JayMohr-related stories
Posted Nov 12th 2009 4:02PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Celebrities, Reality-Free

Dear Jay,
Let me start by stating that I think you are a very funny man. I have been following your career for years and you're great. You were wonderful in
Jerry Maguire. Of course, you were speaking lines written by Cameron Crowe, so that was a plus, but you delivered the performance. Bravo,
Jay Mohr.
That said, I have to talk to you now about
Gary Unmarried. Jay, you can make this so much better. Really, you are capable of so much more. Yes, you don't have Cameron Crowe writing for you now. I'm fully aware of that. But you're there.
Gary Unmarried may have started as a formula, and it still has too much of that formula intact. The bitchy, controlling wife/ex-wife? Haven't we seen the Allison character on
Two and a Half Men (Judith),
Everybody Loves Raymond (Deborah),
The King of Queens (Carrie)? Do you see the pattern here? I do.
Continue reading An open letter to Jay Mohr about Gary Unmarried
Posted May 11th 2009 2:02PM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Industry, Pickups and Renewals

While it's still waiting to find out if it might get renewed for next season,
Gary Unmarried creator Ed Yeager and fellow exec producer Ric Swartzlander
have already bolted for greener pastures. Apparently it was the old "creative differences" standby that caused the problem. Now normally I'd say that a creator leaving a show would be cause for serious concern, but
Gary Unmarried is a fairly traditional family-oriented sitcom, so I should think someone else could steer that ship.
The show was entertaining enough when I watched it, but I never felt particularly compelled to come back the next week and watch it again. I can't help but think that this may be enough to doom the show. CBS has a lot of new shows to look at, and with
Gary just so-so in the ratings they might want to throw something else against the wall and see if they can't improve on just so-so. If it does get yanked, they can have Jay Mohr return to the just renewed
Ghost Whisperer. He's a better foil for Melinda than the still awkward Jamie Kennedy anyway.
Posted Nov 21st 2008 9:20AM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Watercooler Talk, Reality-Free

Anyone who thinks that the lame, traditional, laugh-track-laden sitcom is dead hasn't seen
Gary Unmarried yet. Unfortunately, I have. And I've got to tell you, it's probably the worst sitcom since the undead
According to Jim first infected our airwaves in 2001. It's too bad, given the talent involved.
And when I mention "talent," I don't mean series creator Ed Yeager, who helped foist
Still Standing on the American public for four years. I'm talking about stars Jay Mohr, Paula Marshall, Ed Begley Jr., and Jaime King, as well as esteemed sitcom director James Burrows. They're talented people stuck in a show that contains the same wacky plots and "setup-joke" rhythm that has led many to think the multi-camera sitcom is as dead as disco.
Continue reading Gary Unmarried: the new According to Jim
Posted Oct 30th 2008 10:07AM by Isabelle Carreau
Filed under: Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, OpEd, Reality-Free

It won't be a surprise if I admit that I watch a lot of TV. Maybe even a bit too much. Amongst all the series I watch, there were no spooky or horror series until last May. That's when, looking for something new
to me to watch during the days since I was working from home, I decided to give CBS's
Ghost Whisperer a try. The series's first and second seasons where airing daily on a local specialized channel last spring.
Since the series premiere of
GW, I've kept in the loop as to what the show was about and what was going on (
spoilers column obliges). However, I never felt compelled to tune in mostly because I get scared quite easily by TV series and movies that deal with ghosts. You will never catch me watching
Ghost Hunters. Never. And until the special black and white episode of
Supernatural last week, I never watched a full episode of the series. Actually, I turn the TV off five minutes in the series premiere.
Surprisingly to me, I ended up not only watching the reruns of seasons one and two of the series but also made sure to catch up with the CBS reruns of the third season in order to be ready for September.
Hello! My name is Isabelle and I'm now a fan of
Ghost Whisperer. Here's why.
Continue reading Why I now embrace Ghost Whisperer and look forward to that big twist
Posted Sep 24th 2008 5:02PM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Early Looks, Episode Reviews, Reality-Free

Jay Mohr moonlights away from his regular gig on
Ghost Whisperer to star as Gary Brooks in this traditional sitcom. CBS has paired
Gary Unmarried with
The New Adventures of Old Christine, which creates an interesting dynamic. First, you have Julia Louis-Dreyfus as a divorced woman trying to live her own life while dealing with her ex and their kid. Then you get Jay Mohr as a recently divorced man trying to live his own life while dealing with his ex and their kids.
In fact, this seems to be almost the same show, only from the ex-husband's point of view rather than the ex-wife's point of view. Husband is a bit more lax with the kids while mom is overbearing and a bit crazy. I do like that in this variation, the kids have more distinct and important personalities. In fact,
Gary (premiering tonight at 8:30 PM ET) has a much wider cast altogether. Both spouses have new relationships and Gary's girlfriend has a kid of her own.
Continue reading Gary Unmarried -- An early look
Posted Aug 29th 2008 9:38AM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, Reality-Free

The show
Ghost Whisperer is no stranger to major changes in its status quo. They wrapped up their first season by having Jennifer Love Hewitt's Melinda Gordon lose her best friend Andrea (Aisha Tyler), only to have to deal with her spirit to launch the second season. It made for an emotionally powerful episode and a tragedy that drove Melinda into that new year.
Michael Ausiello, who is generally pretty spot-on with his rumors, dropped a pretty big bombshell of some possible happenings early on in this upcoming season. Now I've already admitted on this very site that
Ghost Whisperer is a bit of a guilty pleasure for me. I've had the joy of growing up with Jennifer Love Hewitt from her days on
Party of Five and she's still just too gosh-darned cute to stop watching now. And dammit if the writers don't know how to pull the heartstrings in almost every episode, too. But now ... well, we'll talk about it after the jump.
Continue reading Would they really ... ? The latest Ghost Whisperer rumor
Posted Jun 11th 2008 2:23PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Casting, Reality-Free
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In a move as big as his executive producing
Living with Fran, Jamie Kennedy has decided to return to series television. In fact, Jay Mohr's loss is Jamie's gain.
Jamie Kennedy has signed on to the CBS psychic drama Ghost Whisperer. It's not a guest role or a mini-arc, he's a regular. Yes, Jamie Kennedy will be a regular and will play a dramatic role. Okay, he'll try to play it straight. Perhaps this will be the ultimate Jamie Kennedy experiment?
Jay Mohr was the college connection with whom Melinda consulted on
Ghost Whisperer, but now that he's getting his own sitcom on the networks,
Project Gary, GW needs a new character to provide the same kind of insight. Jamie will play Eli, a college grad student.
Continue reading Jamie Kennedy a psych expert? Yes, on Ghost Whisperer
Posted Apr 28th 2008 7:44AM by Brett Love
Filed under: Programming, Casting, Reality-Free
I suppose most people would lead with the fact that Jay Mohr has signed on to Ed Yeager's untitled comedy pilot for CBS. After all, Jay does have that regular gig on Ghost Whisperer. In a nutshell, Mohr and Paula Marshall play a couple that has recently divorced, after fifteen years of marriage. The funny is scheduled to arrive as we watch Mohr's character try to juggle his ex-wife, their two kids, and his new girlfriend, played by Jaime King.
That's all well and good. For me though, the far more interesting bit is Paula Marshall's involvement. I find her career fascinating. She's been on a bunch of great shows. The Wonder Years, Seinfeld, Nash Bridges (don't laugh, Nash was very successful), Spin City, Sports Night, Just Shoot Me, Nip/Tuck, and Veronica Mars, to name a few. Yet, for whatever reason, whenever she gets a starring gig, it all seems to go to hell. See Cupid, Snoops, Hidden Hills, and Out Of Practice. I don't get it. I like everything she's ever done, but it just doesn't work. So, I don't have high hopes for this production. However, it does offer a thought. It's quite possible that Paula was all set to star in a great new show for Tim Minear. Unfortunately, the sheer power of their combined abilities to kill shows sent the series itself back in time, canceling itself before the idea even came to be.
Posted Oct 22nd 2007 1:07PM by Kristin Sample
Filed under: Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, OpEd, Interviews

On Thursday October 18th, I attended a blogger event for CBS at Universal Studios in Los Angeles. After waiting a surprisingly long time to clear security (all the while the security guard kept my driver's license with him), I finally started my tour of the
Ghost Whisperer stages. Along with a tour of the show's set, the press event also included interviews with the executive producers, a sneak preview of the Halloween episode (airing October 26th), and a tour of the show's back lot (in the context of the
Universal Studios R.I.P. experience). Completely unrelated to
Ghost Whisperer but interesting all the same, we got a sneak preview of
How to Survive a Horror Movie: All the Skills to Dodge the Kills and an interview with writer/director Seth Grahame-Smith.
Continue reading CBS Halloween online press event: Ghost Whisperer preview and How To Survive a Horror Movie
Posted Aug 8th 2007 11:42PM by Jay Black
Filed under: Last Comic Standing, Episode Reviews
(S05E09) Remember that story about
The Doors? The one where Ed Sullivan told them that they could only be on his show if they changed the lyrics of
Light My Fire? They agreed, but when they went on Jim Morrison not only said the original lyric, but emphasized it. The message he was trying to send to Ed Sullivan and the network was that no amount of television exposure was worth selling out his integrity.
Watching
Last Comic Standing tonight made me wish that Jim Morrison was still alive. And a stand-up comic. And on this show. I'd bet he'd have had something to say about jester costumes....
Continue reading Last Comic Standing: Challenge Round #2
Posted Aug 6th 2007 4:02PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Web, Celebrities
Jay Mohr, comedian and sports fan, will be providing twenty-minute video segments for FoxSports.com this month. The series, called The Alternative With Jay Mohr, will mix remote segments, monologues and comedic sketches. Mohr will also pen a weekly column for the sports site.
Sports fans shouldn't be too surprised to see Mohr in this capacity. The comedian/actor, who currently appears on CBS' Ghost Whisperer, hasn't exactly hidden his love of sports, having appeared as a guest host on Jim Rome's Sirius Satellite Radio program, not to mention frequent appearances on The Best Damn Sports Show Period and NFL Sunday Morning.
Continue reading The Alternative With Jay Mohr hits FoxSports site this month
Posted Feb 19th 2007 10:01AM by Richard Keller
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Other Comedy Shows, NBC, OpEd, Celebrities, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip
Something isn't right in Sorkinland. In last Monday's episode, Matt Albie and Andy Mackinaw are feeling nostalgic. In a scene early in the show Andy asks Matt if he remembers his first office . . . the one that was so small that you could write on both walls if you reached your arms out with pencils in your hands. Matt mentioned that was his second office, and that his first was actually the floor in the middle of the hallway.
Now, the reason methinks something is afoot is because I just finished reading Gasping For Airtime, the excellent Jay Mohr autobiography that chronicles his two year stint on Saturday Night Live in the mid-1990's. In this book he talks about the dressing room that he had during his second season on the show. . . the one that was so small that he could take a pencil in each hand, stretch his arms out, and write on the walls. He also mentioned a conversation he had with SNL alum Mike Myers about his first office. It turns out that it was on the floor in the middle of the hallway.
Hmmm.
Continue reading Aaron Sorkin meet Jay Mohr
Posted Aug 3rd 2006 9:13PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Other Reality Shows, NBC, Talent, Industry, OpEd, Celebrities, Last Comic Standing

Most fans of
Last Comic Standing (I think there are one or two left) are aware that, while Jay Mohr is labeled as the show's "executive producer," the ex-host hasn't been involved with the show this year. He had a falling out with NBC over how Season Three was handled; NBC rushed a "Season 1 vs. Season 2" contest on the air, then cancelled the show right before the finale and never showed it, eventually shuttling that episode off to Comedy Central. So, because of the rift,
LCS fans have had to put up with the shaky hands and zombie-like stare of host Anthony Clark all season.
But it looks like there has been a thaw in the frigid relations.
According to Zap2It.com, Mohr will perform a stand-up set during the season finale on Wednesday, Aug. 9 (Now I realize how they're going to do this: They'll go from three to two on Tuesday, then announce the winner on Wednesday). The filler-tastic 90-minute finale will not only feature Mohr, but also sets by previous
LCS winners Alonzo Bodden, John Heffron, and (gulp) Dat Phan. Hopefully, this will be a sign that Mohr will replace Clark for next summer's edition. That alone will improve upon what has turned out to be a sub-par season for the show.
Posted Mar 10th 2006 1:04PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, NBC, Celebrities

Jay Mohr isn't going to be hosting the new season of
Last Comic
Standing, but he is coming back to NBC. This time he'll be starring in
Community Service, a comedy about
an arrogant New Yorker who travels to a small Ohio town to win back a girl. Unfortunately he doesn't win her affection,
but he does wind up stuck in the town doing community service; hence the name of the show. Christopher Wiehl of
Love
Monkey plays a local cop and football hero. I'm going to file this under "wait and see." I like Jay Mohr,
but he doesn't always fare well unless he's given the right show.
Posted Feb 4th 2006 9:33AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Las Vegas, Celebrities
Las Vegas siren Nikki Cox is engaged to Jay Mohr, the
host of
Last Comic Standing. Previously, Cox had been engaged to comic Bobcat Goldthwait.
Jay and
Nikki met on the set of
Las Vegas when Jay was a guest star. His episode
just aired on
January 24th, 2005, so I'm not exactly sure how long these two have known each other. Place your bets, people! Get it?
'Cuz they met on the set of Las Vegas. And there's really nothing else to say about it.