Archive: December 2010 (71-80 of 304)

Dec 21 2010 10:00 AM ET

The Best TV Character Deaths of 2010

2010-deathsImage Credit: Michael Courtney/FoxOn TV, death is a good thing. Death shakes up the status quo. Death eliminates annoying characters, and it sends off beloved characters with an emotionally-explosive bang. The threat of main-character death has hovered over some of the greatest TV shows of the last ten years. Some shows, like 24, practically made a game out of their gleeful employment of the Death Twist, an out-of-nowhere elimination of an apparently central character. (Be honest: you had a couple bets going on who would die in the Lost finale, right?) Killing off a main character can be just a cheap gimmick, but when it’s done well, it can be incredibly moving. It can even revitalize a show. (See: Grey’s Anatomy, post-bloodbath.)

For our round-up of the best character expirations on TV this year, we focused exclusively on characters that were, if not series regulars, at least important parts of an ensemble — our (perhaps arbitrary) cut-off was that the character must have appeared on at least four episodes before expiring. By nature, this list skews towards drama, but it’s not all dour. On TV at least, death can be pretty funny. As you might expect, this post is SPOILER ALERT central, so if you’re worried, just click down to the comments right now and tell us your favorite deaths from 2010. Otherwise, check out the list after the jump… READ FULL STORY »

Dec 21 2010 08:06 AM ET

'The Sing-Off' finale recap: And the winner is...

sing-off-lacheyImage Credit: Trae Patton/NBCAfter three weeks, five episodes, 65 performances, and 957 puns, the joyous celebration of terrific, autotune-free vocals known as The Sing-Off came to a close last night, and a winning group was finally crowned. Who was it? [SPOILER ALERT: If you don't want to know who won, don't read on!] READ FULL STORY »

Dec 20 2010 05:45 PM ET

Hollywood's Highest-Grossing Actors of 2010. It's the No. 2 finisher who will surprise you.

inceptionImage Credit: Melissa Moseley2010 is nearly over, which means plenty of publications (including ours) are releasing an endless supply of year-end lists. (People of the year, celebrities of the year, movies of the year, squirrels in your backyard of the year, etc.) And today, Forbes has released their list of Hollywood’s Highest-Grossing Actors in 2010.

Quite predictably, blockbuster king Leonardo DiCaprio tops this year’s list — which is purely based on box office intake, and does not count animated films — with $1.1 billion, thanks to turns in the highly successful Shutter Island and Inception. But the list’s No. 2 finisher is the most shocking: 21-year-old up-and-coming Aussie actress Mia Wasikowska. Of course, the reason for her $1.0 billion gross over the year is mostly due to the list’s No. 3 finisher — Johnny Depp, who served as the main draw for Wasikowska’s summer film, Alice in Wonderland — and critical darling The Kids Are All Right, but it’s an impressive distinction to hold, considering most Americans don’t even know her name. (Not to mention how to spell it.) READ FULL STORY »

Dec 20 2010 05:05 PM ET

Golden Globes host Ricky Gervais on awards shows, his Christmas wishes, and his HBO cartoon

ricky-gervaisImage Credit: Charles Eshelman/FilmMagic.comAsk Ricky Gervais, and he’ll tell you he started his podcast The Ricky Gervais Show so he and writing partner Stephen Merchant could hang with radio producer Karl Pilkington and hear his childlike views on life (and monkeys). Setting the world-record for number of downloads and launching an Emmy-winning HBO cartoon version? Just the cream. The Golden Globe host called EW recently to plug the animated adaptation’s Jan. 4 DVD release and ended up giving us the what’s what on holiday TV, awards ceremonies, his Christmas-inspired 20-pound weight loss, the show’s second season (premiering Jan. 14 on HBO), and his next series.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY:  Now that you’re a seasoned awards presenter, do you have any advice for Oscar hosts James Franco and Anne Hathaway?
 They’re braver then me. The Oscars you’ve got to rehearse. When they said, “Will you host the Globes?” I said, “can I just turn up and do my own thing and not have a lot of cues?” And they went “yep.” And I went “fine.” So that’s my kind of job. For the Oscars, I’d have to learn a song and dance routine — way too much trouble.

What were you most proud of about last year’s Golden Globes? READ FULL STORY »

Dec 20 2010 04:33 PM ET

Excess Hollywood: Starz's 'Camelot' sets April 1 premiere

  • Starz has confirmed to EW that Camelot — starring Joseph Fiennes, Eva Green, and Jamie Campbell Bower as Merlin, Morgan, and Arthur, respectively — will debut on the network on April 1. I await plenty of sword innuendo.
  • ABC has picked up a drama pilot from Shonda Rhimes about the “life and work of a professional fixer and her dysfunctional staff.” The series is inspired by Judy Smith, a crisis management consultant who worked on cases involving Michael Vick and David Paterson and advised Monica Lewinsky. So where was she when this happened? [Variety]
  • Will Smith is developing a crime series set in China with Fox and Overbrook Entertainment. The project centers on a college student in China (where Smith also produced The Karate Kid) who doubles as a crime-fighter. [Variety]
  • Maroon 5 will serve as the house band during Jan. 16′s Critics’ Choice Movie Awards, where hopefully they will be loved. [L.A. Times]
Dec 20 2010 03:30 PM ET

Today's lacrosse star, tomorrow's CW character

gossip-girlImage Credit: Giovanni Rufino/The CWIt may not be as big as the Oscar nominations (or even the Razzies), but today’s unveiling of Inside Lacrosse Magazine‘s 2011 All-Name Team (which playfully compiles the most blue-blooded names of real-life college lacrosse players) will be closely analyzed by any TV writer who wants to get his pet project on The CW. After all, you can’t just stuff your hip new teen pilot with the same ol’ Liams, Clays, and Stefans. For mentally blocked writers, then, this list of the preppiest lacrosse-ey sounding names is a welcome cheat-sheet: You could fill up the network’s entire fall slate with the likes of Caldwell, Baxter, and oooooo … Brogan! That is the name of a Vampire Diaries recurring character if there ever was one. Check out the entire first-team after the jump: READ FULL STORY »

Dec 20 2010 02:27 PM ET

Johnny Depp, 'Inception' top IMDb's year-end polls

wonderlandImage Credit: DisneyIMDb released its users “STARmeter” picks for the year, which are completely based on “search behavior.” And lo, we search for who we love. The top slot this year went to Johnny Depp, which marks his sixth win in the category. Kristen Stewart came in second, followed by Robert Pattinson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Robert Downey Jr., Christian Bale, Gerard Butler, Megan Fox and Zoë Saldana. Interesting!

IMDb users also rated movies all year, and at the top of that heap is Inception. The wisdom of crowds, you guys! Toy Story 3 was second, followed by The Social Network, How to Train Your Dragon, Tangled, Kick-Ass, Shutter Island, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 1, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, and The Town. This list is actually a bit more surprising — I know people loved Dragon, but I didn’t know it was that popular.

Do either of these lists surprise you, PopWatchers?

Dec 20 2010 11:00 AM ET

2010: The Year of Betty White

Betty-White-bookImage Credit: Bryan Bedder/Getty ImagesLast Jan. 23, at the Screen Actors Guild Awards, Betty White received the organization’s Life Achievement Award. After being introduced by Sandra Bullock, her “plain” co-star from the summer hit, The Proposal, White regaled the crowd with a delightful acceptance speech before concluding, “This is the highest point of my professional life.”

But that prestigious honor was before she starred in the Super Bowl’s best commercial, before the successful Facebook crusade brought White to Saturday Night Live, before her SNL show in May became the most-watched episode in 18 months, before she became the “breakout” star of the new TV Land sitcom, Hot in Cleveland, before she guest-starred in NBC’s comedy, Community, and before she became the hero of her very own comic book. So is there any doubt why the 88-year-old superstar edged Glee, Conan O’Brien, James Cameron, the Apple iPad, and Jon Stewart to be named the 2010 AP Entertainer of the Year? And the White-Out is still rolling: Next month, she’ll return to the SAG Awards, where she’s competing against the likes of Tina Fey and Jane Lynch for Outstanding Actress in a Comedy. What a year. What a lady.

(This has to bode well for Ernest Borgnine, who’s slated to receive this year’s SAG Life Achievement Award. Or perhaps it’s time for another Mary Tyler Moore Show alum to shine: Ed Asner (Up) is coming back to television to star in CMT’s Working Class.)

What was your favorite Betty White moment of 2010? And what oldie-but-goodie star would you most like to see soar in 2011?

Read more:
SAG Awards: ‘Modern Family’ and Betty White(!) nab honors
‘Hot in Cleveland’ scoop: Valerie Bertinelli to reteam with ‘One Day at a Time’ costar Bonnie Franklin. Plus: Tons more guest stars!
Betty White is our newest Forest Ranger
‘Community’ season 2 promo: Betty White is confused
‘Saturday Night Live’ recap: Betty White was funny, vulgar, and totally charming
Betty White gets her own comic book

Dec 20 2010 10:35 AM ET

Google TV not feeling so lucky

Categories: Gadgets, Tech, Television

googletvGoogle TV has hit another speedbump. The company has asked TV makers to hold off on unveiling their new Google TV-enabled products until it can “refine the software,” according to the New York Times. That means the Google TV frenzy that was supposed to happen at CES this year won’t be. Zoinks?

My issue with Google TV hasn’t been the software (though … a little finessing never killed anyone?). The problem is that it doesn’t solve a problem at all. The absolute best way to watch web-based content on your television is still to plug a computer into your television. Hulu will work! The network sites will work! Netflix, Amazon on demand — everything will work A-OK. (And if you need help finding what’s “on,” try Clicker, my current obsession. Who knew there were 100 episodes of Beverly Hills 90210 freely, legally available online?) Google TV isn’t better at getting programming onto a television, and it isn’t better at searching for online offerings, and it isn’t sleeker or easier to use than a plain old computer.

Web content on ye olde television set, PopWatchers: What’s your preferred method?

Dec 20 2010 10:08 AM ET

'Inception,' 'The Walking Dead,' 'Scott Pilgrim' and more: Doc Jensen's Best Geek-Outs of 2010

lost-finaleImage Credit: Mario Perez/ABC‘Tis the season for picking favorites — for taking stock of the year that was and expressing ourselves with lists. Like every pop culture junkie, I have a list for everything — movies, TV, books, music, comics, videogames. But I’m also a big geek, with a fancy for what the industry and more sophisticated nerds call “genre entertainment” — superhero, sci-fi, horror, and fantasy stuff, worlds of wild and weird wonder marked by extraordinary creativity and mind-stretching ideas that can inspire intense engagement, deep discussion with friends, and in some instances, multiple 6,000 word essays each week exploring every nook and cranny, real and imagined, of an entertainment experience — especially ones that involve smoke monsters. Here were my favorite Geek-Outs of 2010, and beginning with (no surprise)…

1. Lost
Some people will love me for putting this Number 1; others will hate me. I love that Lost was capable of producing such polarizing responses. Everyone had his or her own intense, personal relationship to the show. I am not here to validate or critique your perspective, whatever end of the spectrum you occupy. That was your experience. This was mine: The most stimulating pop culture experience of my adult life came to a conclusion this past year with a season to savor for years to come. Yes, I do mean savor: The more I think about the Sideways world, the Man In Black, and the center of The Island, the more richness I find — to the point that I’ve recently been re-thinking many of my initial interpretations. (As much as I enjoyed producing those 6,000 word recaps, I really wish I had more time to process and crunch each episode before committing my thoughts to digital paper.) For example, in my write-ups on “The End,” I called the Sideways world “Purgatory” and deemed it a wholly spiritual construct. I am no longer convinced. I find myself tilting toward an idea, suggested by other critics and bloggers, that the Sideways realm should be thought of as a psychological construct; I think you can accept that without negating the spiritual message of the show. That said, in recent months, I’ve been reassessing “The End” through a more agnostic filter, and as I do, provocative and challenging new meanings emerge — about the Man In Black, about what it means to be The Island’s guardian, about the season’s strangest character. What do I mean by all this? And who was the season’s strangest character? I’ll tell you in my long-promised, long-delayed last Lost column, which will post before the end of the year. Oh, and one more thing? Still cry when I watch this. One of the most beautifully heartbreaking things I’ve ever seen on TV. READ FULL STORY »

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