Friday, October 1, 2010

Turner, Skoll receive Environmental Media Awards (AP)

LOS ANGELES â€" Green is always in fashion in Hollywood, and two American entrepreneurs are being honored for their ecological contributions.

The Environmental Media Association says Jane Fonda and Natalie Portman will present Ted Turner and Jeff Skoll with Environmental Media Awards at a private ceremony next month.

The awards recognize people, organizations, and TV and film productions that help raise awareness of environmental issues.

Skoll's namesake foundation has funded organizations such as the Amazon Conversation Team, the American Council on Renewable Energy and Global Footprint Network.

Turner, who founded CNN, supports wildlife habitat preservation, promotes sustainable energy and furthers other environmental causes through his Turner Foundation.

The 20th annual Environmental Media Awards will be presented Oct. 16 at Warner Bros. Studios.

___

Online:

http://www.ema-online.org.

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Heidi Montag, Spencer Pratt divorce is dismissed (AP)

SANTA MONICA, Calif. â€" Court records show divorce proceedings between Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt have been dismissed.

Montag requested the action Wednesday without prejudice, meaning she could refile it later if necessary.

The reality show couple appeared on "The Hills," which filmed their relationship and wedding.

Montag filed for divorce in July, but the couple spent time recently in Costa Rica.

The dismissal was first reported Thursday by celebrity website TMZ.

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Thursday, September 30, 2010

'Law & Order: UK' puts an old show in a new place (AP)

NEW YORK â€" Where scripted shows on U.S. networks are concerned, viewers know it's all about them.

They know certain shows have been imported for them and specially tailored for U.S. tastes. British comedies spawned "All in the Family" and "Sanford and Son" in the early 1970s. More recently, "Ugly Betty" was adapted from a Colombian telenovela. And NBC's "The Office" was a domestic reimagining of the British original.

Meanwhile, it's no surprise that American series are sold around the world, dubbed or subtitled for each local audience.

Even so, who knew "Married ... With Children" had been shot from scratch in a Spanish production â€" or that "The Nanny" inspired homespun productions in countries including Poland and Turkey?

U.S. viewers can get a dandy look at such a foreign transplant thanks to cable's BBC America, which is bringing 26 episodes of "Law & Order: UK" back to the land where the "Law & Order" TV empire was born.

Premiering Sunday at 10:30 p.m. EDT, with subsequent episodes airing Fridays at 9 p.m. EDT, "Law & Order: UK" is unmistakably kin to the "L&O" family.

While the classic Mike Post licks have been swapped out for a different theme, each episode begins with the sonorously voiced "In the criminal justice system ..." rap. (Though here, it's "the crown prosecutors" who prosecute offenders.) And â€" never fear â€" location cards remain part of the format, along with the accompanying "cha-CHUNG" sound effect.

New York City plays an integral role in "Law & Order," but its British offshoot is set in London, where people say "mate" and threaten to "put him in the dock"; where they wear funny wigs in court and drive on the other side of the road.

Each episode has been adapted from the original series, seen on NBC from 1990 through last season. The first "L&O: UK" hour is based on the script for "Cradle to Grave," where a baby is found dead, possibly the victim of tenant harassment. It first aired on "Law & Order" in 1992.

The regulars of "L&O: UK" are solid but likely to be unknowns to most American viewers: Jamie Bamber ("Outcasts," "Battlestar Galactica") as Detective Sergeant Matt Devlin, Bradley Walsh ("The Old Curiosity Shop") as Detective Sergeant Ronnie Brooks, Ben Daniels ("The Passion," "The State Within") as Senior Crown Prosecutor James Steel and Freema Agyeman ("Doctor Who," "Little Dorritt") as Junior Crown Prosecutor Alesha Phillips.

Not exactly household names. But the cast's makeup and relationships will feel instantly familiar to any "L&O" fan.

This would include fans in Britain, where (along with dozens of other countries) the imported "Law & Order" already had been airing when "Law & Order: UK" premiered last year on the ITV network. That show has since proved a big success, averaging about a one-quarter share of the viewing audience.

"After 'Law & Order' was broadcast there, we made an English version and it turned into a hit, and, lo and behold, it's coming back to the U.S.," said "Law & Order" creator Dick Wolf. "This is getting pretty close to a perpetual motion machine."

Other global ventures for the "L&O" franchise include French and Russian productions of "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" and a Russian version of "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit." Maybe in the future: "Law & Order" customized for the Middle East, Asia and Sweden.

"There's an endless fascination with crime," Wolf said, "and I'm delighted that there is."

But Yanks captioned or dubbed aren't enough anymore, said Michael Edelstein, NBC Universal International's London-based president for international TV production, who hopes to seed the world with homegrown versions of "Law & Order" and other NBCU properties.

"U.S. television is remarkable for how it's consumed ravenously around the world," Edelstein said. "But it's not the only game in town. Most television is created locally, and viewers are more comfortable seeing people speak their own language, with their own cities represented.

"I think studios have woken up and realized there is money to be made by serving markets around the world on a local level."

Phil Rosenthal went local far from his home when he helped transform his U.S. family comedy, "Everybody Loves Raymond," for Russian television.

"I have to believe that what we did in the original 'Raymond' was universal," he said. The Barones, of course, were a squabbling family on New York's Long Island, "but I learned that the more specific you get, the more universal you become. If you're very specific, this seems to reach across cultures."

Rosenthal spent weeks in Moscow as a culture-bridging adviser for the comedy christened "Vse Lubyat Kostya."

"But there were many times when the Russians didn't seem to care about my advice," he declared.

His creative adventure is captured in a feature-length documentary, "Exporting Raymond," which is winning applause on the festival circuit and will likely be distributed nationally next year.

Rosenthal's film recalls an unforgettably funny scene in the CBS sitcom pilot 16 years ago. It sprang from Raymond giving his parents a Fruit of the Month Club subscription. But the Russian producers clipped that scene from their own script.

"They said, 'We don't have Fruit of the Month.' So they changed it to Water of the Week," Rosenthal reported with bemusement. "To my mind, fruit is funnier than water."

But who can argue with the locals?

___

Online:

http://www.bbcamerica.com

http://www.itv.com/drama/copsandcrime/lawandorder

___

EDITOR'S NOTE â€" Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org

(This version CORRECTS rank of show's detective characters to Detective Sergeant instead of Detective Superintendent.)

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Coroner: Actor Tony Curtis dies at Las Vegas home (AP)

LAS VEGAS â€" The Clark County coroner says actor Tony Curtis has died.

Coroner Mike Murphy says Curtis died at 9:25 p.m. MDT Wednesday at his Las Vegas area home of a cardiac arrest.

Curtis, who had heart bypass surgery in 1994, began his acting career as a 1950s heartthrob but became a respected actor with such films as "The Defiant Ones" and "Sweet Smell of Success.

"The Defiant Ones" brought him an Oscar nomination in 1958 for his portrayal of a racist escaped convict handcuffed to a black escapee, Sidney Poitier. The following year, he co-starred in one of the most acclaimed film comedies ever, Billy Wilder's "Some Like It Hot."

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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

U.S. television getting more gay friendly (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) â€" "The Good Wife" is getting a gay brother; new teen TV show "Hellcats" features a lesbian cheerleader; and as for "True Blood" -- TV watchers now need two hands to count the vampires who will suck the blood of either gender.

The number of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) characters on prime time U.S. television is growing, with 58 regular LGBT roles on network and cable shows this season, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) said in a report on Wednesday.

GLAAD said that 23 LGBT characters account for 3.9 percent of regular characters in scripted network shows like Emmy-winning comedies "Modern Family" and "Glee" in the 2010-2011 TV season, which started last week.

On mainstream cable networks, the number of regulars jumped to 35 from 25 last year, with HBO's surreal vampire drama "True Blood" taking the crown as the most inclusive program on TV with six recurring characters who are either gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender.

There are an additional 32 recurring roles on broadcast and cable TV shows, but GLAAD lamented the fact that there were no black LGBT characters on network comedies and dramas.

GLAAD president Jarrett Barrios said the increase in gay and lesbian characters on TV reflects "the shift in American culture toward greater awareness and understanding of our community."

"The recent critical and commercial success of shows like 'Modern Family' and 'Glee' clearly indicate that mainstream audiences embrace gay characters and want to see well-crafted stories about our lives," Barrios added.

ABC's mockumentary-style "Modern Family" won the Emmy for best comedy series, and earned another Emmy for the actor who portrays one-half of a gay couple raising an adopted baby. Popular Fox musical comedy "Glee" won a best directing Emmy and features an eclectic cast, including a gay teen and a high school singer raised by two men.

GLAAD welcomed the addition of gay characters this year to high-rated shows like CBS lawyer drama "The Good Wife", whose bisexual, Indian investigator will be joined by a gay brother for lead actress Julianna Margulies.

New ABC shows "The Whole Truth" and comedy "Happy Endings" both have gay characters, while the new CW show "Hellcats" features gay cheerleader Patty Wedgerman and NBC's new lawyer show "Outlaw" has bisexual Lucinda Pearl.

On cable networks, AMC's spy thriller "Rubicon" features a gay lead character with past romantic entanglements, while Showtime programs feature seven characters who are gay, lesbian or bisexual, including dark comedy "Nurse Jackie".

Wednesday's report is the 15th annual "Where We Are on TV" study by GLAAD, which campaigns for the inclusive and accurate portrayal of gay, lesbian, transgender and bisexual people and events in the U.S. media.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Atlantic City considers street name for Nucky (AP)

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. â€" Real-life political and rackets boss â€" and current posthumous TV star â€" Enoch "Nucky" Johnson may finally get a street named after him.

The subject of the hit HBO series "Boardwalk Empire," Johnson ruled Atlantic City during Prohibition, ensuring that vice flourished here, and the cash was spread around freely.

City Councilman Dennis Mason told The Press of Atlantic City he'll introduce a measure to rename a one-block section of Belmont Avenue â€" near a hotel where Johnson used to live â€" as "Nucky's Way."

Mason is not put off by Johnson's eventual conviction and imprisonment on tax charges.

"It was just tax evasion," Mason told the newspaper. "He didn't actually murder anyone."

Belmont Avenue runs alongside the Ritz, a high-rise condominium building that was once the Ritz-Carlton, a luxury hotel where Johnson lived and rented out the entire ninth floor.

Other high-profile visitors to the hotel included U.S. Presidents Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge, and gangster Al Capone, a close pal of Nucky's.

Mason acknowledged the move is a ploy to generate more interest in Atlantic City among tourists. He said he hopes to organize an event in November in which people will don 1920s clothing and red carnations, a trademark of Johnson and the HBO character based on him, played by Steve Buscemi.

The ethical bar to getting a street named after someone in Atlantic City is not all that high. The city has already named streets for Louis Kuehnle, a city political boss in the early 20th century convicted of accepting kickbacks, and Don King, the boxing promoter who was convicted of second-degree murder before getting it downgraded to manslaughter.

Mason said Nucky held no monopoly on corruption in Atlantic City, noting a slew of recent arrests and prison terms of City Council members.

"I mean, if everybody gets real, I'm sure there are a lot more people that did something (illegal)," he said. "We have bad people in this government now."

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Colbert sparks debate about 'expert' celebrities (AP)

WASHINGTON â€" There are congressional hearings and there are comedy shows, and the twain rarely meet.

So when a House panel on immigration combined them on purpose last week with testimony from Stephen Colbert (kohl-BEHR') and his "truthy" alter ego, debate broke out on the proper roles of the many celebrities â€" from Angelina Jolie to Bono to Elmo â€" who advocate in Washington.

In Colbert's appearance, there was profit to be made from the public, taxpayer-funded forum on one of the nation's weightiest issues, the plight of migrant workers. Immigrant advocates won national news coverage; Colbert helped generate material for his show; politicians scored live coverage of themselves during a brutal election year; and the media bagged a widely viewed story.

Witness Carol Swain, the law school professor who testified before Colbert, was ticked at being overshadowed by a fictional talk show host. But she scored, too. Before the hearing was over, Swain's Twitter and Facebook followings soared. People e-mailed her at Vanderbilt University Law School. A guy recognized her the next day in the grocery store.

"It's increased my visibility in a number of ways," Swain said Monday. "I don't think it would have gotten that much attention had he not been on the panel."

United Farm Workers President Arturo Rodriguez, who also joined Colbert at the witness table on Friday, said he, too, has seen an increase in e-mails and Facebook followers. Inquiries to the United Farm Workers "Take Our Jobs" website also jumped, he said.

"The last big media attention we had like that is really going back to when Cesar passed away in 1993," Rodriguez said, referring to UFW founder and farm worker Cesar Chavez.

Celebrities frequently beat a path to Capitol Hill to raise awareness of issues and bills that otherwise stand little chance of news coverage. Lawmakers crowd into the shot when Jolie advocates for refugees. They hang out publicly with rock stars Bono and Jon Bon Jovi when they're in Washington on official business. Even Sesame Street's Elmo, a fuzzy red puppet, has received coverage for his "testimony" â€" in 2002 about the benefits of music education.

Likewise, this news story will be more widely read because it mentions the Twitter partnership between Lady Gaga and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on behalf of the effort to repeal the ban on gays serving openly in the military.

Colbert's celebrity is a commodity that California Democrat Zoe Lofgren, who chaired the subcommittee hearing, and the other witnesses that day sought to leverage. Lofgren joked at one point that the last time the hearing room was so crammed with audience members and cameras was for President Bill Clinton's impeachment hearings a dozen years ago.

But for all of the attention Colbert might have brought to immigration reform, his testimony also chafed lawmakers of both parties who are engaged in a brutal campaign season.

Republicans, not all of whom apparently were familiar with the character, did not appreciate being satirized on their own turf. And some Democrats cringed at "testimony" from a comedian's alter ego on an issue that for so many is a matter of life and death.

Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., asked Colbert to leave because he had no experience with farm labor issues or immigration policy. Lofgren urged him to stay. He stayed.

Outside the hearing room, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who had not yet heard or seen Colbert's testimony, said she had no objection to it.

But House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer on Sunday called Colbert's appearance "inappropriate" and "an embarrassment." A spokeswoman on Monday said the Maryland Democrat still believes celebrity endorsements generally can be a good thing.

Swain said she agreed with that, if not Colbert's testimony or the Democrats' approach to the plight of migrant workers.

"I have testified before," Swain said. But this time, because she spoke before Colbert and people had to sit through her remarks to hear his, "people heard my testimony."

___

Associated Press writer Suzanne Gamboa contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Take Our Jobs: http://tinyurl.com/32kn58v

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Monday, September 27, 2010

Comedies off to strong start as TV season begins (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) â€" If the opening of the fall TV season has proved one thing so far, it's that comedy has reclaimed the broadcast throne.

After the genre made promising gains last season with the launch of game-changers "Modern Family" and "Glee," this year's first couple of weeks of premieres are forming a pattern: popular comedies are returning to steady or better ratings than last year, and top dramas are coming back to lower numbers -- sometimes, a lot lower.

Of the seven highest-rated premieres so far, five were comedies. There was Fox's "Glee" (5.6 rating in the adults 18-49 demographic, up 60%; each ratings point in that demo equals about 1.3 million viewers), ABC's "Modern Family" (5.1, up 21%), NBC's "The Office" (4.4, up 7%), "CBS' "The Big Bang Theory" (4.9, up 4%) and "Two and a Half Men" (4.9, up 10%).

Of the two other top premieres, one was a drama (ABC's "Grey's Anatomy"; 5.4, down 21%) and the other was a reality show (ABC's "Dancing With the Stars"; 5.1, up 24%).

The "Grey's" slump was not without company. Part of the issue is the oft-reported observation that many of TV's dramas are a bit long in the tooth. Veteran series "House" (4.2) was down 37%, "CSI" (3.4) -- despite a guest appearance by Justin Bieber -- fell 17%, and "NCIS" (4.0) was down 17%.

Ratings for new shows followed a predictable bell-curve pattern of a couple delivering truly impressive opens, several performing solidly and a handful that blew up at the starting gate.

"Everybody has something to feel good about," CBS scheduling chief Kelly Kahl said.

Especially CBS, which is off to a great start. On Monday, "Hawaii Five-0" (3.9) didn't create quite the splash that many expected, though its rating is formidable, and freshman "Mike & Molly" (3.9) managed to be the second-highest-rated comedy in the network's block. Tuesday legal drama "The Defenders" (2.9) wasn't spectacular but didn't embarrass either. Thursday's "$#*! My Dad Says" (4.0) opened terrific. And on Friday, despite rumors of a troubled production, "Blue Bloods" (2.2) performed solidly in a tough time period and even won the night.

"All our new shows so far have at least gotten off the ground and look to have every opportunity to succeed," Kahl said.

Much has been made of CBS' bold scheduling shakeup for fall. And although at least one move clearly has paid off -- "Survivor" (4.0) is rocking its new Wednesday time period -- the jury is still out on the others. The network's comedies went big on Thursday for their first week, though whether the critically panned "$#*!" will maintain its numbers is a question. "Hawaii" was below "CSI: Miami" in its time period, and on Friday, "CSI: NY" drew a tad less than "Medium" at the post last year.

NBC has enjoyed a couple positive headlines. Monday's mystery thriller "The Event" (3.6) had a head-turning opening for the network in a competitive time period, and insiders hope audiences stick around for the next couple episodes, which critics say improve creatively on the pilot. At 10 p.m., action-thriller "Chase" (2.3) wasn't able to catch up with competitors. New spy dramedy "Undercovers" (2.1) underwhelmed, and Friday's Jimmy Smits legal drama "Outlaw" (1.1) looks DOA against "Blue Bloods."

"It's still the top of the first inning, but I'm happy with our start," NBC scheduling head Mitch Metcalf said. "We've set out what we planned to do, and that's to patiently hour-by-hour lay the foundation for a long-term turnaround.

Many expected NBC's "Community" (2.2) to get crushed by "Big Bang" on Thursdays, but the comedy delivered a typical number.

"They're different types of comedies," Metcalf said. "It's not an election where the winner takes all."

Thursday's new comedy "Outsourced" (3.6) was impressive. But the return to a civilian version of "The Apprentice" (1.4) is not doing the network any favors on the night.

With "Glee," Fox is able to tout last week's highest-rated show. The rest of the network's news is mixed. Critically well-liked comedy "Raising Hope" (3.1) launched fine, though there was a worrisome step down to "Running Wilde" (2.4). The network's freshman tentpole "Lone Star" (1.3) had such as spectacularly dismal premiere that it spawned a slew of stories debating its fate and prompted creator Kyle Killen to write an open letter to fans to rally support.

"We've seen several episodes of 'Raising Hope' and we think we have a show there," Fox's scheduling chief Preston Beckman said.

ABC is pacing to land in second place for the week but had a couple misfires. Arguably its best bet, "No Ordinary Family," doesn't bow until Tuesday. "Dancing" and "Modern Family" dominated their respective nights, with the network's Wednesday comedy block generating solid numbers. "The Middle" (2.7) showed particular spunk leading off the night and represents another comedy that returned to improved ratings. The debut of "Better With You" (2.5) was very OK.

There might be trouble among the network's other new shows, though. Tuesday's "Detroit 1-8-7" (2.3) underperformed, but the cop show looks towering when stacked next to Wednesday's legal drama "The Whole Truth" (1.5) and Thursday's "My Generation" (1.6), which join "Lone Star" and "Outlaw" on the shortlist of insta-bubble shows.

"More than ever, you have a lot of time periods where you have two (or) three shows actually doing well," ABC's scheduling chief Jeff Bader said. "Some shows launching are not getting sampled because there's so much going on."

Neither of the CW's freshman shows is blowing viewers' skirts up like last year's "The Vampire Diaries" (1.6), which continued to perform strongly. Wednesday's "Hellcats" (1.0) and Thursday's "Nikita" (1.1) are slipping from their lead-ins, though "Nikita" ranks as the network's second-most-watched show among total viewers. More urgently worrisome is the return of low-show-on-the-totem "Life Unexpected" (0.7). One bright spot: Friday's premieres of the final season of "Smallville" (1.3) and "Supernatural" (1.3) landed the network a rare bronze medal for the night.

All of the networks had a win or two to call their own, through broadcast overall continues to erode as DVR penetration increased 15% over last fall. Through the first four days of the season, the five broadcast networks were once again down a collective average of 9%. As DVR data come into play during the next few weeks, there's sure to be more headlines about record-setting numbers that demonstrate how many viewers didn't watch these shows the same night they aired.

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Comedies off to strong start as TV season begins (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) â€" If the opening of the fall TV season has proved one thing so far, it's that comedy has reclaimed the broadcast throne.

After the genre made promising gains last season with the launch of game-changers "Modern Family" and "Glee," this year's first couple of weeks of premieres are forming a pattern: popular comedies are returning to steady or better ratings than last year, and top dramas are coming back to lower numbers -- sometimes, a lot lower.

Of the seven highest-rated premieres so far, five were comedies. There was Fox's "Glee" (5.6 rating in the adults 18-49 demographic, up 60%; each ratings point in that demo equals about 1.3 million viewers), ABC's "Modern Family" (5.1, up 21%), NBC's "The Office" (4.4, up 7%), "CBS' "The Big Bang Theory" (4.9, up 4%) and "Two and a Half Men" (4.9, up 10%).

Of the two other top premieres, one was a drama (ABC's "Grey's Anatomy"; 5.4, down 21%) and the other was a reality show (ABC's "Dancing With the Stars"; 5.1, up 24%).

The "Grey's" slump was not without company. Part of the issue is the oft-reported observation that many of TV's dramas are a bit long in the tooth. Veteran series "House" (4.2) was down 37%, "CSI" (3.4) -- despite a guest appearance by Justin Bieber -- fell 17%, and "NCIS" (4.0) was down 17%.

Ratings for new shows followed a predictable bell-curve pattern of a couple delivering truly impressive opens, several performing solidly and a handful that blew up at the starting gate.

"Everybody has something to feel good about," CBS scheduling chief Kelly Kahl said.

Especially CBS, which is off to a great start. On Monday, "Hawaii Five-0" (3.9) didn't create quite the splash that many expected, though its rating is formidable, and freshman "Mike & Molly" (3.9) managed to be the second-highest-rated comedy in the network's block. Tuesday legal drama "The Defenders" (2.9) wasn't spectacular but didn't embarrass either. Thursday's "$#*! My Dad Says" (4.0) opened terrific. And on Friday, despite rumors of a troubled production, "Blue Bloods" (2.2) performed solidly in a tough time period and even won the night.

"All our new shows so far have at least gotten off the ground and look to have every opportunity to succeed," Kahl said.

Much has been made of CBS' bold scheduling shakeup for fall. And although at least one move clearly has paid off -- "Survivor" (4.0) is rocking its new Wednesday time period -- the jury is still out on the others. The network's comedies went big on Thursday for their first week, though whether the critically panned "$#*!" will maintain its numbers is a question. "Hawaii" was below "CSI: Miami" in its time period, and on Friday, "CSI: NY" drew a tad less than "Medium" at the post last year.

NBC has enjoyed a couple positive headlines. Monday's mystery thriller "The Event" (3.6) had a head-turning opening for the network in a competitive time period, and insiders hope audiences stick around for the next couple episodes, which critics say improve creatively on the pilot. At 10 p.m., action-thriller "Chase" (2.3) wasn't able to catch up with competitors. New spy dramedy "Undercovers" (2.1) underwhelmed, and Friday's Jimmy Smits legal drama "Outlaw" (1.1) looks DOA against "Blue Bloods."

"It's still the top of the first inning, but I'm happy with our start," NBC scheduling head Mitch Metcalf said. "We've set out what we planned to do, and that's to patiently hour-by-hour lay the foundation for a long-term turnaround.

Many expected NBC's "Community" (2.2) to get crushed by "Big Bang" on Thursdays, but the comedy delivered a typical number.

"They're different types of comedies," Metcalf said. "It's not an election where the winner takes all."

Thursday's new comedy "Outsourced" (3.6) was impressive. But the return to a civilian version of "The Apprentice" (1.4) is not doing the network any favors on the night.

With "Glee," Fox is able to tout last week's highest-rated show. The rest of the network's news is mixed. Critically well-liked comedy "Raising Hope" (3.1) launched fine, though there was a worrisome step down to "Running Wilde" (2.4). The network's freshman tentpole "Lone Star" (1.3) had such as spectacularly dismal premiere that it spawned a slew of stories debating its fate and prompted creator Kyle Killen to write an open letter to fans to rally support.

"We've seen several episodes of 'Raising Hope' and we think we have a show there," Fox's scheduling chief Preston Beckman said.

ABC is pacing to land in second place for the week but had a couple misfires. Arguably its best bet, "No Ordinary Family," doesn't bow until Tuesday. "Dancing" and "Modern Family" dominated their respective nights, with the network's Wednesday comedy block generating solid numbers. "The Middle" (2.7) showed particular spunk leading off the night and represents another comedy that returned to improved ratings. The debut of "Better With You" (2.5) was very OK.

There might be trouble among the network's other new shows, though. Tuesday's "Detroit 1-8-7" (2.3) underperformed, but the cop show looks towering when stacked next to Wednesday's legal drama "The Whole Truth" (1.5) and Thursday's "My Generation" (1.6), which join "Lone Star" and "Outlaw" on the shortlist of insta-bubble shows.

"More than ever, you have a lot of time periods where you have two (or) three shows actually doing well," ABC's scheduling chief Jeff Bader said. "Some shows launching are not getting sampled because there's so much going on."

Neither of the CW's freshman shows is blowing viewers' skirts up like last year's "The Vampire Diaries" (1.6), which continued to perform strongly. Wednesday's "Hellcats" (1.0) and Thursday's "Nikita" (1.1) are slipping from their lead-ins, though "Nikita" ranks as the network's second-most-watched show among total viewers. More urgently worrisome is the return of low-show-on-the-totem "Life Unexpected" (0.7). One bright spot: Friday's premieres of the final season of "Smallville" (1.3) and "Supernatural" (1.3) landed the network a rare bronze medal for the night.

All of the networks had a win or two to call their own, through broadcast overall continues to erode as DVR penetration increased 15% over last fall. Through the first four days of the season, the five broadcast networks were once again down a collective average of 9%. As DVR data come into play during the next few weeks, there's sure to be more headlines about record-setting numbers that demonstrate how many viewers didn't watch these shows the same night they aired.

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Sunday, September 26, 2010

O'Donnell is first political target of SNL season (AP)

DOVER, Del. â€" With the new season of "Saturday Night Live" comes a fresh batch of political satire â€" and Delaware Senate hopeful Christine O'Donnell is the first target.

The Republican candidate's past statements were fodder for the opening sketch on Saturday night's broadcast on NBC.

The sketch involved actors portraying the tea party darling O'Donnell and two Republican officials concerned about her past statements, including speaking out against masturbation.

The actress playing O'Donnell says she is no longer against masturbation and, in fact, masturbates constantly. She also says she once ran a dog fighting operation and burned down somebody's house.

The sketch ends with the actress donning a witch hat and flying away on a broom, a reference to O'Donnell's claim years ago that she dabbled in witchcraft in high school.

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O'Donnell is first political target of SNL season (AP)

DOVER, Del. â€" With the new season of "Saturday Night Live" comes a fresh batch of political satire â€" and Delaware Senate hopeful Christine O'Donnell is the first target.

The Republican candidate's past statements were fodder for the opening sketch on Saturday night's broadcast on NBC.

The sketch involved actors portraying the tea party darling O'Donnell and two Republican officials concerned about her past statements, including speaking out against masturbation.

The actress playing O'Donnell says she is no longer against masturbation and, in fact, masturbates constantly. She also says she once ran a dog fighting operation and burned down somebody's house.

The sketch ends with the actress donning a witch hat and flying away on a broom, a reference to O'Donnell's claim years ago that she dabbled in witchcraft in high school.

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Saturday, September 25, 2010

U.S. television rights battle set to rage (Reuters)

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado (Reuters) â€" Describing the Olympics as the last refuge of family viewing in the United States, Dick Ebersol, the head of NBC Universal Sports, said on Friday the network is ready to battle for American broadcast rights to the 2014 and 2016 Games.

International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Jacques Rogge had signaled earlier on Friday that after several false starts the IOC was finally prepared begin negotiating a deal for the 2014 Sochi Winter Games and the 2016 Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro.

A fragile economic climate in the United States had prompted the IOC to delay the start of negotiations.

The IOC president told Reuters in July that bidding could be put off until after the 2012 Olympics in London because of the uncertainty of the American economy.

But with the U.S. economic picture improving the IOC said negotiations could start before the end of the year.

"Jacques said a month or two after the Games in Vancouver it would be in 2011 and Carrion (Richard Carrion a member of the IOC executive board who will oversee negotiations) said in the summer he hoped it would be in the first quarter," Ebersol told reporters after delivering the keynote address at the U.S. Olympic Assembly.

"So what Jacques said today was in keeping with what they said all along."

Competition for the U.S. television rights is expected to be fierce with NBC, CBS, ESPN-ABC and Fox all expressing interest.

Broadcasting rights are the IOC's biggest source of revenue for the IOC. NBC paid $2.2 billion for the exclusive rights to the Vancouver and London Olympics.

Ebersol said, his network is ready to begin negotiations whenever the IOC wants and is feeling lucky about NBC's chances of retaining the property.

"You have no choice," said Ebersol. "You go by what they say and when they want to do it.

"I have been so lucky for such a long period of time that I'm going to just keep rubbing my rabbit's foot."

(Editing by Alastair Himmer))

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U.S. television rights battle set to rage (Reuters)

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado (Reuters) â€" Describing the Olympics as the last refuge of family viewing in the United States, Dick Ebersol, the head of NBC Universal Sports, said on Friday the network is ready to battle for American broadcast rights to the 2014 and 2016 Games.

International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Jacques Rogge had signaled earlier on Friday that after several false starts the IOC was finally prepared begin negotiating a deal for the 2014 Sochi Winter Games and the 2016 Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro.

A fragile economic climate in the United States had prompted the IOC to delay the start of negotiations.

The IOC president told Reuters in July that bidding could be put off until after the 2012 Olympics in London because of the uncertainty of the American economy.

But with the U.S. economic picture improving the IOC said negotiations could start before the end of the year.

"Jacques said a month or two after the Games in Vancouver it would be in 2011 and Carrion (Richard Carrion a member of the IOC executive board who will oversee negotiations) said in the summer he hoped it would be in the first quarter," Ebersol told reporters after delivering the keynote address at the U.S. Olympic Assembly.

"So what Jacques said today was in keeping with what they said all along."

Competition for the U.S. television rights is expected to be fierce with NBC, CBS, ESPN-ABC and Fox all expressing interest.

Broadcasting rights are the IOC's biggest source of revenue for the IOC. NBC paid $2.2 billion for the exclusive rights to the Vancouver and London Olympics.

Ebersol said, his network is ready to begin negotiations whenever the IOC wants and is feeling lucky about NBC's chances of retaining the property.

"You have no choice," said Ebersol. "You go by what they say and when they want to do it.

"I have been so lucky for such a long period of time that I'm going to just keep rubbing my rabbit's foot."

(Editing by Alastair Himmer))

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Friday, September 24, 2010

AC hopes `Boardwalk Empire' brings the tourists (AP)

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. â€" What "The Sopranos" did for a pork store in northern New Jersey and "Sex and the City" did for a Manhattan cupcake shop, Atlantic City is hoping "Boardwalk Empire" does for the seaside gambling resort.

Nothing is too trivial to become a tourist trap as long as it appears in a hit TV show. "Sopranos" fans packed tour buses to visit spots like the pork store and a strip club, and girls-night-out devotees planned trips around watering holes and shoe stores featured in "Sex and the City."

Now, with "Boardwalk Empire," the HBO series set in Prohibition-era Atlantic City, the resort is ready for its close-up. And with critics hailing the series as perhaps the best of the fall TV season, the 12-episode series could keep Atlantic City in the nation's consciousness far longer and better than any ad could.

"It's an hour-long commercial for Atlantic City, top-of-the mind awareness," said Don Marrandino, eastern regional president of Harrah's Entertainment Inc., which owns four of Atlantic City's 11 casinos. "People will want to come here and see it for themselves, and we need to take full advantage of that."

The attention comes not a moment too soon for the nation's second-largest gambling resort. Atlantic City is in the fourth straight year of a revenue decline brought on by competition from casinos in neighboring states, as well as a continuing poor economy that has people less willing to risk their cash at the tables and slot machines.

Its revenues, after hitting a high of $5.2 billion in 2006, fell to $3.9 billion by the end of last year and nearly 9,000 casino workers have lost their jobs since then.

Two casinos were sold this year for pennies on the dollar, and a third is widely believed to be in danger of closing, having stopped making mortgage payments more than a year ago.

In this context, the free publicity from a smash hit TV show is a godsend. Jeff Vasser, president of the Atlantic City Convention & Visitors Authority, says the resort has a golden opportunity to cash in.

"I don't think HBO can do anything more than it already has done to promote this show, so there will be no excuse for us to say, `If only they had done this or that,' " he said.

The show centers on the exploits of Enoch "Nucky" Thompson, the Steve Buscemi character based on the real-life Enoch "Nucky" Johnson, Atlantic City's political and rackets boss during Prohibition.

For 30 years, until he was finally sent to prison in 1941 for tax evasion, Johnson dominated Atlantic City â€" then one of the nation's leading resorts. He controlled not only the Republican political machine that had a stranglehold on government, but also made sure illegal liquor, prostitution and gambling operations flourished under the protection of paid-off officials.

The show's first episode, which aired last Sunday, introduces us to Nucky and his network of vice as he cements alliances with organized crime to make sure that Atlantic City stayed wet while the rest of the nation was officially dry. But it also showed his compassionate side, handling out cash to down-and-out families whose political loyalties were then secured for years.

In the spirit of Nucky Johnson, Atlantic City is trying to wring every last dollar out of the show with a slew of 1920s-themed promotions. Nearly 30 restaurants are offering are offering two or three-course meals priced at $19.20. Caesars Atlantic City is offering 1,920 hotel rooms for $19.20 a night. Bars are whipping up whiskey-laced "Boardwalk Empire" cocktails like "The Nucky" (whiskey, grapefruit juice, tonic water and grenadine over ice, topped by an orange wedge), and "The Boardwalk Boss" (whiskey, wet vermouth and apple brandy with a lemon peel garnish). A full list of what's available where is at http://www.atlanticcitynj.com under the heading "take the Empire restaurant tour."

For that same $19.20, Resorts Atlantic City offers hot lather straight-razor shaves just like the one Nucky enjoys in the show.

Harrah's and Canadian Club whiskey (featured in the show) are sending marketing e-mails to their 40-million-member marketing list. Even Bloomingdale's has a mock 115-foot boardwalk promoting the show at its flagship Manhattan store.

The main problem with getting fans of the show to come to Atlantic City is that "Boardwalk Empire" was actually shot on a fabricated set in New York City, with the ocean added in via computer graphics. And aside from Boardwalk Hall and a tiny handful of old hotels, not much from Nucky's era has survived along the real-life Boardwalk.

The Fralinger's salt water taffy sign, a local landmark, was shown in the first episode. Vasser hopes other present-day Atlantic City icons also will be featured, so they can be included into marketing efforts. One idea is a Prohibition Tour of local sites in Atlantic City that figured prominently in the illegal liquor trade of Nucky's day.

Pinky Kravitz, a local radio show host and tireless promoter of Atlantic City, suggests recreating the show's set on the actual Boardwalk.

"That will give people something to visit, where they can have their pictures taken and make them feel connected not only to the show but to Atlantic City," he said.

But because Nucky is no longer handing out fistfuls of $100 bills, someone would have to pay for it.

"Pinky's idea is a good one," Vasser said, "and he wants HBO to pay for it, which makes it a great one."

Tobe Becker, an HBO spokeswoman, said the network "will consider any and all ideas" to promote the show, but said it is too early to say whether Kravitz's suggestion is practical.

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Netflix signs expanded license agreement with NBC (Reuters)

BANGALORE (Reuters) â€" Netflix Inc said it signed an expanded license agreement with NBC Universal Domestic Television Distribution that will allow its subscribers to watch content from some of NBC Universal's popular cable channels.

The multi-year deal, which kicks off next week, allows the streaming of prior season cable and broadcast TV series new to Netflix members.

Netflix subscribers will be able to watch content like "Saturday Night Live," "Friday Night Lights," "Monk" and "Battlestar Galactica," the company said.

General Electric, which owns NBC Universal media business, is in the process of selling a majority stake to cable operator Comcast Corp.

(Reporting by Jennifer Robin Raj in Bangalore)

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Thursday, September 23, 2010

Sesame Street pulls Katy Perry from show (AP)

NEW YORK â€" Katy Perry's cleavage is fine for Russell Brand â€" not so for Elmo and Sesame Street.

The children's show says it won't air a taped segment featuring the "California Gurls" singer and Elmo. The pop star â€" who is known for her risque outfits â€" wore a gold bustier top as she sang a version of her hit "Hot & Cold." But some felt it was too revealing for the kid set.

Sesame Street said in a statement Thursday that in light of the "feedback we've received" after the bit was aired on YouTube, they won't include it on the show. While the show said it would still be available on YouTube, it had been removed by the official Sesame Street YouTube channel.

Perry's rep did not return a message seeking comment Thursday morning.

____

http://www.sesamestreet.org

http://www.katyperry.com

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British composer Geoffrey Burgon dies at 69 (AP)

LONDON â€" Geoffrey Burgon, the British composer whose soundtrack for the television production of "Brideshead Revisited" became a hit recording, has died at age 69, his publisher said.

Burgon also contributed to Monty Python's "Life of Brian" and produced music for "Dr. Who," "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy," "The Chronicles of Narnia" and other productions.

Burgon died Tuesday after a short illness, according to an announcement from his publisher, Chester Music.

Burgon's score for the television adaptation of "Brideshead" sold 100,000 copies.

He first gained attention in 1976 when his "Requiem" was performed at the Three Choirs Festival in western England.

Burgon won an Ivor Novello award in 1979 for "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy," which included a memorable version of the "Nunc Dimittis"; and another two years later for "Brideshead." He also won BAFTA awards more recently for his music for "The Forsyte Saga" and "Longitude."

Other works included church music, settings of words by John Donne and St. John of the Cross, a piano concerto for Joanna MacGregor in 1997 and an opera, "Hard Times," based on the Charles Dickens novel.

He is survived by his wife, their son and a son and a daughter from a previous marriage.

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

`Undercovers' colorful mission: bring change to TV (AP)

LOS ANGELES â€" Steven and Samantha Bloom are an appealing couple whose international spy capers on NBC's "Undercovers" promise to be slick, sexy and fun, the kind of escapist fare that fills many an hour of TV.

But the new show's intrigue comes from its casting along with its plots: Boris Kodjoe and Gugu Mbatha-Raw are the stars in charge of making this romp work, and both are black.

It's a persistent rarity in TV to have black leads outside of a "Grey's Anatomy"-style ensemble, and "Undercovers" is rarer still because it's not an African-American sitcom or a black-oriented drama fraught with social issues or family pathos.

This time around, two stunning, accomplished and happily wed black characters just get to have fun. The series airs 8 p.m. EDT Wednesday.

"It's huge progress," said writer and filmmaker John Ridley ("Three Kings," "Third Watch"). "As a person of color I love to see issue-oriented stuff, but at the same time, it's great to have two black people doing what two white people would do on any TV show."

Kodjoe, a German actor whose credits include the new movie "Resident Evil: Afterlife" and TV's "Soul Food," is glad to be part of a breakthrough for U.S. television in general and the network in particular.

NBC, which pioneered the first network drama series starring an African-American, "I Spy" with Bill Cosby in 1965, got a tongue-lashing this year from a California congresswoman for its lack of diversity. The network and parent company NBC Universal are under scrutiny as Comcast Corp. seeks regulatory approval to buy a majority stake in NBC Universal.

"It's quite a proud moment," Kodjoe said of "Undercovers." He calls it "refreshing" for a show to tell lighthearted stories about a couple and their adventures that have "nothing to do with them being black."

The decision to broaden the casting net beyond white actors resulted from the inclination and clout of J.J. Abrams, whose heavyweight credits include "Lost" and "Alias," and fellow producer Josh Reims ("Brothers and Sisters").

"We didn't want to do a show that looks like 10 other shows on TV. ... We just wanted to do something that felt fresh," Reims said. Various actors were considered but "we thought if we could cast two black actors it would be great."

There was no resistance, only encouragement, from the network and the studio, he said.

In the end, Reims said, the best choices proved to be Kodjoe, 37, and Mbatha-Raw, 27, a British-born, stage-trained actress who starred on Broadway with Jude Law in "Hamlet," on TV in "Doctor Who" and is in an upcoming Tom Hanks film, "Larry Crowne."

Mbatha-Raw, who like Kodjoe employs an impeccable American accent in "Undercovers," was unaware that black actors faced long odds for certain U.S. television roles. Her experience in Britain has been different.

"To be honest, I've been really blessed to play ethnically specific and non-ethnically specific roles" back home, she said, both on the stage and TV. "I think there's a different cultural legacy in the U.K. than in the United States."

As for the NBC series, "It's nice that it's groundbreaking but it shouldn't be in this day and age," she says.

Kodjoe agrees.

The entertainment industry needs to "make choices that are creative and real and diverse" and stop following tired paths that ignore diversity, he said. He was initially reluctant to read for "Undercovers" because he'd lost too many jobs when producers who praised his audition later informed him their show needed to go "in another direction."

Invariably, that meant a white actor had won the role, Kodjoe said.

It's the sidekicks on "Undercovers" who are white, played by Carter MacIntyre and Ben Schwartz. Gerald McRaney is the Blooms' boss, Carlton Shaw, who brings the couple back to work for the CIA five years after they quit to enjoy a routine married life and run a business (a catering company, which becomes their cover).

On another, more typical series, Shaw is just the kind of stern authority figure who would be played by a black actor to provide a dash of color â€" like Rocky Carroll as the agency director on "NCIS."

The caper genre has found a comfortable home on TV, especially in recent years on cable, with USA Network's "Burn Notice" and TNT's "Leverage" in the pack that feature mostly white leads with a minority cast member or two.

Black-headlined fare of that and nearly every other stripe has long been a tough sell on TV.

Acclaimed actor James Earl Jones has been in several short-lived series, most notably the 1995 family drama "Under One Roof."

"Snoops," a detective series starring Tim Reid ("WKRP in Cincinnati") and real-life wife Daphne Maxwell Reid, debuted in fall 1989 and was gone after just a few months. Reid's critically praised "Frank's Place" (1988) didn't fare better.

Other tries included "Get Christie Love," starring Teresa Graves as a sexy detective, which aired from September 1974 to July 1975. "Shaft," with Richard Roundtree in his big-screen detective role, lasted under a year in the mid-1970s.

This time around, will viewers dig "Undercovers"?

A long-standing rule in series development is to avoid making a program "exclusionary," said former TV executive and historian Tim Brooks (co-author of "The Complete Directory to Primetime Network and Cable TV Shows").

"When you have a program almost entirely in a black setting, white viewers feel that's not their world," Brooks said. In focus group testing, white viewers may not "say it in so many words, but they just can't relate it to their lives."

There's typically an exemption for sitcoms, which can draw a multiracial audience with all-black casts (examples abound, ranging from "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" to Cosby's comedies). But dramas about relationships hit closer to home, Brooks said.

Filmmaker Ridley doesn't buy that thinking. Largely white Hollywood decision-makers simply are drawn to projects and characters they're familiar with, he contends, and it takes an influential producer such as Abrams to see the need for change and force it.

And, Kodjoe notes, do it well.

"Josh Reims and J.J. Abrams are genius writers and that's what it comes down to. The rest is really up to the audience," he said.

___

Online:

http://www.nbc.com

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"Baywatch" star Hasselhoff first "Dancing" victim (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) â€" Maybe David Hasselhoff should have sported a Speedo on the dance floor.

The former "Baywatch" lifesaver was the first celebrity contestant cut from the new season of ABC's "Dancing with the Stars" on Tuesday after performing an arthritic cha-cha.

The judges variously described his turn during Monday's performance round as "very bizarre" and "a potpourri of insanity disguised as dance."

Hasselhoff went into the elimination round tied at last place with unsteady comedian Margaret Cho and under-rehearsed MTV reality star Mike "The Situation" Sorrentino.

Viewers declined to come to his rescue when it was their turn to supplement the judges' scores.

Afterwards, the 58-year-old actor described his brief tenure on the show as "a great ride," while his daughters attributed his poor performance to bad knees.

The dance continues for singers Brandy and Michael Bolton, political progeny Bristol Palin, reality starlet Audrina Patridge, retired sportsmen Kurt Warner and Rick Fox, former Disney Channel child star Kyle Massey, "Brady Bunch" mom Florence Henderson, and "Dirty Dancing" veteran Jennifer Grey.

"Dancing with the Stars" was the second-biggest show on TV last season, behind "American Idol," averaging 20 million viewers. Reigning champ is Pussycat Dolls singer Nicole Scherzinger, who teamed with pro dancer Derek Hough.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; editing by Todd Eastham)

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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Calif. charter schools get $1M nod on 'Oprah' (AP)

OAKLAND, Calif. â€" An Oakland nonprofit that operates 30 charter schools in California is being recognized with a $1 million donation from Oprah Winfrey's Angel Foundation.

Aspire Public Schools was one of six public school reform groups honored with grants from the talk show host Monday.

The charter school network serves nearly 10,000 students in East Palo Alto, Modesto, Oakland, Stockton, Sacramento and Los Angeles.

The gift came during a show Winfrey devoted to a new documentary about public education called "Waiting for Superman."

Summit Preparatory Charter High School in Redwood City, one of the schools featured in the film, also was singled out for praise on Monday's "Oprah."

The other charter networks that received grants are in Philadelphia, Chicago, Houston, Denver and New Orleans.

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Calif. charter schools get $1M nod on 'Oprah' (AP)

OAKLAND, Calif. â€" An Oakland nonprofit that operates 30 charter schools in California is being recognized with a $1 million donation from Oprah Winfrey's Angel Foundation.

Aspire Public Schools was one of six public school reform groups honored with grants from the talk show host Monday.

The charter school network serves nearly 10,000 students in East Palo Alto, Modesto, Oakland, Stockton, Sacramento and Los Angeles.

The gift came during a show Winfrey devoted to a new documentary about public education called "Waiting for Superman."

Summit Preparatory Charter High School in Redwood City, one of the schools featured in the film, also was singled out for praise on Monday's "Oprah."

The other charter networks that received grants are in Philadelphia, Chicago, Houston, Denver and New Orleans.

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Monday, September 20, 2010

New TV thriller "Event" a test of viewer patience (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) â€" With the conclusion last season of "Lost," "24" and "Heroes," it would seem television is ripe for a new action serial. That could bode well for NBC's "The Event," which premieres Monday, particularly because its pilot asks a lot of viewers but gives back comparatively little in return.

Successful shows of this stripe walk a careful line, building suspense and mystery even as they reward viewers with answers and insight. "Event" teases viewers with an intricately plotted tale of conspiracy and terrorism, but it weaves the story from so many directions, perspectives and timelines that the episode becomes a sort of video Rubik's Cube.

Comic-Con attendees aside, the effort required to follow the story by co-executive producer/writer/creator Nick Wauters goes well beyond what most viewers might be willing to give. With its large ensemble cast and frequent flashbacks -- visiting and revisiting events that occurred from 23 minutes to 13 months in the past -- watching "Event" is like riding a contraption that is half time machine and half bumper car.

The pilot only hints at the grand arc of what is to occur. This includes a macro story with global implications and a micro tale about a normal, unsuspecting nice guy (Jason Ritter) who plans to pop the question on a Caribbean cruise but instead stumbles into a world of sabotage and intrigue. Blair Underwood plays President Elias Martinez, who discovers that the CIA is operating a detention facility in Alaska that makes Guantanamo look like a Boy Scout camp. Against the counsel of advisers, he vows to close it down. Laura Innes plays Sophia, the leader of the detainees, and apparently the mastermind behind The Event.

Ritter is goodhearted Sean Walker, who plans to propose to Leila Buchanan (Sarah Roemer) after securing the blessing of her dad (Scott Patterson). Then strange and really bad things happen to Leila's family, and Sean's world gets more complicated than a dessert station at a midnight buffet.

As showrunner, Evan Katz, formerly of Fox's "24," knows a good deal about storytelling at breakneck speeds. In addition, executive producer Jeffrey Reiner, who directed the pilot, barely lets you catch your breath. However, unless they reward viewer trust with a few satisfying answers -- and soon -- "Event" will see a sharp decline in RSVPs.

So far, the most enjoyable part of this dizzy ride is the brilliant cast. Underwood and Ritter are entirely convincing in complicated roles. Equally impressive is the work of Innes as the tightly wound conspirator and Zeljko Ivanek as the president's straight-talking aide. Cast and producers repeatedly have said that the second episode provides many answers. Maybe, then, instead of "The Event," the pilot should be called "Eventually."

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New TV thriller "Event" a test of viewer patience (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) â€" With the conclusion last season of "Lost," "24" and "Heroes," it would seem television is ripe for a new action serial. That could bode well for NBC's "The Event," which premieres Monday, particularly because its pilot asks a lot of viewers but gives back comparatively little in return.

Successful shows of this stripe walk a careful line, building suspense and mystery even as they reward viewers with answers and insight. "Event" teases viewers with an intricately plotted tale of conspiracy and terrorism, but it weaves the story from so many directions, perspectives and timelines that the episode becomes a sort of video Rubik's Cube.

Comic-Con attendees aside, the effort required to follow the story by co-executive producer/writer/creator Nick Wauters goes well beyond what most viewers might be willing to give. With its large ensemble cast and frequent flashbacks -- visiting and revisiting events that occurred from 23 minutes to 13 months in the past -- watching "Event" is like riding a contraption that is half time machine and half bumper car.

The pilot only hints at the grand arc of what is to occur. This includes a macro story with global implications and a micro tale about a normal, unsuspecting nice guy (Jason Ritter) who plans to pop the question on a Caribbean cruise but instead stumbles into a world of sabotage and intrigue. Blair Underwood plays President Elias Martinez, who discovers that the CIA is operating a detention facility in Alaska that makes Guantanamo look like a Boy Scout camp. Against the counsel of advisers, he vows to close it down. Laura Innes plays Sophia, the leader of the detainees, and apparently the mastermind behind The Event.

Ritter is goodhearted Sean Walker, who plans to propose to Leila Buchanan (Sarah Roemer) after securing the blessing of her dad (Scott Patterson). Then strange and really bad things happen to Leila's family, and Sean's world gets more complicated than a dessert station at a midnight buffet.

As showrunner, Evan Katz, formerly of Fox's "24," knows a good deal about storytelling at breakneck speeds. In addition, executive producer Jeffrey Reiner, who directed the pilot, barely lets you catch your breath. However, unless they reward viewer trust with a few satisfying answers -- and soon -- "Event" will see a sharp decline in RSVPs.

So far, the most enjoyable part of this dizzy ride is the brilliant cast. Underwood and Ritter are entirely convincing in complicated roles. Equally impressive is the work of Innes as the tightly wound conspirator and Zeljko Ivanek as the president's straight-talking aide. Cast and producers repeatedly have said that the second episode provides many answers. Maybe, then, instead of "The Event," the pilot should be called "Eventually."

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Sunday, September 19, 2010

Whitfield leaves 'Spartacus' for 2nd cancer battle (AP)

NEW YORK â€" Starz network says "Spartacus: Blood and Sand" star Andy Whitfield is leaving the show to battle a recurrence of cancer.

Production of the "Spartacus" series' second season was postponed this spring when Whitfield was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The cable television network said Whitfield was responding well to treatment, but the cancer has returned.

The British-born Whitfield played the gladiator hero in the show's breakout first season.

The network said co-stars Lucy Lawless and John Hannah would take center stage for a six-episode prequel leading up to Spartacus' arrival. It will air beginning in January.

In a statement, Whitfield expressed regret at leaving the series while describing his cancer battle "as another extraordinary journey."

___

Online:

Starz: http://www.starz.com

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Whitfield leaves 'Spartacus' for 2nd cancer battle (AP)

NEW YORK â€" Starz network says "Spartacus: Blood and Sand" star Andy Whitfield is leaving the show to battle a recurrence of cancer.

Production of the "Spartacus" series' second season was postponed this spring when Whitfield was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The cable television network said Whitfield was responding well to treatment, but the cancer has returned.

The British-born Whitfield played the gladiator hero in the show's breakout first season.

The network said co-stars Lucy Lawless and John Hannah would take center stage for a six-episode prequel leading up to Spartacus' arrival. It will air beginning in January.

In a statement, Whitfield expressed regret at leaving the series while describing his cancer battle "as another extraordinary journey."

___

Online:

Starz: http://www.starz.com

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Saturday, September 18, 2010

DA: Paris Hilton to avoid felony in Vegas arrest (AP)

LAS VEGAS â€" Paris Hilton has agreed to plead guilty to two misdemeanors stemming from her arrest last month at a Las Vegas resort, a Nevada prosecutor said.

Under the terms of a plea deal worked out with prosecutors, the celebrity heiress will serve a year of probation and avoid a felony conviction, Clark County District Attorney David Roger said Friday.

A plea agreement obtained by the Las Vegas Review-Journal shows Hilton will plead guilty to drug possession and obstructing an officer. She must complete a drug abuse program, pay a $2,000 fine and serve 200 hours of community service.

Hilton, 29, was arrested Aug. 26 inside the Wynn resort, after police say a small plastic bag containing 0.8 grams of cocaine fell out of her Chanel purse as she reached for a tube of lip balm in front of a police lieutenant.

Roger and defense attorney David Chesnoff confirmed the details of the plea deal reported by the Review-Journal. The original felony cocaine possession charge would not have resulted in any jail time.

Roger said he wanted to obtain a pledge from the hotel heiress to stay out of trouble, and said the plea deal accomplished that goal.

"If she is arrested for anything besides a minor traffic violation she will spend a year in jail," Roger said. "There will be no discussion. The court will have no discretion."

Chesnoff said the agreement does not call for Hilton to be assigned a probation officer, meaning she can't break any laws but won't have anyone to report to or check in with.

"Ms. Hilton understands the seriousness of the situation and appreciates the chance she is being given," Chesnoff told The Associated Press. "She has to stay out of trouble."

Hilton initially told police the purse and cocaine were not hers, but claimed some items in the bag, including rolling papers, $1,300 in cash and several credit cards.

She was questioned by police after her boyfriend, Las Vegas nightclub mogul Cy Waits, 34, failed field sobriety tests given by a motorcycle officer.

The couple was stopped in a black Cadillac Escalade after the officer smelled a "vapor trail" of marijuana smoke.

Hilton was banned from two Wynn resorts on the Las Vegas Strip after the arrest, and her boyfriend was dismissed as a nightclub partner.

Hilton briefly faced a marijuana charge in July after a FIFA World Cup match in South Africa, but the case was dropped when a woman who was with her pleaded guilty to possessing the drug.

Hilton is scheduled to appear at 7:30 a.m. Monday before Judge Joe M. Bonaventure, Chesnoff said.

___

Associated Press Writer Ken Ritter contributed to this report.

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DA: Paris Hilton to avoid felony in Vegas arrest (AP)

LAS VEGAS â€" Paris Hilton has agreed to plead guilty to two misdemeanors stemming from her arrest last month at a Las Vegas resort, a Nevada prosecutor said.

Under the terms of a plea deal worked out with prosecutors, the celebrity heiress will serve a year of probation and avoid a felony conviction, Clark County District Attorney David Roger said Friday.

A plea agreement obtained by the Las Vegas Review-Journal shows Hilton will plead guilty to drug possession and obstructing an officer. She must complete a drug abuse program, pay a $2,000 fine and serve 200 hours of community service.

Hilton, 29, was arrested Aug. 26 inside the Wynn resort, after police say a small plastic bag containing 0.8 grams of cocaine fell out of her Chanel purse as she reached for a tube of lip balm in front of a police lieutenant.

Roger and defense attorney David Chesnoff confirmed the details of the plea deal reported by the Review-Journal. The original felony cocaine possession charge would not have resulted in any jail time.

Roger said he wanted to obtain a pledge from the hotel heiress to stay out of trouble, and said the plea deal accomplished that goal.

"If she is arrested for anything besides a minor traffic violation she will spend a year in jail," Roger said. "There will be no discussion. The court will have no discretion."

Chesnoff said the agreement does not call for Hilton to be assigned a probation officer, meaning she can't break any laws but won't have anyone to report to or check in with.

"Ms. Hilton understands the seriousness of the situation and appreciates the chance she is being given," Chesnoff told The Associated Press. "She has to stay out of trouble."

Hilton initially told police the purse and cocaine were not hers, but claimed some items in the bag, including rolling papers, $1,300 in cash and several credit cards.

She was questioned by police after her boyfriend, Las Vegas nightclub mogul Cy Waits, 34, failed field sobriety tests given by a motorcycle officer.

The couple was stopped in a black Cadillac Escalade after the officer smelled a "vapor trail" of marijuana smoke.

Hilton was banned from two Wynn resorts on the Las Vegas Strip after the arrest, and her boyfriend was dismissed as a nightclub partner.

Hilton briefly faced a marijuana charge in July after a FIFA World Cup match in South Africa, but the case was dropped when a woman who was with her pleaded guilty to possessing the drug.

Hilton is scheduled to appear at 7:30 a.m. Monday before Judge Joe M. Bonaventure, Chesnoff said.

___

Associated Press Writer Ken Ritter contributed to this report.

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Friday, September 17, 2010

'Hawaii Five-0' gets an upgrade to modern times (AP)

HONOLULU â€" The elite crime-fighting team of "Hawaii Five-0" is back in the islands â€" this time with more bikinis, fewer stiff suits and a remix of the series' classic theme song.

The remake of the legendary series, which ran for 12 seasons from 1968 to 1980, debuts Monday at 10 p.m. EDT on CBS with a legacy to live up to.

Like the original hit show, the new version's cop team hunts down criminals, often ending with the catch phrase "Book 'em, Danno!"

But the rebooted version aims to add more witty banter, character back story and edginess to the formulaic detective work of the first series, which preceded a generation of crime dramas such as "Magnum, P.I." and "Law & Order."

"You can do great action, and we do," said executive producer Peter Lenkov. "But what's fresh and different is the character development and humor."

Filmed onsite in Hawaii, "Hawaii Five-0" aims to appeal to viewers by taking them to island scenes shot at sun-soaked beaches and landmark locations including Pearl Harbor, Iolani Palace and Waikiki.

Alex O'Loughlin is replacing the original Detective Steve McGarrett, played by Jack Lord. As a former Navy SEAL, the new McGarrett has been recruited by Hawaii's governor to lead a task force against criminals and terrorists intruding into the United States through its Pacific islands.

"He's part mercenary, and his tactics are pretty crazy. He does whatever he needs to do to get the job done," O'Loughlin said during a break from filming on site in Honolulu. "We have respect for what came before us, but we're not drawing from the old show."

Unlike his predecessor, O'Loughlin is more likely to go into a suspect's house wearing a bulletproof vest, guns blazing. The Australian actor has Lord's big shoes to fill after previously playing the lead in "Three Rivers" and "Moonlight."

Alongside McGarrett is sidekick Danny "Danno" Williams (Scott Caan), a by-the-book detective who's less than pleased with McGarrett's full-speed-ahead attitude.

"I don't think that he's a bad guy or anything," said Caan, who has appeared on "Entourage."

"I just think he's crazy," he said. "That sets up the butting of heads and the personality clash."

Rounding out the four-member team are characters Chin Ho Kelly and Kono Kalakaua. Both were part of the original series, but this time they should get more prominent roles because the show won't rely as much on McGarrett alone.

Another big change: Instead of Kono being the burly man seen in the series' first run, the character has been transformed into a swimsuit-wearing rookie cop played by Grace Park.

"To be able to have the experience all over again and revisit it with fresher eyes â€" that's something people look forward to, to have a new different experience," said Park, who previously starred on "Battlestar Galactica."

"Otherwise, we would've just rereleased the old DVDs again."

The show's reinvention of itself will emphasize more teamwork rather than always making McGarrett the primary hero, said Daniel Dae Kim, who plays Chin Ho Kelly.

"Our goal isn't as much to improve on the original series as it is to adapt it to modern audiences," said Kim, best known for his role in "Lost," which was also filmed in Hawaii. "There's a different storytelling style now."

The show's premiere coincides with the 42nd anniversary of its first run, which started Sept. 20, 1968.

Its writers hope to avoid the mistakes that led to the cancellation of other recent remakes such as "Knight Rider" and "Bionic Woman," Lenkov said. Both of those shows lasted only one season.

The characters in "Hawaii Five-0" will be more three-dimensional than during the series' first run, with their own troubled histories, unpredictable family ties and personal mistakes, he said.

Viewers shouldn't expect the new McGarrett's hair to always stay in place or for his decisions to always work out.

"Our Steve McGarrett â€" he's a little more flawed than Jack Lord was," Lenkov said. "That's what makes him an interesting character. There's a little grayness to him. I didn't want him to be a superhero."

___

CBS is owned by CBS Corp.

___

Online:

http://www.cbs.com/

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Yams and mosquito nets on Nigeria's Sesame Street (Reuters)

LAGOS (Reuters) â€" Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch have some new friends.

Meet Zobi, a yam-eating taxi driver, and Kami, a talkative five-year-old living with HIV.

"Sesame Street," the U.S. show which started 40 years ago on state-run television as an attempt to help underprivileged children learn, hits Nigeria next month with some uniquely West African twists and renamed "Sesame Square."

Funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and U.S. President Barack Obama's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the Nigerian take on the hit series remains true to its educational roots.

"When we did the pilot, our focus was orphaned and vulnerable children and still is to a certain extent," said Ayobisi Osuntusa, head of educational outreach for the Sesame Workshop, the non-profit organization behind Sesame Street.

In one episode, children on the set make fun of Zobi, an ageless blue muppet, as he gets wrapped up in a mosquito net. There's a serious message behind the silliness -- a child dies of malaria every 30 seconds in Africa and encouraging kids to sleep under a net is one of the best ways to save lives.

Kami, a talkative yellow ball of fur, is an orphan whose mother died of AIDS. Her stories teach children not only about blood safety, but about acceptance of those living with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes AIDS.

"A lot of the advocacy that is going on is among adults," said Agatha Nkiruka David, a consultant at the Nigerian Institute of Medical Research in Lagos who runs a social club for HIV positive teenagers.

"So I think Sesame Street, targeted at children, will be very effective, especially if children come home and tell their parents that it's okay to play with HIV positive children."

Despondency is frequent among children living with HIV in Africa's most populous nation.

Infected orphans are rarely adopted by family members, despite Nigeria's traditionally strong family values, and once they reach their pre-teens, even orphanages rarely take them in.

It is estimated that there are over two million HIV positive children in Nigeria.

"A child in the studio was talking to Kami ... 'I love you Kami,' she said, and continued to chat. We all stopped and I thought, this is amazing," said Yemisi Ilo, executive producer of Sesame Square.

Sesame Street, with its puppet-like characters the Muppets, has spread across more than 140 countries over the past four decades -- from Rue Sesame in France, to Jalan Sesama in Indonesia and Takalani Sesame in South Africa.

Only around a quarter of households in Nigeria, a country of 150 million people, have televisions, limiting the reach of Sesame Square. But the Sesame Workshop is developing learning materials for more than 90,000 children and is looking into using radios and mobile phones to help spread its message.

"We've partnered with local NGOs in some states. They have TVs, generators and DVD players and they go around organizing screenings after school," said Osuntusa, adding the Workshop was looking for corporate sponsors to expand the program.

Sesame Street taught generations of kids around the world their ABCs and 123s. Now, the makers of Sesame Square hope it can teach Nigerian children even more.

"There were a lot of issues that were subliminally ingrained into us when we used to watch Sesame Street as kids," said Ilo.

"We were learning, but we didn't know it at the time."

(Editing by Nick Tattersall and Paul Casciato)

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Thursday, September 16, 2010

'Lone Star': 1 con man doubles down with 2 women (AP)

NEW YORK â€" It's so nice to meet up with the stars of "Lone Star" for an interview. James Wolk, Adrianne Palicki and Eloise Mumford are three of the sexiest, most eye-appealing actors around, on or off their new Fox melodrama (which premieres Monday at 9 p.m. EDT).

But catching them together is also disconcerting. On the show, Wolk plays a scam artist living a double life. He's the devoted husband of Palicki's character, the wealthy daughter of a Houston oil baron. At the same time, he's the perfect boyfriend living with the character played by Mumford, a down-to-Earth sweetie-pie in working-class Midland 500 miles away.

In short, these two women shouldn't be in the same room. Neither woman â€" Cat or Lindsay â€" has a clue the other even exists. Yet here they are (or, anyway, the women who portray them), palling around like BFFs with each other as well as the man their characters unwittingly share.

"From the first minute that we met each other, Adrianne and I got along incredibly well," says Mumford. "All the producers said, 'No, no, no! You CAN'T be friends!'"

"It's one of the best things about being on location together, and I ran into this with 'Friday Night Lights,'" says Palicki, now back in Texas for "Lone Star" after several years as Tyra Collette, the girl from the wrong side of the tracks, when she was shooting "Lights" in Austin.

"On location," she says, "you develop friendships with your cast mates, because those are the only people you know."

Between them sits Wolk, who, wearing boyish charm as lightly as a feather, suggests a twentysomething version of George Clooney. He is poised to be the season's breakout heartthrob, a forecast that, when mentioned to him, triggers a dismissive, charming chuckle. He'd rather talk about "Lone Star."

"It's about a con man raised in a world of lies and deceit by his father to be the world's BEST con man," Wolk says. "His greatest asset is his ability to connect with people and affect people, and that's also his greatest flaw: He ends up falling in love with his marks â€" THESE two marks," says Wolk as he indicates the ladies flanking him.

"Lone Star" would be worth watching as a delicious prime-time soap. But it's more. The actors speak of it as "Dallas" meets "Friday Night Lights."

"It has gloss," says Palicki, "but it also has depth."

And no easy answers for Bob Allen, the character Wolk plays.

Raised on the run by a ruthless grifter dad, he not only loves his two women deeply, he also loves the identities they let him reflect: Cat's polish, sophistication and ambition; Lindsay's small-town wholesomeness and steadfast values.

"They represent both sides of the American dream, filling two voids inside him," says Wolk. "He is so in love with the worlds that they exist in, that he can't let them go. If he says good bye to either of them, he loses her world as well as her. He can't do that."

But he longs somehow to escape the con game. He wants to go legit. Hired into the oil empire built by his father-in-law (Jon Voight), he wants to be a businessman for real.

"What do you know about 'real'?" sneers his flimflammer dad (David Keith). "This is a house of cards. You don't get to LIVE in it!"

Torn between two worlds, two father figures and two women, Robert must connive to stay true to his dual identities.

"It's gonna be fun when cracks start to show," Mumford says slyly. "These are both smart women, and I think they're going to start to figure it out. Then it's gonna get interesting."

Mumford, Palicki and Wolk laugh as they describe a scene they dreamed up together. It might someday appear in the series, or not, but it's easy to picture: Cat and Lindsay just happen to cross paths in a grocery store. Maybe at the dairy case. Their eyes meet. They feel a mutual connection. Who knows what this could lead to? A breathless pause. Then, without a word, they part, each wheeling away her grocery cart.

One thing is clear: Robert is walking a tightrope. He must stay on guard to protect his cover, and his relationships.

"It's heartbreaking when I think about it," says Mumford. "He has a greater purpose than just trying to get money or success: It's a love story."

"A really messed-up love story," Palicki chimes in.

"He's conning in the name of love," Wolk sums up. "I know that sounds crazy, but I think that's what the audience has to believe, or you're not gonna like him. Or like the show."

Good thing the show is so likable.

___

Fox is owned by News Corp.

___

Online:

http://www.fox.com

___

EDITOR'S NOTE â€" Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org

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Hollywood weighs in on fat people (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) â€" Forget about all those scary-skinny stars -- fat is making a comeback in Hollywood.

Like ABC's "The Bachelor," which spawned a spate of reality dating shows, NBC's "The Biggest Loser" has hatched a ton of weight-loss look-alikes. There's "Celebrity Fit Club" on VH1, "Too Fat for Fifteen: Fighting Back" on Style, "Obese" and "Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution" on ABC and "Thintervention" on Bravo. All feature contestants sweating, whining, quitting and reflecting.

And in a nod to "The Honeymooners," "Roseanne" and more recently "The King of Queens," the new TV season brings us "Mike & Molly," a Chuck Lorre sitcom on CBS that features plus-size stars Melissa McCarthy and Billy Gardell as regular (read overweight) people who meet at an Overeaters Anonymous meeting.

"Nobody cannibalizes better than Hollywood," said J.D. Roth, co-creator of "Biggest Loser" who also produces "Obese" and is prepping "What's Eating You" for E! "As soon as something is working, there has to be 40 of them immediately. More is better."

"Thintervention," a recent entry into the weight-loss sweepstakes, garnered a respectable 1.2 million viewers in its premiere Monday. The show stars Jackie Warner, the high-powered fitness trainer from another Bravo show, "Workout." Like "Biggest Loser," "Thintervention" follows real folks who work out with Warner and attempt to lose 25-100 pounds.

"I think all these weight-loss shows are great," Warner said. "I love (Oxygen's) 'Dance Your Ass Off.' Those people have such joy in what they're doing. I think America has to have the information. I can't believe how confused America is about weight loss."

Dave Ehlers, managing director of branded-entertainment outfit ZenithOptimedia, said all the weight-loss shows provide "excellent vehicles" for advertisers targeting individuals who seek a healthier lifestyle.

Roth said "Biggest Loser" proved a hard sell at first.

"I had people say that fat people aren't attractive and that nobody wants to see fat people on television," he said. "I said, 'Well, do you know anyone who is fat?' 'Oh yeah,' they said, 'my mother is, my sister and brother is.' So, I told them that if everyone in this room knows someone who's in that situation, isn't that your audience?"

Roth knew what he was talking about. The National Center for Disease Control reports that 17% of kids and 34% of adults in the U.S. are overweight.

Despite the glut of similar fare, the popularity of "Biggest Loser" hasn't waned, and the show holds up when facing such ratings juggernauts as "American Idol" and "So You Think You Can Dance." The eighth cycle premiered with 10.4 million viewers, its best performance to date.

"I do think that more and more people are focusing on weight as an issue and walls are being torn down; ratings have something to do with it," said Chad Bennett, vp brand development and production for "Biggest Loser" producer Reveille.

"Too Fat for Fifteen," which focuses on overweight teenagers, has attracted an average of 215,000 viewers, 50% more than Style's primetime average. The show stems from a documentary the cable network ran last year about Georgia Davis, dubbed "Britain's fattest teenager," and her attempt to shed serious pounds at Wellspring Academy in North Carolina.

"The way we tell these stories about real kids who have these weight issues is realistic. You're not going to see an immediate result," said Katie Buchanan, vp programing at Style. "The viewers can relate to the length of the journey and the highs and lows. Our network is all about transformation."

McCarthy, who spent 10 years on "Gilmore Girls," said she signed on for "Mike & Molly" because she was intrigued by the script's humor and its realism.

"It flips it back to the shows I grew up with like 'All in the Family' and 'Barney Miller' that all had people that looked like you," she said. "Everything wasn't so bionic. I liked this script because it allowed you to lose yourself in that world, because it was so real. Everybody didn't have a brand-new coat everyday or talk about having no money and walk in with a brand-new Mark Jacobs bag."

Mark Roberts, who executive produces "Mike & Molly" with Lorre, said the show is not necessarily about two overweight people -- it's about an ordinary couple who fall in love and the obstacles they confront each day.

"I wanted to do something with real people," he said. "People in most sitcoms live very unrealistic lives. Back in the days of Norman Lear, you had real people on television. We're hoping that real people with real issues are going to come back in style."

Despite the plethora of these shows, make no mistake: In Hollywood, thin always will be in.

"People in the movie business still want actresses who are idealized versions of women," veteran casting director Jane Jenkins said. "I think that adage that you can never be too rich or too thin still applies in Hollywood. The plus-size actress today would be a size 6 or a size 8."

Said Warner: "It's heart-breaking because everyone ends up succumbing to this overly thin image. The Kardashians were these voluptuous, curvy sisters who ended up succumbing to the image and losing weight."

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

'60 Minutes' launching companion website (AP)

NEW YORK â€" "60 Minutes" is launching a companion website that will offer additional details from its correspondents each week about stories that appear on the CBS broadcast.

The site is 60minutesovertime.com and will appear on Sept. 26, the night the broadcast begins its 43rd season on the air. Each week new content will appear online at the same time the broadcast airs.

CBS said Wednesday the material wouldn't be outtakes, but fully-produced stories that will explore new angles or expand upon ideas that were only talked about for a short time on the air.

For example, correspondent Steve Kroft interviews New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees for the first show, and they walk down Bourbon Street together. The website will have a more expanded look at where they went during that segment, said Jeff Fager, "60 Minutes" executive producer.

"It's an opportunity for our team to tell stories about their stories," Fager said.

It's not happening immediately, but there are plans to make "60 Minutes" correspondents available to talk about their stories with viewers through the website, said Bill Owens, the broadcast's executive editor, who will oversee content. He said "60 Minutes" is also talking with YouTube about starting a new channel there devoted to the broadcast.

The site is a separate entity from the current "60 Minutes" website, where people can click on video of stories that have aired.

Besides the look behind the scenes at each week's episode, producers say they will draw from archival material to add context to current news stories. For instance, 60minutesovertime.com would have posted excerpts from Mike Wallace's interview with Roger Clemens about steroids on the day the former pitcher was indicted recently, Fager said.

Besides the Brees profile, other stories in the works for this season's broadcast include a Scott Pelley look at the controversy over an Islamic Center near New York's ground zero, and a Lara Logan story on the war in Afghanistan, Fager said.

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