Posts with tag grammy awards
Posted Feb 10th 2008 4:07PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Programming, What To Watch Tonight

- At 7, CBS has a new 60 Minutes, then The Grammy Awards.
- ABC has a new America's Funniest Home Videos, then new episodes of Extreme Makeover and Brothers and Sisters.
- There's a new CW Now on The CW at 7.
- At 8, PBS has a new Nature, then a new Masterpiece.
- Food Network has a new Challenge at 8, then new episodes of Iron Chef America and Throwdown with Bobby Flay.
- At 8:30, FOX has a new King of the Hill.
- At 9, HBO has a new episode of The Wire, then a new Russell Simmons' Def Comedy Jam.
- Showtime has a new L Word at 9.
- At 10, AMC has a new Breaking Bad.
Check your local TV listings for more.
Posted Jan 29th 2008 10:29AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: OpEd, WGA Strike

On February 10, the Grammy Awards will be shown on CBS
with the benefit of writers. The WGA has agreed to let striking writers work on the awards show.
This year is the 50th telecast of the Grammys and it makes sense that the WGA would permit their members to work on this show. After all, the musicians' union is another union and creating music is still just another form of writing.
Continue reading Writers can work on the Grammys
Posted Jan 15th 2008 5:27PM by Richard Keller
Filed under: Industry, Watercooler Talk, Awards, WGA Strike
This year's awards season, barely a month old now, has not been a good one for Hollywood. First, the Golden Globes ceremony was reduced to an Access Hollywood special after members of the Writers Guild and Screen Actors Guild boycotted the show. Now, it looks like the Grammy Awards ceremony may also be in trouble.
It is being reported that the striking guild will probably bar its members from working on the February 10th Grammys telecast. Grammy organizers have yet to ask for a waiver allowing for writers to work on the show. However, according to a WGA spokesperson, a waiver grant would be unlikely. There is no word if the WGA will picket the ceremony. If it does, then SAG members will not cross the picket line. This potentially means another exciting 1-hour infotainment special.
I'm sure members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences are sweating a bit now.
Posted Mar 30th 2007 12:21PM by Liz Finn-Arnold
Filed under: American Idol, Judges, News and Gossip

Are you ready for a pop snack? You're in luck because
Paula Abdul - Greatest Hits: Straight Up! will be released on May 8, 2007.
The 18-track collection includes all six of Paula's #1 chart-toppers, including: "Forever Your Girl," "Opposites Attract," "Cold Hearted," and "Rush, Rush."
You kiddies might not know this, but back in the old days (the golden years of MTV), long before Paula became the weeping, slurring, iconic Idol judge, she was a chart-topping performer who sold over 30 million records. She also won a Grammy, along with seven MTV Awards, two Emmy Awards, two People's Choice Awards, and two Kids Choice Awards. Not bad for an ex-cheerleader.
Paula proves that you don't have to win American Idol or have the "best voice in the world" to sell a lot of albums.
Posted Feb 14th 2007 10:44AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming, Ratings

1.
American Idol - Tues (FOX)
2.
American Idol - Weds (FOX)
3.
Grey's Anatomy (ABC)
4.
House (FOX)
5.
CSI (CBS)
6.
Grammy Awards (CBS)
7.
CSI: Miami (CBS)
8.
Desperate Housewives (ABC)
9.
Two and a Half Men (CBS)
10.
Deal Or No Deal - Mon (NBC)
11.
Criminal Minds (CBS)
12.
NCIS (CBS)
13.
CSI: NY (CBS)
14.
Rules of Engagement (CBS)
15.
Survivor (CBS)
16.
60 Minutes (CBS)
17.
Extreme Makeover (ABC)
18.
Shark (CBS)
19.
Law and Order: SVU (NBC)
20.
Ugly Betty (ABC)
Posted Jan 30th 2007 2:29PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: ABC, Music and Variety, Celebrities
One of the big regrets of my life was not seeing The Police in concert when they were together in the late 70s and early 80s. They're one of my favorite bands, and I don't really know why I never made an effort to see them live. I saw Sting live once and it was great, but it wasn't the same.
I might be able to get another chance. There are rumors swirling that the band is going to get together again this summer for a 30th anniversary tour, but before that happens they'll open the Grammy Awards on ABC on February 11. It's official now. Sting, Andy Summers, and Stewart Copeland will open the show. There are also rumors that they are rehearsing in Vancouver for that world tour, though nothing has been said beyond the Grammys gig.
Now...what song should they play to open the telecast?
Posted Jan 15th 2007 1:05PM by Julia Ward
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, CBS, CSI: New York, Music and Variety, Celebrities

It's a cross-promotional party over at CBS for Grammy Week '07. In anticipation of the February 11th broadcast of the 49th Annual Grammy Awards, nominees
Mary J. Blige and
Nelly Furtado will be making special guest appearances on CBS shows. Blige will be playing opposite lackluster recording artist Jennifer Love Hewitt on an episode of
Ghost Whisperer, and Nelly Furtado will be playing a dead hooker on
CSI: NY. Oops... actually she's not playing a dead hooker. I just saw "network crime procedural" and "attractive woman" so I thought "dead hooker."
Continue reading Blige and Furtado to drop by CBS for Grammy Week
Posted Feb 9th 2006 8:26AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: CBS, Music and Variety, Celebrities

Teri Hatcher had to know that when she wore a sheer dress
with boy panties underneath to the
Grammy Awards last night, she would be compared to Jennifer Lopez's infamous
green scarf outfit back at
Grammys 2000. Maybe I'm just used to seeing celebrities wear see-through dresses, but I thought J-Lo's outfit
had a lot more impact than Hatcher's. Plus, she looked hotter. Lopez actually has some shape to her body, whereas Teri
Hatcher is so skinny that it's borderline nasty. But, the guys might like that Teri is showing more breast than J-Lo
did and yes, they are real and I hear "they're spectacular".
Other fashion you should check out:
Continue reading Teri Hatcher v. Jennifer Lopez
Posted Feb 8th 2006 11:09AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: CBS, Talent, OpEd, Music and Variety
Of course, for many of us, the question could be "did the
Grammys ever matter at all?" But they're asking the question on CNN, and I have to admit that if I didn't write
for a TV site I probably wouldn't even had known that the show was tonight (8pm on CBS).
Is this show important to anyone outside of the music industry? And why would it even be important to anyone in the
music industry, since I don't think that a Grammy nomination or a win results in more sales to the average
consumer. I mean, I don't think music fan buys a CD because the artist wins an award, they buy it because
they like the artist anyway, or it was recommended by a friend, etc. In fact, the argument could be made that
since the artist/album got a Grammy nomination, it already had great sales, or it wouldn't have been nominated
(yeah, yeah, yeah, I know, it's quality, not quanity - but that's in a perfect world. In the real world,
sales means accolades).
So tell us: do you watch the Grammys? And if so, why? And do awards go out and make you buy the
album?