Tag: ted-2

  • First Trailer for the ‘Ted’ TV Prequel

    Preview:

    • The trailer for the ‘Ted’ TV series is online.
    • It’s set in the 1990s, before the two ‘Ted’ movies.
    • From creator Seth MacFarlane, the show will premiere on Peacock in January.

    Not content with dominating the televised animation landscape with shows such as ‘Family Guy’ and ‘American Dad’, Seth MacFarlane has also made movies, with the ‘Ted’ films –– about a foul-mouthed toy (voiced by MacFarlane) who is best friends with John Bennett (played in the movies by Mark Wahlberg).

    MacFarlane is now bringing the character and his story to his small-screen stomping grounds via a new Peacock prequel series, also titled ‘Ted’.

    The first trailer for the show is now online, and you can watch it above.

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    What’s the Story of ‘Ted’?

    Seth MacFarlane as the voice of Ted in 'Ted.'
    Seth MacFarlane as the voice of Ted in ‘Ted.’ Photo by: Peacock.

    While the movies do kick off with young John Bennett wishing his favorite toy could talk, the new show will fill in some of the storytelling gaps.

    It’s 1993, and Ted the bear’s (Seth MacFarlane) moment of fame has passed. He’s now living back home in Framingham, Massachusetts with his best friend, 16-year-old John Bennett (Max Burkholder), along with John’s parents, Matty and Susan (MacFarlane regular Scott Grimes and Alanna Ubach) and cousin Blaire (Giorgia Whigham).

    Ted may be a lousy influence on John, but at the end of the day, he’s a loyal pal who’s always willing to go out on a limb for friendship.

    Related Article: Every Seth MacFarlane TV Show, Ranked From ‘Family Guy’ to ‘The Orville’

    Seth MacFarlane and His Team Talk About the Show

    Max Burkholder as John and Seth MacFarlane as the voice of Ted in 'Ted.'
    (L to R) Max Burkholder as John and Seth MacFarlane as the voice of Ted in ‘Ted.’ Photo: Peacock.

    MacFarlane, along with co-showrunners Brad Walsh and Paul Corrigan, issued the following statement about the new series:

    “Each generation develops its own unique artistic style, its own way of seeing the world. In the twenties, it was the subversive musical phrasings of jazz. In the fifties, it was the bold brushwork of the abstract expressionists. Our generation’s unique art is streaming content based on previously successful intellectual property. In that proud tradition, we humbly give you ‘Ted’. Our series is a prequel to the Ted movies. It takes place in the nineties but is based on the timeless truth that being sixteen sucks. The only thing that makes it tolerable is going through it with a friend, even if that friend is a has-been magical teddy bear with a foul mouth and a proclivity for drug use. The three of us were teenagers in the nineties and grew up in and around Boston, where the show takes place, so many of these stories are personal for us. We were able to put the characters through some of the same indignities and milestones we experienced back then. Also, we made stuff up (it’s a lot of pages to fill and real life is mostly boring).”

    When Will ‘Ted’ Be On Screens?

    Seth MacFarlane as the voice of Ted, Max Burkholder as John, Scott Grimes as Matty, Alanna Ubach as Susan, and Giorgia Whigham as Blaire in 'Ted.'
    (L to R) Seth MacFarlane as the voice of Ted, Max Burkholder as John, Scott Grimes as Matty, Alanna Ubach as Susan, and Giorgia Whigham as Blaire in ‘Ted.’ Photo: Peacock.

    Peacock is premiering the series on January 11th.

    'Ted' premieres on Peacock January 11th.
    ‘Ted’ premieres on Peacock January 11th.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Ted’:

    Buy ‘Ted’ Movies On Amazon

     

  • What’s New on TV, Netflix Streaming, Digital, and DVD/Blu-ray This Week: December 14-20

    At a loss for what to watch this week? From new DVDs and Blu-rays, to what’s streaming on Netflix, we’ve got you covered.

    New on DVD and Blu-ray

    “F is for Family”
    “F is for Family” is one of four Netflix original series dropping on December 18. PC Principal would hate this one, but that may be why you love it. The animated sitcom, co-created by comedian Bill Burr, debuts its first six episodes on December 18. It’s a “family comedy” set in the pre-PC world of 1970s “when you could smack your kid, smoke inside and bring a gun to the airport.” Ah, the good ole days! Bill Burr voices the Murphy family patriarch, with Laura Dern as his wife, Justin Long as his eldest son, Debi Derryberry as his daughter, and Haley Reinhart as his young son.

    Check out the very un-PC Season 1 trailer (warning: explicit language):
    “Fargo” (Monday on FX at 10 p.m.)Maybe all Coen Bros. movies should inspire new TV shows. Season 2 of this instant classic series stars Kirsten Dunst, Patrick Wilson, Jesse Plemons, Jean Smart, and Ted Danson, and the fun is ending with Episode 10, “Palindrome,” on December 14. Check out why it just got some “The Expanse” (Monday on Syfy at 10 p.m.)
    Syfy is launching its most ambitious series ever with the 10-episode space drama “The Expanse.” Episode 1 starts December 14, with Episode 2 following the next night, Tuesday, December 15. The series will then air Tuesdays at 10 p.m. for the rest of the season. The drama is based on the best-selling book series set 200 years in the future after mankind has colonized space. The case of a missing young woman leads a hardened detective and a rogue ship’s captain across the solar system to uncover the greatest conspiracy in human history.

    “The Soup” (Friday on E! at 10 p.m.)
    This is it. E! is ending “The Soup” after 22 seasons on Friday, December 18. The series started as “Talk Soup” with host Greg Kinnear, and was renamed and spruced up in 2004 when Joel McHale took over. Clear some time on Friday night to bid the show adieu.

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  • Why Did ‘Ted 2’ Stumble at the Box Office?

    Thunder buddies for life? Not for audiences, at least.

    “Ted 2” fans proved shockingly disloyal this weekend, ponying up only $32.9 million for the sequel — off more than $20 million from what the original “Ted” made ($54.4 million) three years ago over the same weekend frame. It was supposed to give holdovers “Jurassic World” and “Inside Out” a close race for the top spot. Instead, it came in third place, while “Jurassic” and “IO” finished as expected with $54.2 million and $52.1 million, respectively.

    In a season when pundits have been routinely underestimating the opening weekend tallies of summer hits by tens of millions of dollars, a movie that underperforms as big as “Ted 2” has to be considered a disappointment.

    What went wrong? Here are five possible reasons:

    1. The Novelty’s Worn Off
    A foul-mouthed, pot-smoking teddy bear was pretty funny the first time. The second time? Not so much. “Ted” seems to have been playing on permanent rotation on cable for the past three years, and instead of whetting appetites for a sequel, it seems to have worn out the bear’s welcome.

    2. Seth MacFarlane Is Wearing Out His Welcome, Too
    Since the first “Ted” opened, MacFarlane has hosted the Oscars — to decidedly mixed reviews — and wrote, directed and starred in last summer’s “A Million Ways to Die in the West,” which was universally panned and topped out at $43.1 million — about $11 million less than “Ted” earned upon its opening weekend.

    MacFarlane’s not over, by any means (he still has his two long-running primetime cartoons), but his fanbase isn’t what it used to be. And few seem to want to see him on camera, even if he is voicing a sentient, pot-smoking bear.

    3. The Audience Has Grown Up
    Well, sort of.

    An R-rated comedy depends on adult viewers, of course, but exit polling shows that only about half of “Ted 2” ticketbuyers were over 25. The grown-ups stayed away, perhaps for the two reasons listed above, and perhaps because reviews for “Ted 2” were much worse than those for its predecessor. Since the over-25 audience actually still cares somewhat about reviews, the pans probably hurt the movie. Moviegoers who’ve actually seen the comedy liked it enough to give it a B+ CinemaScore, but decent word-of-mouth won’t help people see it if weak reviews kept them away in the first place.

    4. Fierce Competition
    Or at least a zoo, with the poor bear fighting not just genetically-enhanced dinosaurs at the box office, but also emotions inside a little girl’s head. “Ted 2” faced the one-two punch of over-performers “Jurassic World” and “Inside Out” this weekend, competition that the first film didn’t have to face. A strong argument can be made for “Ted 2’s” audience getting lost on their pay to see “Jurassic” and “IO” again.

    5. R-Rated Comedies Are Struggling
    This summer, anyway.

    Four-week old “Spy,” while critically praised, is a bit of a slow-starter at the box office. But it’s held steady at the box office, boasting small drop-offs week to week, so some of “Ted 2’s” fanbase may have got their laughs from Melissa McCarthy instead. Even four-week-old “Spy” may have knocked some of the stuffing out of “Ted 2.” “Spy” finished fifth this week, with an estimated $7.8 million, for a four-week total of $88.4 million. That’s good considering that it, too, is competing against “Jurassic World” and “Inside Out.”

    The underperformance of “Ted 2” ends Universal’s recent streak of franchise-based hits that it has been enjoying all year, from “Fifty Shades of Grey” to “Furious 7” to “Pitch Perfect 2” to “Jurassic World.” While nobody anticipated just how huge “Jurassic World” was going to be, Universal should have anticipated that its audience would be demographically broad enough to steal some of the thunder from its little thunder buddy and shouldn’t have positioned them just two weeks apart.

    No doubt Amy Schumer is relieved that Universal isn’t opening her R-rated comedy, “Trainwreck,” until July 17. That’ll put three weeks between it and “Ted 2” and five weeks between it and “Jurassic World.” After all, those dinosaurs will eat any critter, no matter who created it.
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  • Amanda Seyfried Facts: 13 Things You (Probably) Don’t Know About the ‘Ted 2’ Star

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    Amanda Seyfried might’ve started off playing the dumb, well-meaning blonde in “Mean Girls,” but since then she’s proved that she can master just about any role. Now she’s taking on raunchy comedy “Ted 2,” alongside co-stars Mark Wahlberg and Seth MacFarlane.

    From how she calms her nerves to the role she almost landed, here are 13 things you probably don’t know about Amanda Seyfried.
    [Source: IMDB]

  • Super Bowl Movie Trailers 2015, Ranked From Best to Worst

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    So there was a pretty big game going on tonight, sandwiched around a jaw-dropping Katy Perry / Lenny Kravitz / Missy Elliott performance. And during said sporting event, they happened to show some trailers during the commercial breaks. Everybody’s happy!

    We decided to run down the Super Bowl movie trailers in order, from best to worst. Feel free to tell us if you agree, and if these crucial opinions swayed your opinion about any upcoming films.
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  • Watch the New ‘Ted 2’ Trailer and Laugh Your @$% Off

    ted 2 trailerSeth MacFarlane learned a valuable lesson last year when he unleashed his hugely expensive flop “A Million Ways to Die in the West” last summer: that he should make another “Ted.” And he did. “Ted 2” will be out on June 26th, 2015, and the first rude, crude trailer has just been unleashed on an unsuspecting world (that’s the new poster, just below it).

    It’s pretty much everything that you would expect, and not much more. If you’ve seen the original film, about a grown man (played by Mark Wahlberg, who returns here) and his complicated relationship with the talking teddy bear from his childhood named Ted (MacFarlane, with a goopy Boston accent), then you know all you really need to know about “Ted 2,” which sees Amanda Seyfried in place of Mila Kunis, who is also joined by Liam Neeson and Morgan Freeman. Not too shabby.

    After watching the trailer, are you ready to make another profane play date with Ted, or have you left it behind, like so many other toys?