Posts with tag Office
Posted Aug 21st 2008 3:04PM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Industry, Celebrities

I've heard and read it a million times in interviews. Johnny X of the show YZ says he just doesn't have time to watch much TV. Maybe the news here or there. And I'm sorry, but I was always pretty suspicious of that. Even moreso when they say they've never watched much TV. Then why did they want to get into TV in the first place? Frazier Moore of the AP talked about
the phenomenon of TV actors shunning TV and speculated it may have to do with the old stigma that TV acting is somehow akin to writing pulp romance novels. After all, "real" writers moonlight in that arena, albeit with pen names.
I wonder, though, if it isn't more that they're trying to put on an appearance of someone who is above the "pedestrian" fare of television, elevating themselves to the so-called loftier perches of the stage and big screen actors. After all, don't many television actors aspire to move onto the more prestigious film world. Is television still something to be ashamed of?
Continue reading TV stars say they don't watch TV ... are they lying?
Posted Jun 4th 2008 6:02PM by Kristin Sample
Filed under: Other Reality Shows, Programming, Celebrities

If you thought
The Singing Bee was bad, wait till you get a load of this. TLC is premiering it's new show
The Singing Office at the end of June. The show will be hosted by ex-*NSYNCer Joey Fatone and ex-Spice Girl Mel B. Each week, Joey and Mel B. will surprise a different office and hold an impromptu audition. From each location, they will recruit a team of five for the next round of competiton. Once formed, the teams will go to "boot camp" as the hosts coach the teams on both their performance quality and their singing. Finally, the teams will compete on stage for a shot at $50,000.
Continue reading The Singing Office comes to TLC
Posted Nov 9th 2007 1:45AM by Jay Black
Filed under: The Office, Predictions and Trends, Episode Reviews
(S04E07) I think I've struck upon the perfect analogy to describe my feelings about tonight's
Office. In keeping with the pastry theme of the episode: tonight's show was like a perfectly baked black and white cookie. I'm not talking the cheap kind that you buy shrink-wrapped at a rest-stop, I'm talking the high-end black and white you'd get from a top-quality New York baker. The kind of black and white that Seinfeld might buy.
The only problem is that I'm allergic to vanilla. So while I can see how some people might enjoy the whole cookie, for me to enjoy it, I have to concentrate only on the half I'm capable of digesting...
Continue reading The Office: Suvivor Man
Posted Oct 9th 2007 11:04AM by Jay Black
Filed under: OpEd, Watercooler Talk, The Office, TV Squad Lists

In my review of
The Office last week, I called Ryan one of the best villains on TV today. I thought it was obvious that the producers were taking Ryan in this direction and that my comment was a compliment to the fine acting and writing on the show. I was met with a bit of resistance, however. Some of our readers felt that Ryan's ideas made a lot of sense and that, if anything, Michael's overall incompetence is the real villain on the show.
I thought a post was in order to further explain why I thought Ryan was a villain. And what's the best way to explain a point? Well, considering the
direction that the internet is moving, the answer is, of course, a numbered list! The nine reasons why Ryan is a villain after the jump.
Continue reading Nine reasons why Ryan is a villain (or, how not to be the office d-bag)
Posted Apr 11th 2007 11:01AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: 24, South Park
But not a real bomb, of course.
It seems that the folks behind the show 24 were so honored by the 24 spoof South Park did recently that they sent a faux suitcase nuke to the South Park offices. You can see pictures here. I haven't seen a lot of suitcase nukes in my day, but I'd say that's a pretty good fake snuke.
If you missed the episode, titled "The Snuke," it satirized the intensity, drama and technology at the center of 24 perfectly with Cartman taking on the "Jack Bauer" role and trying to gather information on a new Muslim student he suspects of being a terrorist. As the plot unfolds, we realize it goes much deeper than that. Also, the Queen of England blows her brains out.
This isn't the first time the South Park gang has gotten praise from other shows. They also received a gift from The Simpsons team after they skewered Family Guy in a two-part episode.
[Thanks to Douglin]
Posted Feb 4th 2007 7:00PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Sports, CBS, Commercials, Super Bowl
Huh?
Not sure I get what SalesGenie does, but then again I haven't been involved in sales and marketing for quite some time. You go to their site and you can get sales leads? What type of sales leads? Any industry, any business? How do you qualify those leads? Are they up to date?
Then again, if I'm asking the question and I'm not even into sales anymore, I'm sure a lot of business types will be going over to their web site and checking out exactly what this is all about. Is the ad effective? If you want salespeople to go to your site, I guess it is.
Posted Jan 11th 2007 11:33AM by Joel Keller
Filed under: CBS, News, TV Royalty, Industry

According to Gail Shister of the
Philadelphia Inquirer, the
60 Minutes office office of Ed Bradley
has not been touched since the veteran reporter
died of complications from leukemia in November. Staffers, including his fellow correspondents, have been going into the office to find comfort and reflect on Bradley's unexpected death. ""It feels like he's still here. In some ways, it almost feels like he's off shooting a story," Steve Kroft tells Shister.
The article also speculates on who eventually might take Bradley's spot on the full-time correspondents' roster starting next season. Believe it or not, the last full-timer to come aboard the mothership (not the
60 II edition that ended a couple of years ago) was Leslie Stahl...
in 1991.
[via
Mediabistro]
Posted Aug 19th 2006 11:52AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Monk, USA
(S05E07) Dr. Kroger, Monk's shrink, typically plays a small role on the series. That isn't to say he's not important to Monk. Actually, he's very important to Monk, and Monk considers Kroeger's office his home away from home, the place where, as he tells Natalie, "it all doesn't happen."
When a cleaning lady in Dr. Kroeger's office is stabbed to death, Kroeger fears it may have been one of his patients. This becomes too much for him to bear so he decides to retire. Of course, Monk doesn't take this very well at all, and goes through all the stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. The difference is that Monk goes through them all in just a matter of seconds, and then repeats them over again as if stuck in a loop.
Kroeger suspects a patient named Joseph Wheeler, who once threatened him, may have been the killer. Wheeler works at Animal Crafters, a Build-A-Bear Workshop-type place, but his alibi checks out so they have to rule him out as the killer. Monk and Wheeler have a moment of solidarity when they realize they both lost someone very important when Kroeger quit his practice. They each stand clutching teddy bears and mourning the loss of their shrink.
Continue reading Monk: Mr. Monk Gets a New Shrink
Posted Mar 27th 2006 2:16PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: TV Royalty, Programming, OpEd, The Five

First, what exactly is an ensemble cast? It's not just a
matter of numbers, it's how the characters interact on the show. But if we are talking about numbers, let me explain
that I'm not talking about 3 or 4 people. It has to be larger than that. Which is why you won't find
Seinfeld or The
Dick Van Dyke Show on this
list. (But if I ever make a Five Great Foursomes, they'd be right up there.)
1.
Newsradio: It's amazing how quickly these actors got into their roles. After only a few episodes, this
large ensemble (8 regular characters: Dave, Lisa, Bill, Matthew, Catherine, Joe, Beth, and Jimmy) were like a comedy
machine, and each character not only has easily noticable quirks and likes and dislikes and character traits, but even
(dare I say it ) some depth. Some casts can't get that chemistry after 3
seasons let alone 3 episodes. Perfect
in every way.
Continue reading The Five: Great ensemble casts