Archive: January 2009 (41-50 of 354)

Jan 29 2009 05:31 PM ET

Elisabeth Hasselbeck's election night nausea turned out to be a fetus

Hasselbeck_babsThe chirpy one on The View announced today that having not realized it for two months, she is officially pregnant with her third child. The Hasselbot recalled feeling tired and nauseous on election night: "I thought I was just worn out from the procedure. No. I was knocked up!" People.com has video of the momentous occasion. (It’s fun — Lis and Babs’ red tones clash!) We’re glad the ‘bot didn’t go all Peggy Olson from Mad Men on us and deny her condition and gradual expansion for the next seven months. (Though, can you imagine the ratings spike if she really did that? I might start watching The View!)

Congrats to the ‘bot, Tim, and baby ‘bots!

Read more:
Ann Coulter makes Elisabeth Hasselbeck look sane
The Top 5 ‘View’ Feuds of 2008: Pick Your Favorite!
Which clangy kitchen utensils could replace Hasselbot on ‘The View’?

Jan 29 2009 05:29 PM ET

'NCIS' soundtrack: An exclusive Pauley Perrette song!

Filed under: Television and tagged: , ,

Ncis_song_lRemember that NCIS soundtrack CD that’s coming out Feb. 10? Many of you mentioned in comments that you were especially looking forward to hearing the new songs recorded by NCIS cast members Pauley Perrette (Abby Sciuto) and Cote de Pablo (Ziva David). Well, we have Pauley Perrette’s contribution, "Fear," and right now EW.com is the only place you can hear it. Give it a listen below, and check out an exclusive shot of Perrette recording this song in the studio to your left.

"Fear" has a Nine Inch Nails-ish industrial grind thing going on, which makes it sound cool even to someone like me who has, I’m ashamed to admit, never seen a full episode of the police procedural hit. (Sorry!) But how do you like it, NCIS fans? Does this song fit in with how you think of her character, Abby? 

More on NCIS:
Ausiello’s got some hot casting scoop
Mandi finally gets this show
NCIS gallery: Exec Producer Shares His Cast Dossier
NCIS gallery: Inside an underwater stunt

Jan 29 2009 04:45 PM ET

Site of the Day: GuacBowl.com

Guacamolealien_lWe tip our hat to the Evite blog for turning us on to Guac Bowl, "America’s Favorite Guacamole Contest/Super Bowl Party." It began nine years ago when two roommates argued over who could make the better guac for Super Bowl Sunday. Today, the event — held at "Adam’s House" in Los Angeles ("Why: Immortality.") — gives trophies in four categories: Best Traditional Guac, Best Alternative Guac, The Icarus Award (for the most ambitious, complete failure), and the crown jewel, Best Presentation (pictured, 2008 winner GuacAlien). Click on that last link, and I guarantee you’ll spend at least 20 minutes looking at the photos: Guaczilla, Guactanamo Bay, Guac of Love, D— in a Guac, Count Guacula, BaGuack Obama, Guac to the Future, Locke-a-mole (guess what’s inside the hatch?). You will not stop.

Is this the best Super Bowl party ever? Or, do you know a tradition that tops it?

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Jan 29 2009 04:39 PM ET

'The Trials of Ted Haggard': Alexandra Pelosi talks about her HBO documentary

Filed under: Movies and tagged:

TedHaggard_l

Despite the screamingly liberal bona fides that come with being the daughter of the Democratic Speaker of the House, documentarian Alexandra Pelosi has carved out a niche for herself as one of America’s best-known chroniclers of the conservative/evangelical half of this country — in part because she’s the kind of liberal who was taught that it’s nice to listen to everyone. It was while shooting 2007′s Friends of God that she first met Ted Haggard, who was at the time pastor of the New Life Church in Colorado Springs, as well as the leader of the National Association of Evangelicals. Sadly, there is no quicker way to get yourself fired from your gig at the pulpit of a megachurch than admitting to doing crystal meth/having sex with a male prostitute, and in 2006, Haggard was exiled — not just from the New Life Church, but from the entire state of Colorado. Pelosi’s latest doc, The Trials of Ted Haggard, premiering tonight at 8 p.m. on HBO, is the story of this very disgraced man’s attempts to keep his family together, to find a job, to live without the church he founded in his basement, and ultimately, to find a way back home.

Pelosi was reticent to do much press for the movie –  "I don’t really need to talk about Ted to anybody because Ted can talk about Ted and I don’t have anything to add to that," she says — but she did us the favor of calling in anyway. Read on for how the doc came into being, her thoughts on the problems that exist on both sides of the gays vs. evangelicals divide (at least w/r/t Haggard), and why she is now, as she puts it "prescribing the Bible"…

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Jan 29 2009 02:52 PM ET

'Lost': Doc Jensen's 'Jughead' take

Filed under: Lost and tagged:

Lostjughead2_lMany thanks to my colleague Adam B. Vary for taking on the Lost recap this week while I tend to other matters pertaining to our mutual obsession that will soon come to your attention. Adam mentioned I might have more to say about "Jughead" next week, but my utter enthusiasm for last night’s episode prevents me from waiting that long. So some quick observations/theories.

"Jughead" rocked. Let me be clear and plain about this before cluttering your mind with my usual nonsense: I loved the episode. The pleasure it gave was visceral; it was a fun episode to feel your way through, from Desmond and his son beholding the London skyline at night to the in-passing revelation that Des and Pen had named their boy after the man who sacrificed his life so their relationship may live, Charlie. Killed me. The storytelling was strong and assured, and the story itself flowed in a surprising, unforced way. And has there been a funnier episode of Lost in recent memory? Not in a jokey way, but in an organic, character-derived sense—the kind of chuckles you get from clearly drawn characters and knowing them well. Faraday asking Miles if by chance the dead guys mentioned what year it was. Locke’s reaction to the Widmore reveal. Juliet and Alpert’s droll line readings. (Must be an Other thing, like Latin.) Sawyer to Faraday: “You told her?!” If you put a gun to my head and made me give you right here, right now, my top 10 list of all time fave Lost eps, I’m sure “Jughead” would be on it. Take the gun away, and I think it would still be there.

My “Arrow” Theory. Adam mentioned this in his recap. Have you noticed the recurring arrow symbolism this season? Episode 1: Pierre Chang produces the orientation film for a Dharma station called “The Arrow.” Episode 2: The Left Behinders are attacked by flaming arrows. And now, Episode 3: Arrows everywhere, in the text (see: the Others’ archery brigade) and the subtext. A leaking or missing hydrogen bomb is known as a “Broken Arrow” event in military parlance.  In physics, the “Arrow of Time” is the name of a body of theories pertaining to the nature of time; the term “broken arrow” is used to characterize an idea like time loops. Google “broken arrow” and you’ll get any number of movies, TV shows and songs about Native Americans… and wouldn’t you know, “Jughead” was a peek into the past of the Island’s indigenous peeps, the Others. But the coolest arrow connection comes via the Other cutie with the shot gun, British accent, and terse line readings: Ellie. Short for Eleanor, which is French for “the Other.” (Or so wikipedia tells me; I don’t speak it. Me stupid American.) On a whim, I combined “Ellie” and “Eleanor” and “Arrow,” and came back with an awesome connection: Ellie Arroway, the heroine of Carl Sagan’s novel Contact, which was adapted into the Jodie Foster film of the same name. I’m going to leave it to you to explore the significance, but Sagan’s story certainly resonates with Lost themes, and perhaps functions as a clue to wormhole theory.

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Jan 29 2009 11:00 AM ET

Quote of the Day: Ingmar Bergman's induction into the Academy of the Overrated

"God, you’re so the opposite. I mean, you write that absolutely fabulous television show. It’s brilliantly funny, and his view is so Scandinavian. It’s beak, my God. I mean, all that Kierkegaard, right? Real adolescent, you know, fashionable pessimism. I mean, The Silence. God’s silence. Okay, okay, okay. I mean, I loved it when I was a Radcliffe, but, I mean, all right, you outgrow it. You absolutely outgrow it…. No, no, no, no, no. Don’t you see? Don’t you guys see that it is the dignifying of one’s own psychological and sexual hang-ups by attaching them to these grandiose philosophical issues, that’s what it is…. Hey, listen. I don’t even wanna have this conversation. I mean, really. I mean, I’m just from Philadelphia, you know. I mean, we believe in God, so uh… okay?" — Mary (Diane Keaton), denying the genius of director Ingmar Bergman to Isaac (Woody Allen), in 1979′s Manhattan

Jan 29 2009 03:24 AM ET

'Lost': What did you think of Faraday in this third episode?

Filed under: Lost, Television and tagged: ,

So I’m still making my way through tonight’s "Jughead" episode and our TV Watch won’t be up until tomorrow morning, but I figured you guys might have a few things to discuss. What are your thoughts on Faraday after tonight? What new questions do you have now?

Check back tomorrow morning for our recap from Adam B. Vary. (Jeff Jensen is hard at work on some new Lost goodness for you all and will be back next week, but you can get your fill of him in this week’s installment of Doc Jensen and in this season’s first episode of Totally Lost below.)

UPDATE: It turns out that Doc Jensen couldn’t wait until next week. Check out what he has to say about "Jughead."

Read more: Lost
Doc Jensen: ‘Lost”s name theories
‘Lost’: 14 Enduring Mysteries
TV Watch: Season 5 ‘Lost’ recaps

Jan 29 2009 02:47 AM ET

'American Idol' in Salt Lake City: Better, no?

Filed under: American Idol and tagged:

I’ve done a lot of whining, moaning, and complaining about the lackluster talent being sent through to Hollywood on season 8 of American Idol, and while tonight’s Salt Lake City auditions featured didn’t exactly stray from that formula, I’ll say this much: I agreed with Simon’s assessment that a couple of contestants (hello, Megan Corkrey!) met the hard-to-define requirement of being memorable. So my question to you guys is this: After tonight’s show, are you more optimistic about Hollywood Week? (Me? I’m always optimistic about Hollywood Week, and especially so this year, since it’ll span a whopping four episodes.) And on that note, I’m off to write my full TV Watch recap, which will post around 6 a.m. tomorrow. Until then, press play on our latest Idolatry installments below, then get buckwild in the comments section!


More ‘American Idol’:
‘American Idol’ Recap: Big Love-fest
‘American Idol’ Recap: Gator Raid in Florida
‘American Idol’ Recap: Kentucky Blues
‘American Idol’ recap: Finding Hacks in Cali
EW’s ‘American Idol’ HQ
Fantasia covers ‘Lady Marmalade.’ Roof height at venue permanently altered.
Randy Jackson’s Journey days: If ya don’t know, now ya know…

Jan 28 2009 11:29 PM ET

Pilot season: Grade the latest orders

Filed under: Television and tagged: , ,

Pilot_lAnother day, another chance to TAG (Totally Arbitrary Grade), the latest pilot orders. Read the greenlights, copy and paste our title cheat sheet at the end of the item into the comments section, and add your marks.

• Untitled detective show: This adaptation of the Argentinian series Brothers and Detectives sounds like it should be coming from CBS, but it’s at ABC. According to Variety,it’s about "a Savannah police detective who discovers, after his fatherdies, that he has an 11-year-old brother with a genius IQ. The detectivewinds up partnering with his young brother, who helps him solvecrimes." I’m guaranteed to watch something this crazy once; if you wantme back week-to-week, the casting has got to be perfect. I’m thinking the detective is either hot and goofy like Bones‘ David Boreanaz and NCIS‘ Michael Weatherly, or hot and eccentric like Life‘s Damian Lewis. Either way, I’m recommending Joseph Castanon, who I recently caught in the NCIS rerun "Honor Code," for the boy. TAG: B

Off Duty: This NBC comedy pilot already has its cast in place. Per The Hollywood Reporter, it "centers on a once-legendary policedetective (Bradley Whitford) on his way down who complicates thelife of his new partner (Romany Malco) — a straight shooter on hisway up — both on duty and off." Cashmere Mafia‘sBonnie Sommerville has just been added as Whitford’s wife. Again, thisis the kind of crazy I definitely want to see someone attempt…once.I just don’t know if I can see an interracial buddy cop comedy onThursday night. TAG: C+

An American Family: The antithesis to the network’s crapping out another simple ’80s remake would appear to be this ABC concoction. I’ll let THR break it down: It’s a docu-style comedy that "revolves around three families: onecomprised of a working dad, stay-at-home mom and two kids; anotherthat includes a 60-year-old man who becomes a stepfather aftermarrying a Latina who is 30 years his junior; and the third, a gaycouple who have just adopted a Vietnamese baby." The Class‘ Jesse Tyler Ferguson has been cast as one of the gay dads. I’m feeling Ugly Betty-brand comedy on crack. TAG: B

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Jan 28 2009 09:29 PM ET

Clip du Jour: Colbert on Wire

Filed under: Television and tagged: , ,

On last night’s Colbert Report, in an effort to mentally prepare for his interview with Man on Wire star (and the book’s author) Philippe Petit, Stephen and his dainty parasol bravely ambled across a thick rope, taking care to avoid excessive pyro and hungry, hungry crocodiles. Stick around for the interview, during which Petit admits, "I just like the music of your voice…I love what you do but I don’t understand a word that you say!"

Read more:
DVD Review: ‘Man on Wire’
‘Man on Wire’ makes Lisa Schwarzbaum’s Best Films of 2008 list
EW’s Colbert/Stewart cover story: Mock the Vote!

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