hero-related stories
Posted Jan 20th 2009 10:22PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Other Reality Shows, Celebrities

If you're a regular
Top Chef watcher -- like me -- you know that when it comes to being a straight-shooter, down to earth, regular person, professional chef
Tom Colicchio fills the bill. He's a tough judge, but pretty fair. He's also supposedly a world-class chef and restaurant mogul, but since I've never been to any of the Craft restaurants to had him cook a meal for me, I have to assume that's true.
One thing I do know is true, however, is that
Tom Colicchio saved a life. Seriously.
On Monday night at a pre-Inaugural benefit in Washington, D.C., hosted by cookbook scribe Joan Nathan, when the hostess choked on a piece of chicken and author Alice Waters screamed for someone to help her, Chef Tom rushed over, assessed the situation and gave Ms. Nathan the Heimlich maneuver. After a few pulls, the chicken was dislodged and the party resumed.
Continue reading Top Chef's Tom saves the day...and a life
Posted May 5th 2008 10:24AM by Isabelle Carreau
Filed under: Celebrities, Heroes, Friday Night Lights, Casting, Reality-Free

Actress
Brea Grant just landed a pretty cool role on the hit NBC series
Heroes. According to
TV Guide's Michael Ausiello,
the young actress was cast as Joy, a woman in her early twenties with the power of superspeed.
This recurring character is said to be introduced in a scene set at a museum. Hiro meets the woman at the museum and asks her if she has powers and is using them to steal art. As expected, Joy will lie to our beloved hero Hiro and leave the scene with a few paintings. Is she part of the villains or is she one of the good guys and somehow lost her way? Only time will tell!
Continue reading Brea Grant speeds her way to Heroes
Posted Mar 23rd 2007 7:34AM by Kevin Kelly
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, OpEd, Smallville, The CW

(S06E17) You know you're in for a very special
Smallville when it starts out with a WWF-style cage match, an extremely gratuitous shot of some very large boobs, and an all-out brawl between Clark and a Zoner who seems stronger than he is. It's like a Bizarro world version of the show starring everyone's favorite Kryptonian. Zowie.
Basically, it's
Fight Club meets
Smallville meets ... well,
Superheroes Gone Wild. Toss in Lois chomping at the bit for a story, and you've got half the makings of a regular old episode of
Lois & Clark, or is it just me? Although I don't remember Teri Hatcher donning red leather and claiming to be a wayward stripper from down the street who has a penchant for loving the ladies. Plus, did you catch the way Lois claimed she does a killer "Stars and Stripes" routine? Hello throwback to an old episode.
Continue reading Smallville: Combat
Posted Mar 11th 2007 1:01PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, Animation, Sci Fi
Painkiller Jane, SciFi's new series based on the comic by Jimmy Palmiotti and Joe Quesada, will premiere April 13 at 10:00 p.m. The series will focus on the titular character (played by Kristanna Loken) a woman who can regenerate from any injury, but still feels pain. She hunts Neuros, humans with super-mental powers, for a secret agency.
Continue reading Painkiller Jane premieres April 13
Posted Jan 12th 2007 12:02PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, Sci Fi
According to Geek Monthly, SciFi is developing a new "Flash Gordon" series as part of a plan to develop new "lighter" shows after network brass blamed the decline in ratings of Battlestar Galactica on its dark tone. However, the article states that the series will not be as campy as the 1980 Flash Gordon film.
Flash Gordon has been developed already in several mediums. It began as a comic strip in the '30s and eventually expanded into comic books, theatrical serials, a live-action television program, an animated series, and the aforementioned movie.
SciFi has not committed to the series yet, but if it does, don't expect to see it until sometime early next year.
I'll admit I rolled my eyes when I first heard this news, but I think SciFi has proved itself over the years as adept at developing old ideas into something fresh and exciting (Battlestar Galactica). What do you guys think? Should SciFi develop Flash Gordon into a new series, or has that idea been beaten to death enough already?
[via TV Filter]
Posted Sep 7th 2006 2:31PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: FOX, OpEd, The Simpsons, Animation, Retro Squad
(S06E22) This episode kicks off, as so many do, with an episode of the Krusty the Clown Show. It seems Krusty got into some hot water with a sexual harassment lawsuit, so his special guest that day is a woman named Officer No Means No. Meanwhile, Bart enjoys his breakfast of Krusty-Os, which contain a special prize inside: one jagged metal Krusty-O.
Bart swallows the jagged O unknowingly, and begins to feel the effects while in class. He begs Ms. Krabappel to let him see the nurse, but she thinks he's faking. Bart tries to persuade her by insisting that if he dies, she'll get in trouble, but according to the school charter, "No teacher shall be held accountable if Bart Simpson dies." Bart is forced to finish his test, and finally Ms. Krabappel let's him see the nurse, who also happens to be Lunch Lady Doris due to budget cuts.
Continue reading The Simpsons: 'Round Springfield
Posted May 4th 2006 6:31PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Cable, Late Night, Talent, OpEd, Web, Watercooler Talk, The Colbert Report, Celebrities

Are
you sick of reading the analysis of Stephen Colbert's
performance at the White House
Correspondents' Dinner yet? I am. I mean, I haven't seen something so inconsequential polarize so many people since
"Clay vs. Ruben". It seems like most of the analysts fall into two camps: either Colbert is a
patriot and a
hero for
mocking the Bush administration
and the media right to their uncomfortable
little faces, or he was a
blowhard that
just wasn't funny, no matter who he was
skewering.
USA Today recaps
the latest columnists to weigh in on the matter.
Really, folks, it was a glorified stand-up routine. It's
almost a week already; it's time for us to move on.
[Photo: Mandel Nagan/Getty Images]
Posted Apr 20th 2006 12:34PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: TV on DVD, Animation
There are two cartoons I remember very fondly and
distinctly from my days as a youngster. Both of them ceased production before I was born, but I gobbled them up in
reruns. The first was Underdog, and the second was Hong Kong Phooey. So, naturally, I was ecstatic
when I found out that all thirty-one episodes of Hong Kong Phooey, a Hanna-Barbera cartoon which featured
Scatman Crothers as the voice of an inept crime-fighting dog who knows kung fu, would be coming out on DVD on August
15. Of course, when Phooey wasn't fighting crime he worked as mild-mannered (all super hero alter egos are
mild-mannered) janitor Penrod "Penry" Pooch. The DVD set will also feature a documentary on the making
of the series.
Oh yeah, and the complete series of Magilla
Gorilla comes out on the same day, but I never watched that.
[via ToonZone]
Posted Apr 1st 2006 9:27AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Cable, OpEd, Wonder Showzen
Last night marked the start of the
second season of Wonder Showzen, and I almost missed it. Thankfully they repeated the episode later in the
evening so I was able to crank up the ol' Tivo and capture it. After watching the same Season One episodes about twenty
times each, it was nice to finally see something new.
Last night's episode was about heroes and victims, with the
main focus being put on the letter P, who was once very pretty but gained a lot of excess weight. Chauncy, the puppet's
ringleader, decides P just needs a healthy dose of tough love, so he and the rest of the gang scream things at her
like "stupid bitch" and "dumb slut" because "she needed to hear that."
Continue reading Wonder Showzen: Body