Category: TCA Press Tour (Page 55 of 56)

TCA Press Tour: That MIA “Flight of the Conchords” panel

Sorry about that. The transcription appeared on the press table sometime right before the press room closed for the night, but it was there bright and early this morning.

Here are some highlights of the event:

* After stumbling his way through a preface that involved the phrase, “Bret, there’s this kind of depressed, fidgety, insecure vibe that you give off that’s not unlike your character” (which raised Bret’s eyebrows, I can assure you), one reporter finally got around to asking the difference between TV Bret and Real-Life Bret. When neither Bret had an immediate answer, Jemaine stepped up and revealed, “The TV Bret is a bit stupider. I notice the difference. They’re subtle. They’re subtle.” (Over the resulting laughter, Jemaine pointedly added, “I’m just kidding. I’m just kidding!”)

* Jemaine isn’t interested in pursuing a solo career…nor, apparently, has he even thought about the concept. “That’s the sort of thing I would want to do when I was a kid,” he said. Bret, however, had far different aspirations: “I wanted to be a tiger.” (Jemaine: “That’s not going to happen.”)

* How have the guys’ lives changed since the debut of their show? “A lot more people want photos with us,” said Jemaine, explaining that, “before, people didn’t know who we were, and, so, less of them wanted photos.” Added Bret, “Yeah, just families. And when you’re at birthday parties. But, now, it’s just strangers coming up, taking photographs with us.”

* If you thought that last quip sounded straight out of “This is Spinal Tap,” try this one. When asked how the guys rate each other as musicians, Jemaine answered, “Bret’s better than I am, and I’m worse than Bret is,” while Bret concluded, “And I think we’re both just above mediocre.”

* Oddly enough for a New Zealand band, these guys have virtually no profile in their homeland…except, however, for making the occasional nightly news report. “We’re on the news a lot for having a show in America,” explains Jemaine. “We’ve been on TV more in New Zealand from being on the news than anything we’ve done there. There’s also great irony in that New Zealand doesn’t make very many good comedy shows, and we were turned down for a show there. So it’s a great ironic story for them.”

* Lastly, that New Zealand accent leads to a bit of comprehension issues in the States…but at least Jemaine makes the most of it. “Sometimes I’ll use it to my advantage,” he says. “If I can’t think of an answer to something, I’ll just make a few sounds, and people will be polite about it, and that will be that.”

TCA Press Tour: Day 2 (well, for me, anyway), Pt. 2

Man, ya’ll are lucky I didn’t have my tape recorder working earlier this morning; if I had, I’d be transcribing every last obscenity I uttered when, just as I was preparing to save my second posting about yesterday’s panels, the internet connection hiccupped and lost everything I’d written…and I didn’t have time to re-write it before heading downstairs for today’s first panel. So, anyway, here I am, in my first live panel – i.e. I’m online as the panels are going on in front of me – but, at the moment, I’m just playing catch-up on yesterday. I mean, it’s the Disney Channel panels; they’re entertaining, but, to my knowledge, no-one here needs any real details on them, am I right? (If I’m wrong, of course, let me know; they provide transcripts, so I can still pick out a few quote highlights.)

Okay, let me grab a cup of coffee and get this show on the road, so I can be all caught up before the SoapNet panel on “General Hospital: Night Shift” begins!!!

Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders: Making the Team (CMT):

I’ll say this right now: any panel which opens with 12 members of the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders show team coming onstage and doing a full routine that ends with lots and lots of high kicks…well, my friend, that’s on the short list for Best Panel Opening EVER. And it was a pleasant little panel, too. You could tell there was a certain amount of cynicism from some of the writers in attendance, particularly when one fellow asked (rather snarkily, I felt), “Is this a stepping stone onto something else, or is this the pinnacle of your career?” The response from veteran cheerleader Megan Fox, however, was heartfelt and honest:

“For those of us as performers…I mean, really, most of us have danced or done some type of cheerleading our entire lives, so this is really that bar that we’ve really worked so hard to reach. So for those of us, it’s kind of the icing on the cake. I really think that this is a dream come true. And for some of us, it will be the end of our performing careers, but for others, we’ll go on to teach, hopefully, and continue to be involved in the dance and performance world. But, really, this is just the icing on the cake for most of us.”

Take that, Cynical Boy!

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TCA Press Tour: A few random photos from the HBO party

James Gandolfini seemed like a nice enough guy, but after several seasons of “The Sopranos,” you can’t help but feel like he might slug you if you ask him the wrong question.

Larry David was extremely approachable…so approachable, in fact, that he was constantly surrounded by reporters with tape recorders, trying to get a good sound bite out of him.

For the boys back home: I had a nice “Entourage” moment with Kevin Dillon, who was a very cool guy, but, sorry, I had to yank the pic because I didn’t realize it’s frowned upon for TCA members to take shots with the celebs. It’s probably something to do with maintaining distance between professional writer and professional fanboy, and I get that. But, anyway, a shout-out to my new friend, Steven Chupnick, managing editor of JewReview.net; he and I stood around and talked w/ Kevin about the show, how it’s progressed, and what it’s like with Matt Dillon as your brother. (No way I’m transcribing that now. You’ll have to wait ’til I’m back and can get more caught up!)

TCA Press Tour: HBO, Pt. 2

Okay, it’s still 6:54 AM here, but, damn, I feel a hell of a lot better after just a few hours sleep. As such, let’s go ahead and take a look at those HBO panels from yesterday:

As You Like It, Kenneth Branaugh’s latest Shakespearean adaptation:

Branaugh found it very easy to cast Kevin Kline in the role of Jacques, it seems. “(He has) vast Shakespearean experience, as you know, a brilliant dramatic actor, a very, very funny man, and is, in life, intellectually curious. And as with all funny men, I would say – without trying to tell my friend who he is – a kind of disposition to a certain kind of melancholy and philosophical introspection. But I just thought he was a great actor.”

Kline’s response? “I disagree.”

Kline isn’t the only American in the production; he shares that honor with Bryce Dallas Howard…even if she doesn’t see it that way. “I would have to say that Kevin Kline is almost like an honorary Brit when it comes to Shakespeare, (whereas) I felt like a little bit of a cowboy,” said Howard. “Like, it’s, you know, a little rough with the language, and I didn’t really have a lot of confidence with it, initially. But under the guidance of Ken, and everyone else that was involved, I allowed myself to just enjoy the experience and do my best. But it was definitely initially intimidating, perhaps being an American, but even more than that, just being someone who is literally at the start of my career. I haven’t had as much experience as I would like to.”

The role of Orlando is taken by relative newcomer David Oyelowo, who had a serious attack of nerves when he discovered that A) he had to go to Branaugh’s house to audition, and B) he had to audition with Branaugh. “You were reading the other lines,” he said, turning to Branaugh, “and my saliva just turned to sand. I mean, there I was, auditioning with Henry V, Iago, Benedict, Coriolanus…and it just…I mean, you probably won’t remember this, but the lines…they just completely went out of my head. You were so gracious; you just went, ‘Okay, let’s do that again…'”

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TCA Press Tour: HBO, Pt. 1

Man, it’s late…particularly for a guy who’s still on East Coast time. But I wanted to offer up a few quotes from today’s HBO presentations before I hit the sack.

Revelations from Richard Plepler (HBO Co-President) and Michael Lombardo (President, Programming Group and West Coast Operations):

* The reputed two-hour “Deadwood” movie is “possible,” says Lombardo, but “we’re going to have to schedule them in a way where we’re going to have to bring back an entire array of actors, many of whom have moved onto other shows. Molly Parker, I think, is on a new series; Tim Olyphant is doing movies. That’s one reason we decided to do movies as opposed to a season: that may be a shorter schedule, but it’s do-able. It will just be daunting. If David (Milch’s) game for this, and we can figure it out, we’re going to figure it out.

* On the “Sopranos” finale, Plepler says, “I actually called Ilene Landress and Carolyn Strauss and thought that they had withheld from me the final 50 seconds. I said, ‘What are you doing?’ She said, ‘No, that’s the ending!'”

* On the delay between the last two “Sopranos” seasons, Lombardo admitted, “the truth of the matter is waiting a year and a half between shows…I think we’ve discovered it’s probably not ideal for the viewer.”

* Of the “Sex and the City” movie, Lombardo says, “I read the script, and I can’t wait to buy a ticket; I think it continues the journey of those women into their 40s and pushing 50s ina really smart ‘Sex and the City’ way,” and Plepler adds, “It’s fun. It evolves the story, and I think that no fan will be disappointed when they see it.”

* On “Preacher,” Lombardo assures fans of the Vertigo comic that an HBO adaptation is absolutely still possible, and that “it’s on the hot list of one-hour dramas for us.”

* And Plepler’s take on the “Sopranos” finale…? “I think what happened is that David (Chase) was saying simply, “Reap what you sow,” and this is a guy who is going to live a life of eternal vigilance, looking over his shoulder always, never being sure for his safety or his family’s. And you have to ask yourself, given all the machinations that he went through to get where he was, has it all been worth it? That’s what I think.” (Adds Lombardo, “And I don’t know, because my TV went out.”)

Okay, I’ve GOT to get some sleep. More tomorrow, folks…

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