008, Warner Bros. unveiled a batch of posters for what would become the second-highest-grossing movie of all time, The Dark Knight. The marketing campaign featured a silhouette of the Joker behind a glass door, scrawling these words in blood: Why so serious?
Somebody could ask Hollywood the same question. Fall movie season is usually the time when the studios haul out their dark dramas for awards consideration, but this year's batch seems especially bleak. The themes they touch upon include incest, murder, AIDS, cancer, abuse, layoffs, and lots of unexpected, tragic deaths (and we're not even counting the dead vampires in the Twilight sequel). This probably isn't just coincidental. This fall's slate was written at the end of the Bush administration, when most of Hollywood—at least the predominantly liberal part—was under a cloud of gloom. Now, we're all feeling gloomy; the economy is in tatters, and the unemployment rate continues to soar. Does anybody really want to go to the movies this year to feel even more depressed?
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Newsweek
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Oct 9, 2009 01:24 PM
Gavin Creel, star in Broadway's revival of Hair, will march on Washington, D.C. this weekend for gay rights. He joined us in the studio beforehand to talk about his musical roots, his hatred of auditions and his feelings on American foreign policy.
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Andrew Romano
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Oct 9, 2009 01:12 PM
Last week, Ramin Setoodeh and I had the honor of interviewing Maurice Sendak, Spike
Jonze and Dave Eggers at Mr. Sendak’s house in Connecticut. It was the
only time the creative team behind Where the Wild Things Are
would be getting together to speak to the press. This morning, Newsweek
posted the magazine version of our exclusive conversation, which you can read here. We think it’s the definitive WtWTA interview.
Instead of reblogging portions of the official transcript, however,
we thought we'd do something different on Pop Vox: share some of the
stuff
that we couldn’t squeeze into print. To find out what death, danger and
Discovery Channel documentaries have to do with kiddie lit, read on…
NEWSWEEK: Why write about death in a children’s story?
Sendak: Well,
it’s a great subject. There’s a lot of charm to it. I remember when we
did Hansel and Gretel, the opera. All of the kids are out in the open,
unprotected from the weather, and so we had one of the little girls
die. And the opera people and everybody was: “Are you sure you want to
do this? It’s Hansel and Gretel.” But I said: “Hansel and Gretel is one
of the scariest stories ever written! Psychotic mother; stupid, inane
father. What the hell are you talking about? Of course there’s going to
be somebody dead in it.” After the show, the kids came backstage and
they wanted the autograph of the dead girl. [laughter] Like, I was just
like chopped liver, they walked right past me. “Where’s the dead girl?”
There’s something in that, though—danger and rebellion are the things that are thrilling to you when you’re a kid.
Sendak:
Kids are barbaric. They really have to be. They don’t know what it is
to be polite or nice. There is a toughness to being a child. Childhood
is a very tough time. I always had a deep respect for children and how
they solve complex problems by themselves.
How did this translate when you sat down to write and illustrate Wild Things?
Sendak:
Well, Max and his mother - it’s not that good a relationship. But it’s
really what a lot of relationships are like between children and
parents. A lot of yelling and losing of one’s temper and throwing of
things, and then you’re sorry you did it. I’ve always been interested
in how children maneuver and figure out how to live.
Jonze: And how do they?
Sendak:
Cleverness, shrewdness, fantasy, and just plain strength. They want to
survive. The kids in Hansel and Gretel¬ she is the heroine, she saves
her brother’s life. Little girl saving a little boy’s life - when do
children have to confront such terrible ordeals? But they do! They do.
What was it like to see the Wild Things embodied onscreen
with the voices of James Gandolfini and Forest Whitaker? Did it clash
with the image of them you’d kept with you all these years?
Sendak:
Yes, but at the same time, I fell in love with the new versions. They
were gentler, they were kinder. Underneath, of course, they were
capable of the same terrible things. One of them puts Max in her mouth.
There always is the possibility that something might go wrong, and
you’ll get eaten. And you don’t know what it is that might go wrong.
What you’ll say or what you’ll do that will provoke a Wild Thing to eat
you. I love watching animal movies on television. One of the only
things I like. And they always say, don’t do this and don’t do that,
don’t run away and don’t turn your back and don’t lie flat. I love
that. It’s from my childhood. How do you prevent dying? How do you
prevent being eaten or mauled by a monster? I still worry about it.
Jonze:
When we went to shoot the movie, we actually watched nature
documentaries, and wanted to feel like we were watching animals-
Sendak: Good.
Jonze:
-and that’s part of the reason we shot it out on location. We wanted it
to be not on soundstages and not with greenscreen, but in real places.
The camera doesn’t know where these creatures are going to go. What’s
motivating them is unpredictable, unknowable, and the cameraman is just
there, trying to document these wild animals, from the point of view of
Max, who knows just as little as we do of what they’re going to do.
Sendak:
Yes, he doesn’t know what’s to come next. I mean, that’s gotta be scary
for a kid, but it’s also gotta be what a kid likes most. It’s that
enticement of what might or might not happen.
CONTINUED AFTER THE JUMP...
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Newsweek
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Oct 8, 2009 04:35 PM
Photo: Matt Carr─Getty Images
(Editor: Last month we ran a much shorter version of our chat with the comedian. Here is the longer version.)
by Allison Samuels
Chris Rock is known for making even the most awkward situations funny. He manages to do that and more with his new documentary Good Hair,
a two-hour in-depth look into the $1 billion hair-care industry
catering to African-Americans. Perms, weaves, and hair-care products
are discussed, scrutinized, and investigated with humorous but
respectful reporting by Rock himself, who leaves no rock unturned. The
comic even traveled to India to watch religious ceremonies in which
hair is donated for the purpose of extensions. Last month Rock sat down
with Pop Vox at the Beverly Hills Polo Club to discuss jheri curls,
hair weaves, and the Jacksons.
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Jennie Yabroff
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Oct 8, 2009 03:02 PM
Cover image courtesy of Gourmet.com
by Jennie Yabroff
I never subscribed to Gourmet, which went out of business this week, but over the years I’ve subscribed to Bon Appetit, (Conde Nast’s other food title) Food and Wine, Cooking Light, Vegetarian Times, the short-lived print version of Chow, and Cook’s Illustrated,
and those are just the ones I remember. As far as I can recall, I never
made a single recipe from any of them. I imagine some of Gourmet’s
subscribers never prepared any of the magazine’s recipes, either, but
instead, consumed the magazine itself, the way I consume food
magazines—on the sofa, with a glass of wine, the evening it arrives,
before shuffling into the kitchen to sauté a chicken breast and steam
some broccoli, or boil some dried pasta and open a jar of sauce. Gourmet,
like all food magazines, was more about the way we think about food
than about the way we actually prepare and eat it—after all, you’ll
never learn as much about cooking by reading a magazine as you will by
actually getting in the kitchen and banging some pots around. So it
seems important to look not only at what we’re losing with the death of
Gourmet, but to ask what is taking its place. Despite The New York Times’ assertion
that it’s “Rachael Ray’s world” now, and we’re just cooking in it, the
answer can be found not in the quick and easy cookbook aisle, but on
the Internet.
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Sarah Ball
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Oct 8, 2009 02:34 PM
After the massive viral campaign to get Tracy Morgan to join Twitter hit fever pitch yesterday, his rep just told Pop Vox that the actor has officially caved. His first tweet? "Welcome to Tracy Morgan's world." Follow the most-desired Tweeter in the world here.
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Newsweek
|
Oct 8, 2009 07:30 AM
by Malcolm Jones
What exactly does it mean for Herta Müller, the Romanian-born novelist,
to take home a Nobel Prize in Literature? Most concretely, it means
collecting roughly $1.4 million. That's not chump change, but after
that, the benefits become more nebulous. If you've languished in
semi-obscurity before winning the prize, it means a brief period of
instant celebrity, a period in which critics play catch-up with your
work and publishers lucky enough to have bought the rights to your work
in leaner times now rush to get your books into print, if they're not
there already.
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Joshua Alston
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Oct 7, 2009 02:02 PM
by Joshua Alston
There are issues so polarizing, so emotionally draining, so morally
fraught, that we never really solve them as much as we table them for a
while. Euthanasia is one such issue, which has come back to fore during
the vigorous debate over American health care. But it’s an equally
important issue in the world of entertainment: when is it finally time
to pull the plug and kill a TV show? I know there are emotions
involved, believe me I do. But I have to be the cold realist—there are
some shows that have to die. It’s simply too painful to see them in
their current state. I can’t bear it, and I’m willing to make the tough
choices that others can’t. What follows is a list of the shows that
must be taken off the respirator post haste.
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Kurt Soller
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Oct 7, 2009 12:52 PM
by Kurt Soller
MTV's reality TV juggernaut—in which young pretty things become terrible human beings—has become a meta genre: we know they're acting, so those questions about whether it's scripted are older than the Juicy Couture they wore on Laguna Beach. Viewers have given abandoned the idea that the lives presented on The City and The Hills are anything close to the lives of Whitney Port or Heidi Montag—they just want to believe that the plot lines are close to anything they could be going through.
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Sarah Ball
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Oct 7, 2009 11:39 AM
Asked to appear on the Australian variety hour Hey Hey It's Saturday as a guest judge, Harry Connick Jr. sputters in disbelief when a Jackson 5 impersonation group entirely in blackface appears onstage. He first gives the group a 0 scorecard for the performance while the audience boos; later, at about 4:40 into the clip, Connick launches into an impassioned race-relations lecture explaining why blackface is a bad thing. "If I knew that was going to be a part of the show, I definitely wouldn't have done it," Connick declares on live TV. The host appears genuinely surprised.
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Ramin Setoodeh
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Oct 7, 2009 10:21 AM
Tom DeLay's final dance Monday night—a samba.
by Ramin Setoodeh
Tom DeLay was the first politician on Dancing With the Stars,
and now his campaign is over. The former Republican House majority
leader had to drop out of the show Tuesday night after suffering from
stress fractures in both his feet. He spoke to Pop Vox Wednesday
morning.
So how bad is your injury?
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Newsweek
|
Oct 7, 2009 09:49 AM
by Marc Bain
Thursday at 11 a.m. GMT (that’s 7 a.m. ET), the Nobel Academy will award its 2009 prize for literature. Like every other year, the announcement will be met with a mix of jubilation, consternation, and plain-old head scratching, as some of us will feel a writer has finally been recognized, others will feel their favorite has been overlooked, and many more could end up wondering who the author is to begin with (quick, what’s the best book you’ve read by last year’s winner, J.M.G. Le Clézio?) But for those of us not in contention for the Nobel, the fun isn’t in the winning, it’s in the speculating.
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Newsweek
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Oct 6, 2009 04:45 PM
by Daniel D'Addario
Poor Tom DeLay. The former House majority leader is hardly the ideal contestant for Dancing With the Stars.
One week, he almost dropped his dance partner. Another week, it looked
like he had two left feet. And Monday night, neither of his feet
worked: he was suffering from two stress fractures. (Afternoon update! Sources are confirming to People that DeLay will leave the show, as his stress fractures have become too painful to allow him to continue. It was a good sartorial run, at the very least.)
For
much of the show Monday night, host Tom Bergeron made it seem as though
DeLay wasn't going to dance at all. Then DeLay hobbled on stage,
dressed in a sparkling red Republican outfit, and he pulled off a
mediocre samba—for an injured guy. Whew. Don't quit, Tom! With Tuesday's news that DeLay will quit Dancing, we hope these other politicos will be inspired to take whirl on ABC’s dance floor:
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Sarah Ball
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Oct 6, 2009 01:44 PM
In what they describe as "probably the last time [they]'ll be together," the five surviving actors who played Munchkins in 1939's Wizard of Oz—celebrating its 70th anniversary this year—reveal set secrets and reflect on their roles in the Oscar-nominated film. Learn why Toto banked more cash than the Munchkins, how Judy Garland handed out gratis candy on the set, and more in this installment of 7 Things. Click the player to view!
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Sarah Ball
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Oct 6, 2009 09:47 AM
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Raina Kelley
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Oct 6, 2009 09:30 AM
by Raina Kelley
As a teacher in
a predominantly black school district, my husband often discusses civil
rights, diversity, and integration no matter what his curriculum says.
And for whatever reason, his eighth-grade students wanted to know why
there are so few people of color on television. Despite the fact that
they should have been discussing the Revolutionary War, my (white)
husband commiserated with the kids for a minute: “If all you knew about
America was what you got from TV,” he told them, “you’d think we were
composed of 99.9 percent white people.” And sadly, my dear husband is
right.
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Joshua Alston
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Oct 5, 2009 04:45 PM
by Joshua Alston
Of all the confounding behaviors that human beings engage in,
perhaps none is more irritating—or more common—than hypocrisy. It’s
fascinating when someone condemns behavior while engaging in it himself, which is what makes David Letterman’s relatively mundane sex scandal
more intriguing than it has a right to be. He mercilessly joked about
the illicit affairs of others while having just those sorts of affairs himself. To expose such a disconnect is oddly fun, and the more
sanctimonious the person, the more rewarding the exposure.
This is what makes the documentary Outrage, which airs Monday and re-airs Thursday on HBO—on the eve of a gay-rights march in Washington, D.C.—such
a guilty pleasure.
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Newsweek
|
Oct 2, 2009 04:28 PM
by Daniel D’Addario
“I Gotta Feeling,” from the Black Eyed Peas' album The E.N.D.,
just tied Mariah Carey’s record for the longest-running No. 1 hit
of the decade, with 14 weeks on top. The ubiquitous, annoyingly
optimistic track has week after week beat back potential chart-toppers
by the likes of Katy Perry (“Waking Up in Vegas”) and Shakira (“She
Wolf”). In fact, it’s been 26 weeks since the Black Eyed Peas first
took the No. 1 spot on the Billboard charts with their onomatopoeic
“Boom Boom Pow.” Who will bump them off? Here’s a look at some of the
current singles gaining momentum and a chance of disturbing the Peas.
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Simon Barnett
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Oct 2, 2009 04:17 PM
by Simon Barnett
As a Brit who has spent over half his life in the United States, I am
frequently cornered by any number of Americans who gushingly admire the
so-called genius of the British music scene. "The Beatles man, the
best! The Clash, yeah man! The Kinks, that really got me! Morrissey, a
true poet man! U2, I love that stuff!"
Right now I suppose it’s Coldplay, heirs to the most overrated band in history, U2. Aaah, Coldplay, the latest to regurgitate Sergeant Pepper's-like
over production (this time even wearing the old military jacket),
somehow duping Jay-Z into giving them urban street cred. And, be still
my beating heart, that lovable front man Chris Martin, who does the
slightly nervous, tentative, unsure of himself, somewhat creatively
tortured, English intellectual thing that is so utterly affected. (I
concede it clearly works though, he did get Gwyneth Paltrow. Score one
for the lads!)
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Jennie Yabroff
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Oct 2, 2009 04:08 PM
by Jennie Yabroff
Despite the inevitability of at least one tell-all by a Letterman staffer who slept with the boss (Top 10 Things About Being Dave’s Girlfriend,
perhaps), we’ll never know exactly what happened off-camera between
Letterman and all the female staffers he’s just admitted to sleeping
with over the years. How many there were, how young they were, how much
his advances were reciprocated or merely endured are all questions we
can never know the answers to. What we can know—what we’ve known for
years—is how he treats his female guests on the show. The question for
audiences now is how news that Letterman is, well, a letch, will
influence the way we feel about his comedy. More specifically, is the
way he interacts with—and derives humor from—many female guests still
going to be funny?
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Sarah Ball
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Oct 2, 2009 01:16 PM
Haven't you heard? Zombies are the new vampires. First it was the hit book Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, a Jane Austen-George Romero mash-up. Last month it was Jennifer's Body. Today, there's Zombieland. Zombiemania premieres on Starz next week, reviving all the old zombie classics (Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead, Day of the Dead and more). Apparently there's even a self-help book for zombies on the way, dispensing "advice and etiquette for the living dead." Zombies zombies zombies.
Except, no.
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Newsweek
|
Oct 2, 2009 09:13 AM
by Pop Vox staff
David Letterman is in trouble again, only this time Sarah Palin is not involved.
He came clean last night about a series of sexual affairs he's had with
younger women on his staff which have resulted in an alleged plot to extort $2 million out of him
to prevent a tell-all book. The host shared all this in lieu of a Top
10, in a strangely half-comedic, half-serious monologue that ended with
him mimicking his extortionist in a leprechaun voice, to loud laughter from the audience.
The only thing is, will people actually care? Absolutely not. Here are our top 10 reasons why:
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Joshua Alston
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Oct 1, 2009 05:49 PM
Now that all of the major fall TV premieres are in the rear-view mirror (except for the troubled V, which doesn’t bow for another month), it’s time to separate the winners from the losers, the wheat from the chaff, the 30 Rocks from the Studio 60 on the Sunset Strips. Here are the winners, a countdown of the five most-watched shows of the new season (according to audience share, not total viewers, in the key 18-to-49 demographic), along with my thoughts as to why they attracted so many eyeballs.
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Sarah Ball
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Oct 1, 2009 12:06 PM
First there was the news that the "Jon" and (sad!) the ampersand in the title of the TLC reality show were dropped. Now it looks like the show part of the show has been dropped. What's left? The e-mail from TLC:
We are aware of Jon Gosselin's recent statements, and remain deeply disappointed at his continued erratic behavior. He and the family were shooting as recently as last Friday, without incident, and his latest comments are grossly inaccurate, without merit, and are clearly opportunistic. Despite Jon Gosselin's repeated self-destructive and unprofessional actions, he remains under an exclusive contract with TLC. Direct filming of the children has been currently suspended, pending further conversations between both parents.
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Joshua Alston
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Oct 1, 2009 08:55 AM
Survivor contestants go through a lot—thunderstorms, the desert
heat, separation from friends and family, limited food (if you don't
count rats)—which is why I don’t recall anyone ever describing CBS’s
reality show as “easy.” That is, until now. The current season, Survivor’s
19th, features a foul, brutish little tank of a man named Russell
Hantz, who is arguably the biggest villain the show has ever seen. He's
even worse than Richard Hatch.
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