Archive: May 2010 (1-10 of 596)

May 31 2010 10:02 PM ET

'Bachelorette' instant reaction: The guys get catty, hooray!

Some true front-runners emerged, Ty played the guitar some more, Craig R. made yet another “Rated ____” pun, and much, much male flesh was shown thanks to a “sexy guy calendar” swimsuit shoot. (We also spent a lot of time admiring Ali’s abs.) But mostly, this week was about Craig M. and his hair vs. Jonathan the Weatherman and his insecurities. Which was just fine with us — at least for now.

The full recap will be up soon, but if you’ve already watched and want to weigh in on the fallout of The Bachelorette‘s first guy-on-guy smackdown of the season, read on after the jump for more. [SPOILER ALERT: Read on only if you've already watched Monday's Bachelorette premiere. Seriously.]

READ FULL STORY »

May 31 2010 03:00 PM ET

'Cake Boss' returns tonight. What Jersey-centric cake would you like to see Buddy make?

cake_bossImage Credit: Justin Stephens/TLCThe third season premiere of Cake Boss premieres tonight at 9 p.m. ET, and since New Jerseyyyyy is so in vogue these days, Buddy and his staffers at Carlo’s Bakery in Hoboken will be crafting a masterpiece inspired by the state for Gov. Chris Christie’s Inaugural Gala at the Prudential Center. (Pictured is the part of the cake modeled after the gala’s setting.)

Okay, it’s a masterpiece and all — this is Buddy we’re talking about — but if they’re going to make a New Jerseyyyyy-inspired cake, they’ve got to do it right. I want to see some smokestacks on the turnpike, a maraca-shaking Jon Bon Jovi, and a whole cheesecake section dedicated to the Cheesequake rest stop. Come on, Buddy! What’s-a matta you?!

What New Jerseyyyyy-inspired ideas do you have for Buddy? And are you tuning in tonight?

May 31 2010 12:00 PM ET

TV on DVD season begins: What's on your list?

Filed under: Television and tagged: ,

ALLY-MCBEALImage Credit: FoxThe end of another TV season is coming. Admit it, after giving your DVR a serious workout this month, you’re actually looking forward to carrying a lighter load. (For at least a week: Royal Pains and Burn Notice return June 3, which officially kicks off “Summer TV” in my world.) You could spend your additional free time “outside,” but we all know that summer is also TV on DVD season. So what’s on your list this year — and why?

Mine:

• Revisiting Ally McBeal, beginning with Season 1: It’ll pair nicely with Lifetime’s Drop Dead Diva, which returns June 6. Plus, I feel like I could really benefit right now from being reminded that there are women who are more unglued than me.

• Revisiting Murphy Brown, season 1: Because I also need to be reminded that there are women who have themselves together.

Battlestar Galactica, season 1: Sci-fi feels like a vacation to me because I don’t indulge often enough. I also occasionally enjoy becoming obsessed with things after everyone else has moved on — partly because I can do marathons, partly because I can tune out the chatter and like or dislike whatever I want to.

Your list?

May 31 2010 09:00 AM ET

EW's 100 Greatest Characters: Joss Whedon reveals his recipe for Buffy

buffy-gellar-whedonImage Credit: Greg Gorman/The WB; Todd Williamson/WireImage.comIn celebration of Entertainment Weekly‘s two decades of existence this year, we’ve put together a special double-sized issue devoted to the 100 greatest characters of the past 20 years. On our ranked list, you’ll find Anchorman‘s Ron Burgundy, Lost‘s John Locke, Harry Potter, Homer Simpson — all characters who feel as real and important to us as our own friends and family.

Also on that list? Buffy “the Vampire Slayer” Summers, of course. And we thought, who better to illustrate what is so special about the extraordinary young killer of evil things — played in the TV series by Sarah Michelle Gellar — than creator Joss Whedon. “There’s a whole recipe for how to make a Buffy,” he explains. “Take one cup Sarah Connor from the first Terminator movie; one cup Ripley [from Alien]; three tablespoons of the younger sister in [the 1984 postapocalyptic comedy] Night of the Comet; a few sprigs of A Little Princess — the book, not the movies; and a pinch of Jimmy Stewart for pain, because nobody does better pain. Bake those up. Once it’s cool, add a little Rosalind Russell from His Girl Friday. All of this must be in a P.J.-Soles-in-Halloween crust. That’s very important.”

Whedon also weighs in a bit on how his show preceded the whole “vampire craze” that took us by swarm at the end of the ’00s. “Ultimately, my show was less about vampires than most shows with vampire in the title. The show’s about growing up, which for her was basically ages 15 through 22, but the kind of 15 through 22 where you fight wars.”

For more from Whedon and the 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years — including Robert Downey Jr. on Iron Man‘s Tony Stark, Johnny Depp talking about Captain Jack Sparrow, an interview with Homer Simpson, and lots, lots more — pick up the new issue of Entertainment Weekly on stands now.

More from EW’s 100 Greatest Characters of the Past 20 Years:
Roseanne Barr says what she thinks the Conner clan would be up to in 2010
Daniel Radcliffe on Harry Potter…and Eric Cartman

May 31 2010 06:00 AM ET

Memorial Day TV marathons: Your best bets

deadliest_catchImage Credit: Rick Gershon/Reportage by Getty ImagesConsider yourself warned! Switch on the TV today, and you could be sitting in front of it for hours thanks to any one of the following marathons. All times Eastern:

Discovery: Deadliest Catch (9 a.m. to 3 a.m.)

Bravo: Real Housewives (of New York City, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.; of New Jersey, 2 p.m. to 3 a.m, with a new episode at 10 p.m.) READ FULL STORY »

May 31 2010 12:07 AM ET

Why Guillermo del Toro left 'The Hobbit' -- and Peter Jackson will not replace him as director

Jackson-Hobbit_320.jpg Image Credit: Barry King/FilmMagic.com; Kristian Dowling/WireImage.comOver the last four years, there has scarcely been another project in Hollywood that has been more highly anticipated — and has weathered more back-room corporate wrangling — than The Hobbit. So when filmmaker Guillermo del Toro (Pan’s Labyrinth, Hellboy) announced today that he was dropping out of directing the two films planned for J.R.R. Tolkien’s literary preamble to The Lord of the Rings, the news served as both a shock to fans and yet another possible casualty in the sad ongoing saga of MGM Studios.

As Del Toro (pictured, right) and The Hobbit producer Peter Jackson (pictured, left) explained to LOTR fansite TheOneRing.net, the two Hobbit films are still slated for release in Dec. 2012 and Dec. 2013. And Del Toro is still collaborating on the screenplay with Jackson and his LOTR co-screenwriters Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens. But why did Del Toro walk away from one of the most highly coveted director’s chairs in modern cinema? And who could possibly step in to replace him? (Read on for why it won’t be Peter Jackson.) READ FULL STORY »

May 30 2010 01:13 PM ET

'Sex and the City 2': Can TV really ruin a relationship?

Filed under: Movies, Television and tagged: , ,

Sex-City-Carrie-Big_320.jpg Image Credit: Craig Blankenhorn I suppose I’ve always related most to Miranda, but I’ve never felt like less of a Carrie than I did watching Sex and the City 2. SPOILER ALERT: Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker) gets upset when husband Big (Chris Noth) buys her a flat-screen TV for their bedroom for their second anniversary. (Cut to my friend Sheila leaning over and saying, “A man can buy me a flat-screen TV,” and me agreeing.) In Carrie’s mind, they’re going to become a boring old married couple that no longer talks. In Big’s mind, it would be nice to occasionally stay home and cuddle with Carrie and watch black-and-white movies. One night, he dares to turn on the TV as Carrie is trying (and failing) to change out of a gown. That’s not a black-and-white movie, she says. “It’s Deadliest Catch, Carrie, and it’s awesome. Let him watch it if he wants to,” I thought and possibly said aloud.

Now I’ll admit that TV is a sensitive subject for me. Partly because I watch so much of it — it’s my job, but I’d be doing it anyway — and partly because I know someone who used to enjoy television, but since her husband doesn’t, now lives in a home without cable. They just moved the TV downstairs where they never go. She says she’s too busy to watch it now anyway, which for her is actually true. But she acquiesced to him long before that.

Can TV really ruin a relationship? If someone really doesn’t want a TV in the bedroom — and promises to be entertainment enough there — I can see that being negotiable. (Not for me, but maybe for you.) But I got the feeling that Carrie wouldn’t have liked Big watching Deadliest Catch on the couch either (maybe even at the end of the movie?). How much should one negotiate in a relationship when it comes to TV?

P.S. Deadliest Catch marathon on Discovery today. And tomorrow. Deal with it, Carrie.

More Sex and the City:
EW’s Sex and the City Central
Lisa Schwarzbaum reviews Sex and the City 2
Gallery: Carrie’s Best and Worst Looks
Gallery: The stars and creators name their most memorable moments
Michael Patrick King imagines a Sex and the City prequel
PopWatch Confessional: The moment you actually related to Sex and the City

May 30 2010 12:00 PM ET

The original 'Bionic Woman' officially coming to DVD. Old-school TV watchers rejoice!

Filed under: Television and tagged: ,

bionic_womenImage Credit: Courtesy of Universal Studios Home EntertainmentAnyone who has been waiting impatiently for the original version of The Bionic Woman to come out on DVD has heard rumblings about its release for a while, but Universal has exclusively announced to EW that the series’ first season will be hitting shelves in October. …And everyone who scoffed at the remake cheered!

I’ve watched a few episodes of the original Bionic Woman on Hulu (called Bionic Woman Classic — scoff, again) and have been meaning to watch more, but I only watch marathon shows when they’re on DVD to avoid brainwashing myself with the five or so 30-second commercial spots that seem to play in a loop on streaming sites. So this news thrilled me to no end. I’m glad I held out and waited for all those rumored legal issues to be worked out. Creator Kenneth Johnson even said via his website weeks back that he was recording commentary for an episode. (As well as for an episode of Six Million Dollar Man, which is also headed for stores, he told EW earlier this month.)

That said, how are you going to celebrate the official announcement and your subsequent victory as fans of classic TV, PopWatchers? No parachuting. Okay?

May 30 2010 01:55 AM ET

Dennis Hopper: Co-stars Gene Hackman, Peter Fonda, and Isabella Rossellini pay tribute

Filed under: News and tagged:

Several of Dennis Hopper’s co-stars from films like Easy Rider, Hoosiers, and Blue Velvet are paying tribute to the late actor and director, who passed away Saturday from complications of cancer. Here are their statements to EW:

Peter Fonda, co-star in Easy Rider (1969): “Dennis introduced me to the world of Pop Art and ‘lost’ films. We rode the highways of America and changed the way movies were made in Hollywood. I was blessed by his passion and friendship.”

Gene Hackman, co-star in Hoosiers (1986): ”As an actor, one is always taken by someone who is different. An iconoclast, Dennis was an artist and I will always treasure having worked with him. He will be missed.”

Isabella Rossellini, co-star in Blue Velvet (1986): “When I first met Dennis on the set of Blue Velvet, he had just come out of rehab. I was afraid of him, but Dennis turned out to be infinitely kind, compassionate and understanding. He had gone to hell and came back from it with great wisdom. It will take me a while to realize and accept he isn’t with us any longer.”

Check back here for more tributes from Hopper’s friends and colleagues.

(Reporting by Mandi Bierly and Adam B. Vary)

May 29 2010 09:25 PM ET

Kevin Eubanks says good-bye to 'The Tonight Show'

kevin_eubanksImage Credit: Paul Drinkwater/NBCKevin Eubanks began his final night on The Tonight Show pretty much like any other in his 18 years as Jay Leno’s sideman: Sitting back in his chair, strumming his electric guitar, a placid smile plastered on his face. After Leno played one of his trademark putting-my-face-on-someone-else’s-body jokes — this time as a rowdy fan at a recent Lakers game — Eubanks even managed to play along with the gag, however halfheartedly: “Wow, man,” he mumbled to the host, “I didn’t know you were into basketball. That’s wild.” And when Leno finally mentioned it was Eubanks’ last show, he did it to set up another joke about Venus Williams flashing the crowd at the French Open. “Kev is leaving to pursue his true passion,” smirked Leno, “following the Williams sisters on the tennis tour.” (For the record, Leno did later note that Eubanks is actually leaving to pursue a music career and help Los Angeles high school students participate in music programs.)

It was that kind of night for pretty much the entire hour: Leno and the show undercutting Eubanks’ departure with feeble cracks at the exiting band leader’s expense. READ FULL STORY »

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