Archive: October 2009 (31-40 of 69)

Oct 19 2009 11:59 AM ET

Elisabeth Hasselbeck returns to 'The View,' opines on Balloon Boy and Fox News Channel: 'This is what we deserved'

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Welcome back, Elisabeth Hasselbeck. Returning from maternity leave, Hasselbeck came to the View table this morning bursting with opinions for Monday’s all-”Hot Topics” day.

On the Balloon Boy hoax: “This is what we deserved,” she said, making two points: that the public craving for reality TV has both inspired people to do stunts like this to gain TV fame, and that extensive coverage of stunts like this has infected news coverage. Pretty sensible, yes?

(I did like the way Whoopi introduced footage of Balloon Dad as being from “something called Wife Swap.” It’s great that Whoopi, whose orneriness I’m warming to more and more, doesn’t seem to know or care  this is an ABC show; even more glad that she doesn’t watch that junk.)

On the Obama administration’s recent skirmishes with the Fox News Channel, Elisabeth said: “Isn’t that edging toward an attempt at censorship… when our President asks us not to watch a certain channel?” Um, no — that’s not what happened, Elisabeth.

She defended Rush Limbaugh’s racially insensitive remarks by saying Jennifer Lopez and the Black Eyed Peas’ Fergie have also made racially offensive remarks. Two wrongs don’t make a… Plus, Lopez and Fergie don’t have daily radio platforms for their opinions or a track record for offensiveness.

In closing, she shared with us that she’s now “practicing strict birth-control methods.” Ah, that’s more like it!

All in all, a fine return to form for the mighty Hasselbeck. Did you watch?

Oh, and View-finders, feel free to follow me on Twitter.

Oct 18 2009 11:04 PM ET

'Desperate Housewives': Is it too soon to say Drea de Matteo's storyline isn't working?

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Drea-Matteo-Housewives_lI don’t think so.

With all the crazy stuff going on in Desperate Housewives this season — personally, I could just watch Dana Delany go wacko and squabble with anyone in sight for about half an hour every week — the subplot about Drea de Matteo’s Angie, her phony-baloney husband (I like Jeffrey Nordling, but… ), their boring son Danny, and her scar just doesn’t seem to add up to anything promising, a month into the new season now.

I know there were other things to dislike about this week’s episode, chief among them the jokes about Lynette’s pregnancy-swelled breasts, twin plot devices that got repetitive and obvious fast.

But even with the final-moments reveal that Nordling’s character is doing something very naughty, this new-neighbor plot still feels too similar to the deadly Betty Applewhite story-arc (I feel badly for Alfre Woodard, now stuck co-starring on the seemingly-doomed Three Rivers opposite Housewives on CBS!). Angie, like Betty, just isn’t interacting enough with the other star-women, and the character is positioned as a permanent outsider.

Maybe you disagree? Have you figured out what the significance of Angie’s scar is? What did you think of the final moments of this week’s episode with the revelation about Nordling’s character? Are you caring about these people?

Oh, and feel free to follow me on Twitter.

Oct 18 2009 10:52 AM ET

'Monty Python: Almost The Truth': All the fun, all the hatred, all the naughty bits, plus alcoholism, starting tonight

Monty Python: Almost The Truth (The Lawyer’s Cut) begins a six-night run this evening on IFC, and if you’ve even so much as giggled a bit at a Monty Python sketch, you really have to commit to all six hours.

I started watching expecting to scan through the stuff that’s usually boring in these sorts of documentaries — the trudge through everyone’s childhood; the descent into repetition and post-Python career attempts. Instead, I was enthralled from the opening moments onward, amazed by the frankness of nearly everyone involved.

As the Beatles of comedy, John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Eric Idle, Michael Palin, Terry Jones, and Terry Gilliam  spent the 1970s spinning out a classic TV show, some uneven but lumpily brilliant movies, and endured a couple of break-ups and one long, slow death. (Cleese, who wrote much of his Monty Python’s Flying Circus material with Chapman, is strikingly honest about the awfulness of Chapman’s alcoholism and specific in his bitterness that the others never acknowledged what a difficult time Chapman put him through.)

Aside from the fact that much of the material shown here — their greatest hits — remains funny, there are other extraordinary elements. You must see the electric debate two of the Pythons had on British television with Malcolm Muggeridge and a Church of England bishop over the irreligious elements in Monty Python’s Life of Brian. You’ll want to hear how “the two Terrys” — Jones and Gilliam — tried to co-direct their movies and how each of them, in separate interviews, tries to justify his bad behavior.

Warts and all, joy and all, Almost The Truth does indeed seem to be very near the truth.

Watch it and tell me what you think, please.

And feel free to follow me on Twitter.

Oct 18 2009 08:00 AM ET

'Saturday Night Live': Hosted by Gerard Butler and beer. Actually, mostly just by the beer.

Filed under: News and tagged: , , ,

It was a great night to be a beer-drinker or the kind of person who always loved watching the bloopers at the end of Smokey and the Bandit movies. Anheuser-Busch sponsored most of Saturday Night Live this week, to promote its Bud Light Golden Wheat brand. The beer company also introduced never-before-seen dress rehearsal outtakes from earlier SNL seasons — the company was as much the host of the show as Gerard Butler was. If you’d been yearning to see a 1998 clip of Will Ferrell laughing while sitting on a donkey, this was your week.

The rest of the time, you probably needed to drink a lot of the sponsor’s product to find much else that was funny. The weekly cold-open attempted to find something funny about President Obama resulted in Dwayne Johnson making a return cameo as The Rock Obama, hulkingly asking things like, “Why health care bill no have public option?”

Following the bad-luck pattern SNL has followed this season in booking hosts with poorly-received movies opening the same weekend (Megan Fox, Drew Barrymore), Butler was a smiling, friendly presence but he wasn’t used well. As with Fox and Barrymore, Butler’s current product wasn’t mentioned. Instead, we got a 300 parody in which all the soldiers were gay with a drawn-out “don’t ask, don’t tell” punchline. The sketch wasn’t funny — especially since “Weekend Update” had made at least two other “don’t ask, don’t tell” jokes preceding it.

Butler had to compete for screen time not only with Bud Light, but also with Kristen Wiig, who seemed to be everywhere. Sketches would begin with one premise — say, Butler as an ad-agency rep coming up with ideas about how to make cottage cheese sexy — only to have Wiig enter and take over the sketch doing one of her 25 interchangeable nervously-awkward characters. I’m not saying Wiig isn’t talented; it’s just that she’s being stretched too thin. Couldn’t Abby Elliott, Jenny Slate, or Nasim Pedrad have been used more prominently to give her (and them) a break?

The night’s real missed opportunity, though, was a fake BET talk-show called “What Up With That?” hosted by Kenan Thompson as an R&B-crooning host. His guests included Bill Hader as Lindsey Buckingham and James Franco as James Franco. But those two said not a word: The joke was that Thompson’s character sang and talked so much, time ran out. A red jump-suited Jason Sudeikis did some highly amusing dancing in the background, but — well, all I can say is, I was really looking forward to seeing Hader do his Buckingham impersonation. Too bad…

Oh, I almost forgot: I liked Seth Meyers’ “Update” joke about the new cast of Celebrity Apprentice reducing the meaning of “celebrity” to “mammal.” And I always laugh at Hader as the alien sportscaster, which he did early in the show.

Musical guest Shakira shook various parts of her body with great vigor. Twice.

What did you laugh at on the show this week? Did SNL succeed in making you want to buy beer?

And I think I’m federally mandated by law to say you can follow me on Twitter.

Oct 16 2009 12:13 PM ET

'Law & Order' tonight: A Jon & Kate-hate-crime, plus a swipe at the Octomom: Finally, must-see-TV returns to NBC!

The pre-publicity for tonight’s excellent episode of Law & Order, “Reality Bites,” suggested that it was going to be a ripped-from-the-ratings takedown of Jon & Kate Plus Eight. But, now in its 20th season, L&O is a sly old dog, and it’s taking nips at more than just the Gosselins. READ FULL STORY »

Oct 16 2009 09:37 AM ET

'Captain Planet': Ted Turner says the world needs him now more than ever!

Filed under: News and tagged: , ,

So says CNN inventor Ted Turner. Of course, Turner also co-created the 1990-1993 cartoon series Captain Planet and the Planeteers, combining superheroes with ecology themes.

In a wide-ranging chat with Bloomberg.com yesterday, the 70 year-old former owner of CNN said he’d like “CNN to report to me again and the Cartoon Network… I’d put Captain Planet on [again] so kids could see the environmental hero instead of Superman.”

Ah, Captain Planet. That name made me nostalgic for a crappily-animated but good-hearted cartoon I have ridiculously fond feelings for. Before you look at this clip, quick: Can you name the five young “planeteers” and their powers, who combine to form Captain Planet?

Remember: The power is yours!

Oct 16 2009 07:52 AM ET

'30 Rock': Why does a hilarious show have to beg for viewers as though it had a case of... arrested development?

UPDATED WITH RATINGS BELOW: “I want to welcome you to Season Four.” With that semi-greeting — Alec Baldwin’s Jack was referring to the restaurant to which he’d brought his most treasured employees, to sample a troubled-economy pleasure, the Cheesy-Blaster — 30 Rock took off last night with a breathlessly daffy edition.

It had all the elements you want in a Rock: Misperceived motives (Liz and Pete’s attempts to find a new cast member misconstrued as an office love affair by everyone including Pete’s all-too-understanding wife); Tracy Jordan doing something absurdist ridiculous (in this case, trying to get back in touch with his inner poor-man; this, from a man who has to ask his assistant-pals which elevator he’s not afraid of), and Jack READ FULL STORY »

Oct 15 2009 11:11 PM ET

'Fringe': Olivia solves an anagram, Peter recites a mantra, and Walter feeds his head

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In some ways, this was one of the less-distinctive, more X-Files-ish episodes of Fringe on Thursday night. The core case investigated by Olivia, Peter, and Walter involved people committing violent acts — they saw everyone around them as demons, and lashed out at the creatures (who were just innocent bystanders).

But as usual, there was another narrative layer at work here, a couple of them, in fact. One involved Olivia: She was still mourning the death of Charlie — or rather, her killing of “Charlie,” the shape-shifted version of her friend and colleague. She received more helpful, if obtuse, advice from the poker-faced bowling-alley savant Sam Weiss.

The other involved Walter’s past experiments mingled with his early parenting of Peter. (Peter told us that when he was a kid plagued by nightmares, Walter taught him an effective mantra: “Please don’t dream tonight.”)

The essence of the episode circled back to Walter’s past. SPOILER ALERT. The violent READ FULL STORY »

Oct 14 2009 10:02 PM ET

'Glee': Unwanted pregnancy?

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I’ve heaped my share of praise upon Glee, and have argued with a few people I’ve encountered who’ve started whining that the show is overrated. It’s not: It’s fresh, it’s funny, and if you watched tonight, you saw that it knows who its most valuable player is. (If you haven’t watched this week’s Glee yet, spoilers ahead, beware.)

READ FULL STORY »

Oct 14 2009 11:13 AM ET

'Mad Men': Fired writer Kater Gordon co-writes this week's episode

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This Sunday’s episode of Mad Men is called “The Color Blue.” Its writing credit goes to “Kater Gordon and Matthew Weiner.” Yes, the same Kater Gordon who was fired from the show soon after winning an Emmy.

Could this be the episode during which Weiner decided, as he put it in his statement to the press, “Matt has reluctantly decided that their relationship has reached its full potential”?

I’m always psyched for a new Mad Men; this only increases my interest for this coming Sunday. That, and whether Sal will ever make it out of that park we left him in last week with his dignity intact…

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