Tag: bill-cosby

  • 11 Things We Learned at the NBC Winter TCA Panels: Scoop on ‘Parks & Rec,’ ‘Chicago Fire,’ and More

    2015 Winter TCA Tour - Day 10The Winter Television Critics Association Press Tour is underway and Moviefone sat in for the panels at NBC’s day to present their upcoming roster of programming. We got some scoop on new shows and returning favorites — here are the highlights!

    1. Eva Longoria Returns to TV
    The “Desperate Housewives” alum’s comedy “Telenovela,” about a daytime actress and her popular show, has a 13-episode order already.

    2. “Heroes Reborn” Has a New Star
    And his name is Zachary Levi. The “Chuck” actor will join NBC’s upcoming miniseries, a continuation of “Heroes.”

    3. The Next NBC Live Musical Will Be…
    “The Wiz” or “The Music Man.” They’re still deciding. Which would you prefer?

    4. An Undergound Railroad series?
    Another musical endeavor for the network will be “Freedom Run,” a musical miniseries that will focus on stories from the Underground Railroad and feature music from Stevie Wonder.

    5. Dolly Parton Has Some TV Tricks Up Her Bedazzled Sleeve
    In other music news, county legend Dolly Parton is developing a series of TV movies based on her life and her work. We’re not complaining…

    6. No More Cosby
    NBC Chairman Bob Greenblatt says it’s “safe to say” the network won’t be working with the comedian again. “When that many people come out and have such similar complaints, it became a tainted situation,” he remarked when asked about scrapping NBC’s previously planned Bill Cosby project.

    7. Chicago… Med?
    There’s already “Chicago PD” and “Chicago Fire,” so why not add “Chicago Med” in the successful mix? Well, that’s the plan.

    8. “Hannibal” Will Return…
    This summer. You’ll have to hold tight a little bit for Season 3, everyone.

    9. “The Slap” Is an Interesting Choice for Network
    “The Slap,” a miniseries comprised of an impressive cast that includes Uma Thurman, Peter Saarsgard, Thandie Newton, Zachary Quinto, and Melissa George, revolves around the consequences that arise from one parent’s slapping of another family’s child. The “slap” is really just a catalyst for the events that follow, and the complex issues that are raised throughout. “For the first time, we have this luxurious, poetic dialogue… and we’re on network TV,” George noted of the tricky concept.

    10. More “Chicago Fire” / “Chicago PD” Crossovers
    “You cant do it too often, but two, three times a season is catnip,” says Dick Wolf.

    11. We’re Going to Miss “Parks & Rec”
    OK, we already knew this. But after watching the hilarious cast in action discussing their favorite memories and experience on the show, the whole room felt the impending loss even more. Some highlights of their panel included Amy Poehler expressing her love for the idea of “treat yourself,” Chris Pratt’s vocal hatred of mean internet commenters (“screw everybody who reads comments!”), and producer Mike Schur’s reveal that he originally planned to have Andy Dwyer end up as mayor. We also learned that everyone will return for the finale. Schur mentioned that “the last moments of the show are everybody in the same place at the same time.”

    Keep checking back for more news straight from the Winter TCA press tour panels!

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  • Woody Allen’s Amazon Series: Six Burning Questions

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    Woody Allen used to joke that television was the result of how Los Angeles disposes of its trash, but now he’s in the business himself. There’s a lot that’s fascinating, surprising, confusing, even shocking about the news that he’ll be creating a TV series for Amazon. For one thing, he’s maintaining the same secrecy about plot and title that he does for his movies. Still, Moviefone can try to answer your burning questions about the Allen project.

    Does Allen know how to write for TV? Yes, he does. Surprisingly, no one seems to remember that one of his first jobs in showbiz was as a TV comedy writer for the great 1950s sketch comic Sid Caesar, whose legendary writer’s room launched not just Allen’s career but also those of Neil Simon, Carl Reiner, and Mel Brooks. He wrote for some other golden-age comedy series as well. Concurrent with his movie career over the last 45 years, he’s written a number of made-for-TV movies, one-act plays, and short films. So a sitcom shouldn’t be too much of a stretch.

    Allen is 79; does he still have what it takes to make a multi-episode Web series? Well, are you asking about his stamina? The guy’s made a movie a year for the last 46 years, and he shows no sign of slowing down. His parents lived to be about 100. So he’ll probably be able to handle the workload.
    Are you asking if a guy who still uses a typewriter is hip enough to write for a cutting-edge streaming-video distribution model? Well, maybe not. Then again, in movies, he keeps writing screenplays about young people falling in love, so maybe he can still appeal to a youthful demographic. His 2001 short “Sounds From a Town I Love,” a funny and poignant montage of New Yorkers talking on their cellphones, suggests both that he understands how people communicate in the mobile-device era and how to make clips that will go viral.

    Does hiring a filmmaker of Allen’s stature mean that Amazon has arrived as a prestige player? Actually, you could argue that the breakthrough moment came a couple days before the announcement of the Allen deal, when Amazon’s critically lauded “Transparent” won the Golden Globe for Best TV Comedy Series, and its star, Jeffrey Tambor, won for Best Actor. So no, it’s not really a milestone for Amazon or for the streaming-TV medium; after all, Amazon also has Paul Weitz’s “Mozart in the Jungle”; David Fincher is behind Netflix’s “House of Cards”; and the Wachowskis are the creators of Netflix’s upcoming “Sense8.” True none of these are filmmakers as well-regarded as Allen, but they did all make the leap from features to the streaming screen. What’s more, traditional TV has also seen an influx of prestige movie directors lately, including Martin Scorsese and Steven Soderbergh. A lot of this speaks to how TV is currently a better medium for writers than mainstream Hollywood film; it’s also a haven for indie film directors seeking interim work as episodic TV directors.

    If anything, this is less a case of Allen catching up to a new medium than the medium catching up to Allen. The rise of TV-bred auteurs like Larry David, Louis C.K., and Lena Dunham, all of whom wear their Allen influences on their sleeves (C.K. even borrowed Allen’s film editor, Susan Morse, for his FX series “Louie”), suggests that Allen should feel right at home in the current landscape.

    Can Allen sustain enough ideas for an entire TV series? Yes. The auteur has a famous file full of unproduced story ideas, probably more than he can ever turn into movies. Some of them become plays or New Yorker magazine humor pieces, and some of them gather dust. But his ridiculously prolific mind is not going to have any trouble with satisfying the appetites of binge-watchers.

    Isn’t Woody Allen pretty much a niche figure these days? Sure, but maybe that will help him here. His movies (aside from fluke hits like “Midnight in Paris”) don’t sell many tickets in North America, but then, his audience has aged and doesn’t like to go out to the movies that often. But then, stay-at-home viewers are the ones he’s pursuing anyway through Amazon. His movies do better overseas, and his show presumably will as well, so Amazon’s investment in him is probably secure.

    Why is Allen getting a TV deal when Bill Cosby is losing his? Indeed, there has been a lot of grumbling about how Allen seems to be benefiting from a double standard, given the horrific accusations of sexual assault against both comedy legends. Neither man, of course, has yet to be proven guilty of any crime, but there’s now a full pattern of accusations against Cosby, while Allen has a single accuser. The act Allen is accused of allegedly happened more than 20 years ago, while Cosby’s alleged misdeeds span decades. And the accusation against Allen came out during his messy breakup with Mia Farrow, suggesting to Allen supporters that there was an ulterior motive behind the claim. None of this is to excuse either man if he actually is guilty, but it makes it easier for fans to shrug and give Allen the benefit of the doubt than to do the same for Cosby.

    There’s also the fact that Cosby had an image as America’s favorite Dad. Allen has no similarly wholesome image to live up to. In fact, Allen has spent much of the last quarter-century, making films that acknowledge that it’s possible to be both a great artist and a horrible human being without one negating the other. (See in particular “Bullets Over Broadway,” “Deconstructing Harry,” and “Sweet and Lowdown.”) So Allen has cultivated an audience that’s capable of compartmentalizing his personal life and his creative work. Cosby, however, has suggested throughout his entire career that there is no difference between his work and his life. His stand-up routines, his sitcoms, his fatherly-advice books, and even his “Fat Albert” cartoons are clearly autobiographical. This matters to the extent that Cosby would have been the star of his now-scrapped NBC show, while there’s no telling whether or not Allen plans to act in his.

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  • Golden Globes 2015: The Top 5 Amy and Tina Moments

    It was widely reported that this year’s Golden Globes show would be the swan song for amazing co-hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, news that put us through the five stages of grief pretty quickly (followed by lots of heavy milkshake-drinking). The duo have hosted the glittery awards show for the past three years, exposing the inherently sexist, silly nature of Hollywood but doing with such good-natured aplomb that it never came across as acid or mean-spirited (like the infamous previous host Ricky Gervais).

    What was kind of upsetting about last night, though, was how little Tina and Amy were actually given to do. It felt like last night the dynamic duo had the least amount of screen time out of any of their gigs. After a terrific monologue (more on that in a minute), they were largely sidelined, interjecting where they could but mostly silent (or hidden backstage somewhere or in the maze of underground tunnels I’m fairly sure exists underneath the Beverly Hilton). Still — when they were on stage, they were genuinely incredible. And if this really is their final job hosting, they went out on top. Obviously.

    1. The Monologue
    A lot has already been written about their razor-sharp monologue (you can watch it below), but it needs to be reiterated that it was really, really, ridiculously funny. They took aim at the ridiculousness of the evening and its participants (Tina: “You bunch of despicable, spoiled, minimally talented brats”), the brouhaha surrounding the release of “The Interview” (“All the movies North Korea was okay with”), the current nominees (“We Anderson arrived on a bicycle made of antique tuba parts”) and, most damningly, Bill Cosby. (What? You thought two outspoken, brilliant feminist comedians wouldn’t joke about the defamed comedy legend, currently staring down more than two dozen sexual assault allegations?) Maybe the most delightful element of their monologue was when they went around the room talking about who they’d rather or not sleep with. Our favorite bit? Weighing who would be better in the sack — “Boyhood” director Richard Linklater (“Once a year for five minutes”) or “Birdman” filmmaker Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu (“Two hours, one take”). All in all: they killed it. Now what can we do to bring them back for year 4?

    2. Introducing Margaret Cho
    Fairly early in the show, Tina and Amy decided to introduce the newest member of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association — Cho Yun Ja, a North Korean contributor to Movies Wow played by none other than cult comedienne Margaret Cho. She was totally in character, straight-faced and wearing nearly kabuki-style make-up, gripping an issue of her magazine (“Kim: Break the Internet”), taking a selfie photo with Meryl Streep that was photographed by Michael Keaton and photo-bombed by none other than Benedict Cumberbatch. It was pretty great, orchestrated with gleeful anarchy by Fey and Poehler.

    3. Cho Yun Ja Returns
    Thankfully, Margaret Cho’s introduction was not her last appearance — she would pop up periodically throughout the night, even saying the final words of the telecast. But it was her first appearance back after her introduction that was the funniest. Particularly for her final zinger: “Also I think ‘Orange is the New Black’ should be in the drama category. It’s funny but not ha-ha funny.” And then everyone was hacked again.

    4. Tina’s Awesome Glittery Tux
    We just have to take a moment and give it up for Tina’s awesome glittery tux, which she wore during the middle section of the show. This might be the only glittery tux to be more awesome than David Oyelowo‘s glittery tux (undoubtedly part of the Daft Punk evening wear collection). Fey’s outfit had her bow tie all askew and was just looking really, really cool. It was a wonderfully gender-defiant piece of fashion that was also elegant and smart and witty.

    5. The Matthew McConaughey Joke
    Amy’s Matthew McConaughey joke was brief but totally amazing. “When your producers tell you you’re running long, there’s only one thing to do… here’s Matthew McConaughey.” Alright alright alright alright, this was a pretty great joy. Yes it was, yes it was. (By the way, how stoked was McConaughey when his best bud Richard Linklater took home the big prizes last night?) And yes, this was better than the Oprah intro. By a fairly considerable margin.
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  • Tina and Amy’s 2015 Golden Globes Monologue: Bill Cosby, Clooney, ‘The Interview’ Mocked (VIDEO)

    tina fey and amy poehler at the 2015 golden globe awardsCrushed it. Again. Bow to the queens. Tina Fey and Amy Poehler hosted the 72nd Annual Golden Globe Awards on Sunday, January 11 on NBC. They said it’s their final time hosting but someone has to convince them to come back next year.

    They went for it right out of the gate, starting their monologue with a Sony hacking reference when Tina welcomed the audience as “you bunch of despicable, spoiled, minimally talented brats.” They quickly segued into “The Interview”/North Korea jokes, then later made the audience groan with a Bill Cosby/Sleeping Beauty joke. (There was a whole Cosby section, including impressions from both actresses.)

    Tina and Amy also hit the classics, including jokes about women aging in Hollywood. See Amy’s “‘Boyhood’ proves there are still good roles for women over 40 as long as you get hired when you’re under 40,” and Tina’s “It took me three hours today to prepare for my role as a human woman.” They also explained that Jennifer Aniston‘s movie title “Cake” was a substance people eat on birthdays, with birthdays being things people celebrate when they acknowledge that they’ve aged.

    And since their George Clooney “Gravity” joke was an instant classic, they went for another Clooney diss, this time mocking how he’s getting a lifetime achievement award when his wife is the one with a long list of important real-life accomplishments.

    The monologue didn’t feel that long – it could’ve been even longer – but it also included a classic game of “Who Would You Rather?” with Tina and Amy choosing between Colins, Hulks and Chris’s. Tina wins for choosing Colin Firth “for a polite amount of time.”

    What did you think of Tina and Amy’s monologue, from the Sony joke to Bill Cosby? Killed it? Disappointed?

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