Category: Gossip (Page 7 of 50)

TCA Press Tour: A few random CBS tidbits…

…courtesy of the solo panel by CBS President of Entertainment Nina Tassler…

* “The Amazing Race” and “The New Adventures of Old Christine” will not return until mid-season.

* Tony Scott will be directing the season premiere of “Numb3rs.”

* Finally, three seasons into “How I Met Your Mother,” we will finally begin to get some hints as to who the hell “your mother” actually is.

* The season premiere of “Cold Case” will be an all-Nirvana episode, so I guess that means the case in question must take place in the early ’90s, presumably in Seattle. (Tassler hadn’t actually seen the script yet.)

* Jake, the half-man on “Two and a Half Men,” will be starting junior high.

* Writer P.K. Simonds, late of “Party of Five,” will be re-teaming with Jennifer Love Hewitt and become co-runner of “Ghost Whisperer” with John Gray; apparently, Simonds and Gray are reinvigorating the series by creating a new mythology which indicates that main characters Jim and Melinda didn’t choose the town of Grandview but, rather, vice versa. (I don’t know what this means; I don’t watch the show. I’m just spreadin’ the info.)

* There will be a “C.S.I.” / “Without A Trace” crossover this year, with William Petersen and Anthony LaPaglia appearing on each others series…and to alleviate the possibility of missing one half or the other, the episodes will air on the same night.

* On “C.S.I.: Miami,” Horatio Cane will discover that he has a biological son…and although this isn’t confirmed yet, Premium Hollywood is going out on a limb and predicting that Caine’s tip-off to his child’s identity is his red hair and stilted acting skills.

* They are in talks with Drew Carey to host “The Price Is Right,” but, then, they’re in talks with several people to host “The Price Is Right.”

* There is, at least in Tassler’s eyes, no reason to expect that “NCIS” will change dramatically in this, its first season with Don Bellisario at the helm. “It’s the natural evolution of a show that you groom your writers on your staff to take over the mantle so you can move on to develop other shows. It’s time that Don developed another show for us which is what we’re looking to do. The look of the show is not going to change, and it’s, again, a part of changes that happen on virtually — in many of the show. Personality aside, it’s time for Don to do something else for us, and the show will go on. It’s in very capable hands.”

* The network has been in talks with Rosie O’Donnell about a show. Some show. Don’t know what show. But definitely some show.

* Tassler conceded that the lengthy hiatus between the two half-seasons of “Jericho” “maybe…wasn’t good for the show.” Y’think…?

* Oh, and here’s what Tassler had to say about the whole Mandy-Patinkin-leaving-“Criminal Minds” thing: “Mandy came to us and came to me and asked to be released from the show, and we were able to accommodate that request on his part. And right now, it’s a personal issue. And, you know, I think the show is accommodating his needs. The creative on the show is very strong. The stories, as we know about the audience on ‘Criminal Minds’ — people come to that show for the ‘E ticket,’ you know, that white-knuckle ride that they’re going to get every week. And in the legacy of ‘ER’ and ‘Law &
Order,’ the show will go on. But right now, it’s personal.”

Tassberg couldn’t (or wouldn’t) provide any insight as to why Patinkin chose to make his departure from the second CBS series of his career. “I can only hope in the very near future that Mandy himself will be able to answer those very questions. I do not mean to sound like I’m avoiding the question. It is a personal issue. I wish I could say more. I just — I don’t feel that this is the forum in which I’d like to have that conversation.”

What about the fact that the CBS press release said it was “creative differences,” not “personal issues”?

“Well, I think ‘creative differences’ is a euphemism for ‘personal issues,'” said Tassberg…and then winked!

Jon Lovitz fights Dick

You’ve undoubtedly heard it all over the place since yesterday, but, yes, Jon Lovitz got in a fight with Andy Dick in a bar. Check out the tale of the full incident right here. I know a lot of people can’t stand Andy Dick, and I undestand that, but the guy always made me laugh more than Lovitz, whom I never really enjoyed since his original stint on SNL. The best thing he ever did on the show was an impression of David Crosby doing a TV commercial for the two record set “Sold Out Gold” and “Sold Out Bronze.” “The Critic” was midly amusing from time to time, but other than that, his career of starring in flicks like “High School High” and Subway commercials pretty much says it more than I can.

TCA Press Tour: James Woods is my new motherf***ing hero

I’ll tackle the “Shark” panel in greater detail later, but I had to share these two moments of James-Woods-ian brilliance with you:

1) When one of the reporters bemoaned the panel – Woods, his co-star Jeri Ryan, and producer / creator Ian Biederman – for not giving them anything that made for good copy, Woods stepped up to bat. “Okay, well, I honestly hate these mother fuckers, but I’m getting paid so, you know, what am I going to do. That fucking Jeri Ryan bitch. She shows up in a fucking Borg suit and says, “Hey, remember me when I was hot?” One more fucking time and I’m done!” At this point, he finally gave in to laughter, saying, “Okay, I think we’re done now.”

2) In the last moments of the panel, Woods tackled the issue of his character’s questionable moral decision in the season finale, when he knowingly sent a man to prison for a crime he didn’t commit because he knew that he that he was guilty of other crimes. As it happens, Woods didn’t really agree with Biederman’s decision to have Sebastian Stark do what he did. “I don’t believe in vigilante justice,” he said…then, after a moment, added, “Except if I were pissed off about something. Then I would believe in it. I mean, you know, I get lousy customer support, I want to get involved in a workplace killing.”

At this point, Woods began to mime speaking into a phone. “‘Where in India are you, mother fucker? Where exactly in Sumatra are you, you fucker?'”

A beat.

“Oh, boy, that wasn’t politically correct,” said Woods. “I wouldn’t want to see that get out.”

Right. That would explain why he then proceeded to make the international hand signal for jacking off…and also why tried to give the publicists at CBS a heart attack with his next words:

“Hey, Isaiah Washington’s back. So that’s good.” With a wicked grin, Woods continued. “Let’s have some controversy. I’m so tempted. I’m so tempted to say it, but I’m not…”

The reporters, of course, were egging him on, even as Biederman was nervously suggesting, “Let’s wait ’til Season 4, can we?”

In the end, Woods demurred. “I’m sure we could do it and kid around and have a good time,” he said, “but, no, somebody would take it the wrong way. All the CBS people back there, they’re shitting themselves right now.”

And with that, “Shark” publicist Barbara Abseck got the biggest laugh of the panel: “Sooooooo…this concludes our session.”

Yeah, but what a way to go…

TCA Press Tour: Law & Order & stuff

If you haven’t heard already, when NBC’s fall season begins, there will only be two “Law & Order” series still on the network: the original and “L&O: Special Victims Unit.” But don’t cry for “L&O: Criminal Intent” just yet: the show will continue with new episodes on the USA Network, which is also part of the NBC-Universal family.

“L&O” creator Dick Wolf showed up with a statement in hand to clarify how the network would handle it if Senator Fred Thompson ended up making a run for the White House (long story short: don’t count on seeing D.A. Arthur Branch show up on any episodes during the campaign…and that goes for re-runs, too), but the majority of his time was spent answering questions about whether or not the original “Law & Order” would beat “Gunsmoke” for the longest-running drama in television history.

“I sure hope so,” admits Wolf. “I think that the show is going through one of its major renovations of the past 10 years. Jeremy (Sisto) is joining the cast. I think it was this year’s cast, in a sense, (but) I’m pleased to announce that Linus Roache will also be joining as the new prosecutor. So the show has a very different look than it had two years ago. I think that Sam (Waterston) is going to be a terrific DA, but if you look at a cast that, as I said, two seasons ago had Sam as the chief prosecutor, Fred as the DA, and Dennis Farina as essentially the lead cop and you look at the way it’s going to look this year, that is a very, very large shift and also a very deliberate shift to hopefully reignite or further penetrate a younger demo. The show has been skewing older, and we would love it to skew a little bit younger.”

Sisto and Roache, together again? Two “Kidnapped” alumni on “Law & Order”…? “I thought ‘Kidnapped’ was an incredibly well produced show,” says Wolf. “Shows that may not have necessarily worked are very rarely the fault of the actors.” There’s not much that can be said about Roache’s character – he was only signed right before Wolf made the announcement, apparently – but Sisto at least acknowledged that his “L&O” character is completely different from his role on “Kidnapped.”

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TCA Press Tour: Hey, ho, “Jericho”!

First things first: when we arrived at the “Jericho” panel, we were greeted with a bag on our chair from NutsOnline, including a bag of nuts and a t-shirt which proudly trumpeted the company’s role in saving “Jericho.” How cool is that? God bless those guys for their dedication…

* No-one on the panel – producer Carol Barbee and cast members Skeet Ulrich, Lennie James, and Ashley Scott – had any reason to believe the show would return. Even when the “nuts” campaign began, they really only had the slightest inkling of hope that it might work.

* The producers pitched the plot of the second season to the network, and CBS was quite happy with it. It originally was going to take place in Jericho, Cheyenne, and New York, which would have been revealed to have been survived, but things are being switched up a little bit now. They’re burning through ideas more quickly and having to compress the action more than they otherwise might have, since they’ve only got a 7-episode commitment at the moment, but they’re happy with how things are progressing.

* Skeet was beside himself with the news of the reprieve, calling as many of the cast members personally as possible to let them know about the show’s having been saved. “I love giving people shocking news,” he said, with a grin.

* The season opener will be a “big tent,” to help people understand the world of the series if they’ve never seen it before, but time will have passed since the season finale, so it’ll be new information for everyone, old and new viewers alike. But don’t worry: the big cliffhanger will be paid off. You’ll get the scoop on what happened with the battle, and then it’ll time-jump ahead.

* It was always the plan that Johnston Green would die, because his arc was tied directly to Jake’s arc, for the son to replace the father. It maybe happened sooner than had originally been planned, but when the season end came around, the opportunity arose, and the producers took it.

* Production schedule: they will start shooting this Monday, and, all things being equal, they’ll be finished shooting all 7 episodes by end of September.

* Random observation from me: fucking hell, I had no idea that the dude who plays Robert Hawkins was British!

* At the end of Season 1, right before the battle, Stanley said he was going to ask Mimi to marry him; it doesn’t exactly go down quite as easily as all that, but they do end up engaged, which is the big personal story of the new season. The bigger story, however, is that Hawkins and Jake will go on a mission to save the world. (Oh, no, not again!)

* The new government from Cheyenne has come in to stop the battle between Jericho and New Bern and are helping Jericho to rebuild, getting them their water and electricity back. There are revenge killings going on between the two cities, however, as lingering vestiges from the battle.

* It’s Barbee’s sincerest hope that everyone in the cast will be back. Titus Welliver, however, they wanted back, but scheduling prevented that; as a result, there’ll be another character coming in to fill the void left by Col. Robert Hoffman. Sprague Grayden will definitely be back as Heather. The budget was cut, says Barbee, but they’re trying to do their best to be creative in order to still deliver a quality product. Will Gerald McRaney be back in a flashback? “We’ll see,” says Barbee. “We loved him. But, right now, it’s not planned for these 7 episodes. We’ve pretty well got those laid out already.”

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