Year: 2006 (Page 144 of 228)

“Our focus groups show that Scrappy Doo didn’t ruin the ‘Scooby-Doo’ franchise enough!”

The Kids WB! has announced their new line-up, and…well, I have no joke here, because if you don’t read it for yourself, you won’t believe this is a real show:

SHAGGY & SCOOBY-DOO GET A CLUE: Ruh-roh! Everybody’s favorite quivering sleuths, Shaggy and Scooby-Doo, are back in a new adventure that will anchor the “Too Big For Your TV” programming block. In this comedy, also produced by Radomski, Shaggy and Scooby live in the bling’d-out mansion of Shaggy’s Uncle Albert, solving mysteries with the help of a transforming Mystery Machine which, at the click of a remote, can morph into one of a number of modes of transportation. New Scooby Snacks infused with a top-secret nano-technology allows our canine hero to fly, become a towering robot or even turn himself into a giant magnet, which comes in handy as Shaggy and Scooby-Doo carry out their new mission: protecting the Scooby Snacks and keeping them safe from those who want them for evil. Shaggy & Scooby-Doo Get A Clue! is executive produced by Sander Schwartz and Joseph Barbera.

You can check out the original article here, where you can read about the new “Legion of Super Heroes” cartoon that does sound pretty cool…but, criminey, here’s a memo to Hanna Barbara: STOP UPDATING YOUR CLASSICS FOR “THE NEXT GENERATION.”

One more reason to obsess over “Lost”

lockejackhatch

This year, the fun doesn’t end when the credits roll on the season finale episode of “Lost.” Fans won’t have to spend the entire summer waiting for new episodes and scrutinizing the old ones for clues they may have missed the first time around–though many viewers will undoubtedly do just that.

Instead, ABC offers a whole new outlet for the legion of conspiracy theorists: a multimedia treasure hunt that “makes use of e-mail messages, phone calls, commercials, billboards and fake Web sites that are made to seem real.” Dubbed “The Lost Experience,” the alternate-reality game will introduce new characters and add a new layer of depth to the show’s already hatch-deep mythology.

Although alternate-reality gaming (ARG) has often been used by marketers to introduce new products (such as the much-heralded “I Love Bees” launch for Halo 2), ABC emphasizes that “The Lost Experience” was created by the show’s writers, including the highly talented Damon Lindelof, not by soulless marketers, and is therefore designed to enhance viewers’ relationship with the show rather than to shill product.

Of course, that said, the article closes by indicating that the game begins May 3, and viewers should TiVo it “but don’t skip the commercials.” Thus, the gaming experience will not be entirely shill-free — and you can bet the episode’s advertisers are paying a premium for the privilege.

You might be a redneck if you watch CMT

foxworthy

If this isn’t a match made in heaven, I don’t know what is: Recognizing that “Blue Collar TV” has about as much chance of being resurrected for the CW’s new fall schedule as, say, “Homeboys in Outer Space,” Jeff Foxworthy has signed on to host a variety show for Country Music Television (or CMT, in redneck-hipster lingo).

Dubbed “Foxworthy’s Big Night Out,” the show will feature stand-up comedy, humorous sketches, and — in deference to the host network, no doubt — live music performances.

Some of Foxworthy’s Blue-Collar cohorts will undoubtedly turn up onstage at some point during the 12 episodes ordered…but here’s hoping Larry the Cable Guy was too busy chasing the snow-cone lady in his crap movie to find time to shoot a segment for the show.

Matt Groening dishes on the future of “Futurama”

Good news, everyone…!

In an interview with the Onion’s A.V. Club, Matt Groening – creator of “Life in Hell,” “The Simpsons,” and “Futurama” – reveals more details about the ongoing adventures of Fry, Leela, Bender.

“We’re going to do four of them, straight to DVD,” says Groening. “And as we speak, I’m exchanging e-mails and ideas with David X. Cohen and Ken Keeler, both of whom worked on the show from the very beginning. Right now, we’re trying to figure out whether to do a giant epic, or separate crazy movies, or what. But I wager that Bender will be featured prominently.”

Groening also talks about how there was once the very real possibility of a Krusty the Klown spin-off.

“I just thought the idea of a live-action Krusty the Clown show would be something Dan (Castellaneta) could go completely crazy with. And halfway through the pitch, Fox said, ‘Can it be a cartoon?’ So okay, we’ll make it a cartoon. And it just got bogged down in the kinds of mysterious machinations that often happen in Hollywood. Maybe someday we’ll do it. I don’t know.”

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