Archive for category Tune In Info

The CW Announces “One Tree Hill” Series Finale and More!

 

Although we feared believed that “One Tree Hill” would somehow un-cancel itself and that The CW would have its producers declare that the show will air until the end of time, that is not to be. The series that began its long life on The (late) WB will air a two-hour episode, its very last one, on April 4.

The fifth network also revealed season finale dates for the rest of its primetime series, in addition to announcing that “The L.A. Complex,” a Canadian soap, is joining its schedule a week after the season (and possibly series) finale of “Ringer.” “The L.A. Complex” makes its CW debut at 9pm Tuesday, April 24.

The full list of The CW’s season and series finales follows:

 

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Time to Submit to “Spartacus”!

 

One great episode.

That’s really all it takes for a veteran TV series to convert a non-believer — one  solidly constructed, brilliantly executed episode that illuminates everything that makes it extraordinary. Every television lover has such a TV chapter in his or her back pocket, ready to share with anyone who questions whether the show they adore is worth watching.

This week’s episode of “Spartacus: Vengeance,” titled “Libertus,” may be one of those hours. At the very least, it’s great Friday night viewing for a series that most people still have a very hard time taking seriously. Yes,  it is action heavy… bordering on bonkers, even. Everything that made people initially roll their eyes at the period action drama is in full effect, including slo-mo CG-animated blood spurts and gore, fairly explicit soft-core sex, and nudity. Oh, the nudity.  (As if we were expecting anything different. The show is in its second season. No reason to pull back on the reins now!)

But dedicated viewers are much more passionate about the engine that makes “Vengeance” so entrancing: poetic dialogue as grimy and sharp as the edge of a fighter’s blade, multi-layered political machinations and scheming, operatic romance, and of course, brutally acrobatic fight sequences. Tonight’s episode puts a shine on all of that, making it one of the most interesting hours of the series thus far.

The centerpiece of “Libertus” marries the two “Spartacus” series (“Spartacus” and its prequel, “Gods of the Arena“) in one gruesome nail-biter of a battle, one fans likely figured was coming since the prequel’s end: a face-off between Oenomaus (Peter Mensah) and Gannicus (Dustin Clare). The two characters have an agonizing back story, but have earned the viewer’s sympathy…meaning regardless of which gladiator comes out victorious, anyone emotionally tied to this series loses.

That brings us to a point worth acknowledging – “Spartacus” is highly serialized, which means that there will be subplots that new viewers won’t fully understand, and characters whose actions only become clearer upon viewing previous episodes. But that’s the point: “Libertus” make your want to see more episodes in order to understand all of the implications of what happen within its hour, which is what a great slice of television should do.

Should you find yourself hungry for more “Spartacus: Vengeance” after “Libertus” premieres at 10pm, don’t worry. Starz is airing a marathon of the first five season two episodes starting at 9pm ET/PT on Saturday, February 25.  Episodic stills can be viewed here. And for a fantastic distillation of why “Spartacus” is like “Downton Abbey” (you’d be surprised!) read this excellent piece by  Maureen Ryan.

 

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Rejoice, Human Beings! “Community” Has a Return Date

Allaying any remaining fears that “Community” might be off the air permanently, executive producer and creator Dan Harmon surprised his Twitter followers on Tuesday afternoon by revealing the fiercely beloved but frustratingly low-rated comedy’s return date.

“What you call 8:00, we call home,” Harmon tweeted, revealing that the show will return to NBC’s primetime schedule on Thursday, March 15th.

“Community” has not aired an original episode since December 8, 2011. Fans rebelled when NBC left the comedy off of its midseason schedule, in favor of promoting freshmen sitcoms “Whitney” and “Are You There, Chelsea?“  While those series moved to Wednesday nights, NBC bumped another first-year sitcom, “Up All Night,” to Thursdays. To make room for the return of “30 Rock,” “Community” was temporarily shelved.

As of March 15, according to a network press release, NBC’s Thursday night comedy line up will lead off with “Community,” followed by “30 Rock” at 8:30pm, “The Office” at 9pm and “Up All Night” at 9:30pm. “Parks and Recreation”  will return on Thursday, April 19 at 9:30pm once “Up All Night” has ended its first season.

“Community’s” return to 8pm Thursday nights may come as a bit of a surprise to those who have been closely following news updates during its absence from the airwaves. Only last month, NBC entertainment president Robert Greenblatt told reporters that he doubted it would return in the kick-off timeslot for NBC’s valuable comedy block.

“I don’t know if it makes sense to ask it to start off the night again,” Greenblatt said then, “but, you know, we have a really tight schedule with comedies, and there’s not a lot of places to put comedies.”

Given that “Community’s” main comedy competition, “The Big Bang Theory,” has been besting even ratings juggernaut “American Idol” in the show’s target demo, however, the powers that be must have concluded that the Greendale study group certainly could not perform any worse at 8pm than “30 Rock” has.

To which one imagines our beloved Dean Pelton would say, “Here’s to lowered but attainable expectations!”

We’re just happy to have Jeff, Abed, Britta, Shirley, Annie, Troy, Pierce, Chang, and the rest of Greendale’s student body back on our televisions. Pop POP!

 

 

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Return of “The Walking Dead”: A Chat with Showrunner Glen Mazzara

 

AMC’s “The Walking Dead” returns tonight at 9 pm with a lot more on the line than the simple question of whether Rick and his group will be able to stay on Hershel’s farm.

There’s the question of how much of a ratings hit the show might take, considering its long midwinter hiatus. AMC split the second season into two parts, and tonight’s episode, “Nebraska,” will be the first new hour that has aired since November 27. The show’s extended absence from the schedule may be less of a concern than the deep divide among fans about the first half of the second season’s storyline. Read a few critical analyses and fan posts about the survivors’ extended camp-out on a farm run by a veterinarian with a no-kill policy towards his zombified kin, and it becomes apparent that people are either loving season two or loathing it.

Maintaining a high level of fan loyalty through the six remaining episodes won’t just be a test for AMC. It’s also a trial for Glen Mazzara, the executive producer who assumed showrunner duties on the series after executive producer Frank Darabont was fired. From the moment he took the reins, Mazzara has been in a tough spot,  made tougher recently when details about Darabont’s scrapped  Black Hawk Down-inspired prequel episode (starring “Being Human‘s” Sam Witwer) was revealed in various media reports.

Mazzara, whose previous producer credits include FX’s widely-acclaimed drama “The Shield” as well as lower-rated titles such as “Hawthorne” and “Crash,” seems to be taking it all in stride. “I was just telling someone, this is the first time I’m working on a show that people are actually watching,” Mazzara joked. “So I feel very lucky.”

During the recent Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour, IMDb’s TV Editor had a conversation with Mazzara about where the second half of “The Walking Dead” is headed creatively, during which he revealed some details about upcoming episodes and discussed how a lesson that he learned in the writer’s room for “The Shield” will influence the show’s pacing from this point on.

My first question is a point of clarification: How much creative input did you have in the first seven episodes of the second season?

A tremendous amount of creative input. This is a Darabont question, I guess? I wrote an episode during the first season, and I was brought on before any of the other writers. I helped hire them. I was Frank’s number two. But  we broke these stories, we were locked in a room for weeks and developed these stories.

When things went down with Frank and I was asked to become the showrunner, we were shooting… I think it was our fourth episode. Our fifth episode came out. Our sixth episode I made changes to — just things where, you know, that script needed a pass. The (midseason) finale was written while Frank was there, but he had never given notes on that. That was a script that I polished and put into production. And then these episodes that are coming out are episodes that I broke with the writers. So I think that’s pretty clean.

But I will say, I went back and I had to re-cut these episodes. I cut these episodes, I’m responsible for all of the editing, post-work, music, I was responsible for all of the usual showrunner duties. So that was a tremendous amount of influence.

… Listen, I respect Frank and I’m happy that he wanted me as his number two. …I wouldn’t say we were partners, but it was a collaborative effort. Frank collaborated with us. But there came a point where the material was drying up in the pipeline, so I had to get in and do some polishing. That’s just normal business. But I will say that the overall arc of, a girl goes missing and then she’s in the barn, that was developed under Frank. The overall arc of the back half of the season, that’s all mine.

I will say that, (regarding) the script for the midseason finale, I think I was lucky that we had a great writer and a great director on that episode. That was sort of me coming out of the gate. Does that make sense?

It makes perfect sense.

What I didn’t want to do was my version of a Frank Darabont show. I wanted to follow, and I wanted to honor the world that he’s created because that’s a world that I love. But I didn’t feel an obligation to try to become Frank Darabont. That isn’t fair to Frank and it isn’t fair to me.

…The voice of the show became different with the midseason premiere. Did you see it yet? That’s my voice.

There are a number of articles and blog posts that have voiced strong opinions about this season. There are people who are kind to it, and there are a number of people who haven’t been so kind.

Well, what are your thoughts?

I enjoy the show. There was never a week that I wasn’t looking forward to a new episode. But I do think there were a number of issues that just seemed to be endlessly cycling and never quite resolved, so that the characters couldn’t move on. I don’t think the issue was being at the farm – that, for me, was not a problem. I know for some people it felt like a bottle episode and their thoughts were along the lines of, “Obviously, it was because the budget was cut.”

That is not accurate.

Yes… for me, there were some characters that were developed quite a bit. I enjoyed Daryl’s character development. But the love triangle between Lori, Rick and Shane… there became a point at which the characters seemed very static, there was very little development or evidence that they were moving forward.

Fine. Okay.  So how did you feel after watching the midseason premiere?

The thought that went through my head was, “OK, Rick has put his hat back on. Things are going to change now. Let’s go.”

That’s right. I think Rick got a little lost in the first few episodes. Since I have become showrunner, I have pushed Rick front and center. You can see that in the midseason finale. Rick is the guy who steps forward and puts the bullet into Sophia. Rick’s humanity is his flaw. And Rick is now very much the central character, as he should be, of “The Walking Dead.” And he’s a more compelling character, I think.

There’s a very, very interesting scene, written by Evan Reilly, coming up.

The scene in the bar? There’s a lot of tension there.

Yes. I’m very proud of that scene. Evan Reilly wrote that scene, and Clark Johnson directed it. I think that we are doing a much better job in the second half of the season of progressing the story. There’s a very, very interesting scene in the next episode, at the end of the next episode, between Rick and Lori. All of a sudden you are seeing new sides of characters that you weren’t seeing before, and that’s something that’s coming out in the back half of this season.

I do agree that we can push deeper into our characters, and that’s what we do. But we also amp up the tension. We amp up the action. We amp up the zombies. Everything is on full boil.  Again, it’s the back half of the season. So over the course of 13 episodes, you’re going to mark things out.  I’m lucky in that I’ve got all the characters established, so we can push things a little bit. I have a good example. You want an example?

Please.

There’s a scene in an episode that you already saw, where Lori confesses the affair (with Shane) to Rick. That is something Frank did not want to do. He did not want that to come out. I felt that that was important to progress the personal stories as well as the plot of finding Sophia.

One of my early jobs was “The Shield.” I did “The Shield” for a long time. We had a rule on “The Shield”: “Move it up. Move it up, burn the bridge right now, we’ll figure out how to get across the river later.” That is very much the motto I am using for “The Walking Dead” from now on. So if people felt like we were stalling, I’ll give it to you. But no more stalls.

In the midseason premiere, I think it’s denser storytelling. And yet, there’s not a lot of zombie stuff. It’s all character stuff.

But people do want the zombies, you know.
I love the zombie stuff! You know what? If you think about it, it’s only been a few hours after the barn…

And there are other survivors to contend with, too.

Yes. Couple of things. One is, the farm is no longer safe. The outside world will come crashing in. Two, the midseason premiere is taking place in a few hours after a HUGE zombie massacre. If we have another HUGE zombie massacre right then and there, it’s not going to feel real. It’s not going to feel plausible. It’s going to feel like a video game.

What’s interesting about this show is, if we do zombie attacks, some people say, “Ugh, it’s just the zombie attack of the week.” When we don’t do zombies, people say, “Where are the zombies?!” You can’t win!

(laughs)

But we’re trying. I’m very proud of the (midseason premiere). That episode is indicative of the type of storytelling  I want to do in the back half of the season, and I really think our best material is in these next six episodes.

Looking forward to it. Please develop T-Dog more.

You know what? I’ll tell you the truth: T-Dog is a character that has suffered because there are so many other characters. He has some great stuff coming up, some really great scenes. I think IronE Singleton did a terrific job, and it’s a matter of making room for him. That’s a character, if you really look at him, that character’s on borrowed time because he’s not tied into any major story. And yet, he keeps earning his place. T-Dog just gets through it, he’s becoming very interesting.

Sometimes those minor characters are on a slow burn. The Ronnie character was like that in “The Shield.” …We’re learning how to write for that character.

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Review: A Strong Start for “Touch”

 

The “Work Its” of the world notwithstanding, sometimes midseason is the perfect launching territory for a series too unique to fit on a fall schedule, and too full of potential to be submerged in a sea of September competition.  “Touch,” a new drama starring Kiefer Sutherland, represents a perfect example of this idea.  While we’ll never know if  “Touch” would have pulled away from fall’s freshman pack, its preview airing tonight at 9pm ET/PT on Fox ensures this latest series from “Heroes” creator Tim Kring  has a better-than-decent chance of getting the attention it deserves.

Certainly a portion of “24‘s” faithful will tune in to see Sutherland’s return to series television…  and as it turns out, 9/11 has a significant role in “Touch’s” pilot.   But viewers searching for shades of Jack Bauer won’t find much of him in Martin Bohm, a widower and single father struggling to raise his 11-year-old son Jake (David Mazouz) while still mourning a wife who died in the collapse of the Twin Towers. Bohm is stubborn and driven, but Sutherland’s portrayal grants him a level of fatigue and frailty his action hero rarely (if ever) displayed.

What has Bohm so emotionally frayed is Jake’s condition, which we discover has been incorrectly diagnosed as autism.  Jake has an obsession with numeric sequences and mobile phones, and even touching him makes him react with such force that people will have to “peel him off the ceiling,” his father explains.  The kid also has a habit of scampering up cell phone towers, and one climb too many draws the attention of  well-meaning social worker Clea Hopkins (Guga Mbatha-Raw).  Like his father, Hopkins  is concerned that Jake’s condition has closed him off from the world as we know it.

Naturally Jake is anything but disconnected from humanity, and viewers witness this through Jake’s internal narration and other perspectives, including the stories of people around the world that the boy will never meet but nevertheless are affected by his actions. Jake’s role as a hub of universal interconnectedness – vaguely explained by a somewhat kooky expert on the phenomenon (Danny Glover) – is fascinating to watch as the quilt of plotlines reveal themselves, and ever more inspiring when each disparate story comes together in end. Rare is the pilot that manages to be uplifting without getting caught in a sticky bog of maudlin sentiment, but the first episode of “Touch” pulls off that feat.

This in no way guarantees that the series will maintain all the strengths of its pilot, or that audiences will care enough to return each week to witness Bohm and son weave ever more wondrous webs of human connection around the globe. Even if one accepts the theories and possibilities that Jake’s gift grants those around him, there comes a point at which the ripple effect of his actions must be subject to constrictions and boundaries. Lacking a concrete definition of Jake’s condition means the writers can be free to explain away all kinds of twists and U-turns in the story without rooting them in absolute plausibility.

Those who remember what “Heroes” devolved into about, oh, one and a half seasons into its four-year run know what a huge problem that could be.  To borrow from Jake’s way of seeing the universe, this is a series that demands there be a distinct pattern leading us to a specific end point. From what we have seen of Kring’s previous work, he has not demonstrated great success in mapping out his various endgames.

For the time being, it’s enough that “Touch” gets off to a a strong start, and to hope that everything that works so well in the premiere consistently connects through future episodes.

 

 

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A Chat with “Justified’s” Neal McDonough

As FX’s critically-acclaimed drama “Justified” returns for a third season, it will be very difficult for some fans to imagine the world of Harlan County, Kentucky, without its beloved and feared crime matriarch Mags Bennett. Margo Martindale‘s Emmy-winning role was so emotionally affecting that to call Mags a tough act to follow is beyond an understatement.

To meet that challenge this season, “Justified’s” executive producer Graham Yost is serving up not one, but two new crime bosses. Neal McDonough plays one of those heavies, a smooth-talking Detroit criminal named Robert Quarles. Quarles wears expensive suits and has a glaring white smile, and between that and his go-getter attitude, he is utterly frightening.

But he’s also a very different kind of villain than the ones we’re used to seeing Raylan Givens (Timothy Olyphant) face on his home turf.  Raylan knew Mags, just as he knows the reputation of the third season’s other great antagonist Ellstin Limehouse (Mykelti Williamson, who previously co-starred with McDonough in Yost’s “Boomtown“).

Limehouse, who lords over an African-American community known as Nobles Holler, has a long history in Harlan and is a hospitable man, offering barbecue to his visitors before he doles out threats. Quarles, on the other hand, is unerringly polite but uninterested in pleasantries.

We sat down with McDonough at the recent Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour to get more details about his work on this season of “Justified,”* which kicks off tonight at 10pm ET/PT on FX, and to find out about his upcoming appearances as  Timothy “Dum Dum” Dugan, one of the Marvel Universe’s better-known good guys.

(WARNING: This interview contains a minor spoiler about a subplot in an upcoming episode of “Justified.”)

IMDbTV: Your character is amazingly creepy.

McDonough: Yes,  and I didn’t realize how creepy he was until I saw the first episode the other night.  But it’s not so much that he’s creepy as much as he’s… I keep on saying this with the “Ds”: He’s despicable, he’s delectable, he’s delightful, he’s dastardly, he’s everything you would want as a character to play as a villain.

But I’m playing him as a hero. And in his mind, all of these other people are villains in the show, and I have to get rid of these bad guys.

Interesting.

The first time I introduce myself to these other actors in the show, I’ll just start giggling at them for no apparent reason. I can see, in their minds, that it puts them off, and it kind of stays with the character throughout the piece. It’s a lot of fun playing this guy.

The other thing that’s interesting about “Justified” is that, even though the story has protagonists and antagonists going at each other, in the preface to any conflict, there’s almost a Southern politeness about it. Your character is also very polite, but in a specific Northern way. Can you talk about the “carpetbagger” aspect of Quarles?

It’s great because I think that I’m the king. I graduated summa cum laude from Michigan, enjoy all of the great things – fine wines, foods – I’ve been bred really well. But I just have this horrible anger inside me, this temper and this rage that builds inside me and once in a while, it comes out. And when it does come out, it’s just deplorable.

It’s tough playing a guy like this, because I always want to infuse so much emotion into it. Before I do this horrible thing, my eyes just start to well up. There’s this really tight close-up of my face where I look really remorseful about what I’m about to do.

On that note, can you give any hints as to what’s to come for your character? (WARNING: Minor spoiler ahead!)

The things I do to this one boy in the series… I read the script and it says, “Quarles opens the door and sees pretty boy handcuffed to the head post.”  So I called (executive producer Graham Yost) immediately  and I asked, “So how pretty does this boy have to be?”  And he starts laughing. Then I asked, “Are you going to answer why this boy is here?” And he goes, “I’m not sure yet. I might not.” I said, “OK, great.”

Well, he actually did answer it and… it’s just awful.

(END SPOILER ALERT.)

Wow. You look like you feel awful about it right now.

I do! You know, when I do this I can always just say, “Well, it’s just fun, it’s entertainment.” But when I want to do it right, I really have to do it right. If you don’t have that remorse in a villain, it doesn’t work. You can’t play it like an android and not have any emotions. I think that’s what makes this role so chilling to play.

Is that something that Graham and (executive producer and author Elmore Leonard) inspired in you to do?

Graham doesn’t say boo. He’s come by the set once, maybe twice this year. He lets me just play… “In Graham I trust” has basically been my slogan for years. The stuff he wrote for me in “Boomtown” was just phenomenal, and the stuff he’s writing here is fantastic. I would love to see Graham write me another David McNorris, because I miss playing that guy…When you get to see the insides of a man’s soul, then you’ve got great television.

It seems that the villains from the first couple of seasons on this series, um, don’t come back.

Oh, I’m going end up in a slaughterhouse, or whatever, at the end of the season. I just heard, what is it called, “American Horror Story”? What a genius approach to have the whole cast gone after the first year and recast it for the second year. That’s genius, because you get to watch a whole new story. Like Graham has alluded to, if you have the same villain and he keeps staying around, he loses his shine. Even if they wanted to keep me around for another year or so, it wouldn’t make sense for the show. I don’t think they will. I think Graham is figuring out a beautiful way for my demise as we speak.

I understand that you’re going to reprise your Captain America role.

Yeah, they’re planning (to go into production for) Captain America 2 for the end of this year, because Marvel does one film at a time. So they’re going to do Thor 2 and as soon as Thor has wrapped, they’ll do Cap 2. Hopefully right after that, we’ll jump into Nick Fury because that’s the one I’m looking forward to more than anything.

Why is that?

Because it’ll be me and Sam Jackson. In the real Marvel universe, Dum Dum Dugan is Nick Fury’s right hand man.

…And  I just pray that they have a 1970s setting, because I want to see Sam Jackson with lambchops kicking people’s asses for Marvel universe. It would just be awesome. And to work with Sam would be a treat. We’ve become friendly over the years.

It sounds like you were a fan of the comic beforehand.

Absolutely.  I’m very well aware of the Marvel universe, and to be part of it is such a blessing. To go back to London and shoot there for four months, that was just a great year.

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AMC Sets Premieres for “Mad Men,” “The Killing,” Expands “The Walking Dead”

 

Confirming a statement made earlier by series star Jon Hamm, AMC has set “Mad Men‘s” long-awaited premiere date for March 25. The cable channel also expanded its season three order of “The Walking Dead” to 16 episodes, as opposed to the original 13 episode order.

“Mad Men’s” two-hour season five premiere will air at 9pm on March 25, returning to its regular timeslot at 10pm on April 1, when “The Killing” makes its two-hour season two premiere at 8pm. “The Killing” settles into its regular 9pm timeslot as of Sunday, April 8.

AMC also set a series premiere date for its first unscripted  series, Kevin Smith‘s “Comic Book Men,” slotted to follow the midseason return of “The Walking Dead” on February 12 at 9pm.  The eighth episode of “The Walking Dead’s” second season is meant to provide a strong lead-in to Smith’s six-part exploration of fanboy culture, which premieres on the same night at 10pm.

Regarding the expanded episode order for “The Walking Dead’s” third season, AMC’s head of original programming Joel Stillerman revealed that the network will likely air a split season again, dividing the 16 episodes into two blocks of eight. The network is targeting the fourth quarter of 2012 for the third season premiere.

The premiere dates were announced as part of AMC’s presentation to TV reporters attending the Television Critics Association’s Winter Press Tour in California.

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The Golden Globes: Ricky Gervais Hosts, and We’re Covering Every Moment!

Celebrities plus alcohol often equals loose speeches and wacky behavior. Garnish that cocktail with the brash, unmuzzled comic sensibility of Ricky Gervais, and what do you get?

Another Golden Globes telecast destined to have tongues wagging on Monday morning.

The British comedian is back for a third round of hosting The 69th Annual Golden Globes,  airing live on NBC starting at 8pmET/5pm PT, and he’s already locked, loaded and ready to take aim at certain, um, subjects.

“What’s the worst that can happen?” Gervais joked to TV reporters on Friday, during his appearance on behalf of his new HBO series “Life’s Too Short.” “You know, I end my career once a week if you read the press. Everyone says that’s the end. I only do things that could end my career now. That’s the fun. That’s my extreme sport.”

Here’s ours: IMDb will once again have live coverage of the event, including instantaneous updates of the winners, photos from the red carpet, and commentary on all of the fun. Starting at 5pm PT, keep the homepage open to see the list of winners from the moment they’re announced.  (Or, if you don’t want to know, avert your gaze.)

Smartphone users can view the list of winners on our mobile site, Android, and iPhone, and check out the Road to the Oscars section for the photos from the red carpet.

We’ll also be posting photos and award results on Facebook and @IMDb Twitter.  And as usual,  @IMDbTV will be the place for TV results and snark… which should be plentiful, based on what Gervais had to say on Friday.

“I’m not one of these people who thinks comedy is your conscience taking a day off. My conscience never takes a day off. I know what I’m going to say outside the odd ad lib. I can justify it and I stand by it, as I do every joke I did last year,” He said.  “And I don’t care. I don’t care what people think.”

We can’t wait.

In the meantime, check out our Road to the Oscars section to view photos of the nominees, trailers and clips from all of your favorite nominated films. You’ll also find photo galleries and lists from past awards seasons.

 

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HBO Sets Premiere Dates for “Game of Thrones,” New Series “Girls” and “Veep”

 

Winter is coming, but it’ll be springtime when it arrives.

HBO’s hit fantasy series “Game of Thrones” makes its second season premiere on Sunday, April 1.  The drama, based on the bestselling series of books “A Song of Ice and Fire” by author George R.R. Martin, will have 10 episodes in its second season.

HBO also set premiere dates for its new comedies “Veep,” starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and “Girls,” the comedy from Tiny Furniture director Lena Dunham. “Veep’s” eight episode first season begins on Sunday, April 22 at 10pm. “Girls” launches its 10-episode first season at 10:30pm on Sunday, April 15.

Meanwhile, HBO’s highly anticipated dramatization of the McCain-Palin 2008 campaign “Game Change,” starring Julianne Moore as Palin, premieres at 9 pm on March 10. The film also stars Ed Harris as John McCain and Woody Harrelson as McCain’s senior campaign strategist Steve Schmidt.

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TCA: The CW Brings Musical Chairs to Your TV.

People have accused the television industry of being creatively bankrupt and out of ideas.

There are plenty of examples to counter that argument. But today, The CW did not add one to that list. Instead, the network announced it was picking up ten episodes of “Oh Sit!”, a game show version of musical chairs.

You read right: musical chairs.

According to the network’s announcement at the Television Critics Association’s Winter Press Tour, each episode will challenge 20 contestants to run through five obstacle course-style elimination rounds, each attempting to claim a chair as a live band plays. The last contestant remaining wins a cash prize.

The CW has yet to select a host or a premiere date for “Oh Sit!” but the comments section of this blog is accepting suggestions.

Meanwhile, the official Twitter account for (the once real but currently non-existent) UPN confirmed that it has passed on picking up reality shows based on “Pin the Tail on the Donkey” or “Clothespin Drop.”

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