Pearl Jam-related stories
Posted May 23rd 2009 1:38PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Late Night, Celebrities, Talk Show, Reality-Free

Unless you've been in a coma for the past year and just woke up, you probably know that
Conan O'Brien is the new host of The Tonight Show. He takes over on June 1.
NBC has released the roster of guests for the first week of shows, and it's a mix of big stars, big musical guests, and one guest thrown into the mix that really sticks out. After the jump, the line-up.
Continue reading Here's the guest list for Conan's first week
Posted May 4th 2009 10:09AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Watercooler Talk, Reality-Free

This was
the season finale the next-to-last episode
Cold Case for the season, but next week could be the
series finale. We'll find out at CBS' upfront presentation in a couple of weeks. But if it does serve as the series finale, at least you had the music of Pearl Jam to play it out! I always think it's weird when the show has a cold case from three or four years ago. That's not cold, that's slightly nippy. But I guess
Nippy Case would have been an entirely different type of show.
Posted Jun 24th 2006 11:35AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Celebrities

David Cross, brilliant (and sometimes extremely foul) comedian and former co-star of
Arrested Development is giving a special performance for charity in Portland, Oregon. I'm not sure my reasons for posting this: either I'm really excited about it or I'm gloating. Either way, he's opening for Pearl Jam at
this event in Portland on Thursday, July 20th.
Tickets are $75 a piece. They go on sale at 10 am PT in case you're in the neighborhood. No, I'm not involved. I just think it'll be a terrific show.
Posted May 22nd 2006 9:03AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: OpEd, Video, Web

Pearl Jam is making one of their videos
available online under the Creative Commons license. Why do I care about Pearl Jam doing this? Well, I don't actually, but it got me thinking about music videos and how they've found a new life online and in DVD form, as television has all but eradicated them. While many networks and channels are moving online with broadband content while still remaining secured to TV, these days you can't really see a video from your favorite band unless you go online, or buy a number of DVD collections dedicated to certain video directors like Michael Gondry and Spike Jonze, among others. The thing is, videos haven't gotten worse, in fact, they've gotten much better, I think, and while the idea of sitting through three whole minutes of song might cause the programmers at MTV to gasp in horror, I'm glad to see bands are still making videos, and making them easily accessible to fans and anyone else who wants to check them out. The Web can be a place not only for networks to try out online-only content and rerun old shows, it can also be a place where ideas no longer suited to television can still find an audience.
Posted May 2nd 2006 9:26AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: CBS, Late Night, Web

I've never liked nor disliked Pearl Jam, I've always been indifferent. I do give
the band credit, though, for embracing its fanbase and keeping on even after the grunge explosion finally fizzled out
and the sound of which they were originally a part of was no longer the hip new blip on the mainstream radar. Lately,
though, the band seems to be warming up to the spotlight again, given their recent apperance on
SNL and a
scheduled apperance on
The Late Show with David Letterman this Thursday. If you catch the show, you'll hear
the usual one song a band performs, but if you want a bit more Pearl Jammy goodness, CBS will be streaming a full
concert by the band from the Ed Sullivan Theater on the
Late
Show Web site which will follow the taping of their appearance. The online concert will start at 5:55
p.m. EST. You can expect to hear songs off the new album, as well as some older material.
Posted Apr 24th 2006 11:17AM by Richard Keller
Filed under: Industry, Programming, OpEd, The Five
April
24th begins the annual "TV Turnoff Week". For seven days we are to turn off the boob tube and focus on other
activities inside and outside our home. For instance, talking to the other members of our family or walking out the
front door into that space full of yellow light and green grass. I think we call that the outdoors.
Of course,
the purpose of "TV Turnoff Week" is the total opposite of what we do here at TV Squad, which is, um, report
on television. So, as a public service to you we present this special episode of The Five: Reasons to not turn off TV
during 'TV Turnoff Week'.
You can post comments on TV Squad articles: We love your
comments, even when you say we're messengers of Satan because some of us don't like Pearl
Jam. However, if you don't turn the TV on, you're not going to be able to comment on any of the shows that we
review. That will make all of us sad, and probably make our bosses even sadder. We'll end up losing our jobs, which
will have a domino effect for all of our other blogging sites. Of course, that will cause AOL to go out of business,
and the Internet will probably collapse unto itself. Dogs and cats will fight, cows will stop giving milk, and,
yadda yadda yadda. We'll eventually be beating each other over the heads with clubs in order to grab the carcass
of a dead brontosaurus.
Continue reading The Five: Reasons to not turn off TV during 'TV Turnoff Week'
Posted Apr 16th 2006 7:03PM by Jonathan Toomey
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, NBC, OpEd, Saturday Night Live, Music and Variety
(S31E16) Not too shabby. For her third SNL hosting gig, Lindsay Lohan wasn't all that bad. I did
find it odd that she's doing SNL again so soon though. Especially after that big hoopla about the Vanity Fair
article a few months ago. But her arms did look much plumper this time around. Besides, she has a new movie coming out and I would assume that she and Tina Fey
have a good relationship. So I guess it does makes sense that she would be doing SNL again so soon. See that?
I answer my own questions.
The Situation Room - It seems like we've officially reached
the point where every single cold open that SNL does is going to be a take-off of one of the many political
pundit shows from across the cable universe. I'm fine with that. I'm just saying that I can't remember the last time a
cold open that wasn't Hardball, or Anderson Cooper, or this. I suppose it makes sense though when the
government is giving out plenty of material to spin into a sketch. Might as well use it. This was funny. Wolf
(Chris Parnell) had numerous guests commenting about the recent news that White House Chief of Staff Andy Card had
resigned (well, I guess it's not that recent). It seems everyone they interviewed, who now worked for the
President, had come from a temp agency. I loved it when Kristen Wiig (she's the new Resident Iran Expert) asked to
have her time card initialed.
Continue reading Saturday Night Live: Lindsay Lohan and Pearl Jam