Categories
Doctor Who

I’m okay with this news.

‘Doctor Who’: Karen Gillan confirms no 50th anniversary return for Amy Pond

Whovians that were excited at the possibility of another companion’s return for “Doctor Who’s” 50th anniversary special, cool your jets. Amy Pond will not be making an appearance, that that’s coming from Karen Gillan herself.

While speaking with the Radio Times, Gillan confirms, “I’m not in it, just to put that out there.” When Gillan left the series, her character was sent back in time along with her husband (Arthur Darvill) by a Weeping Angel, to a place where the Doctor’s TARDIS cannot go.

Of course, Gillan is still excited about the special, that will see the return of David Tennant and Billie Piper, as the tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler, respectively. Not only is she planning to watch it, but Karen makes it sound like there could be a party happening. “I think I’m going to be in America, so I’ll probably round up all the people who like to watch ‘Doctor Who’ in the area,” she says. “We’ll probably watch it and drink PG Tips and eat Jammy Dodgers, if I can get them.”

Sounds like a pretty good time if you can get yourself an invite to her “Doctor Who” viewing party.

Categories
The Simpsons

Woo hoo!!

The Simpsons Renewed for Historic 26th Season

No one is saying “Boo-urns” to this news.

The Simpsons has been picked up for a historic 26th season, Fox announced today. The comedy, starring one of the most dysfunctional families on the small screen, is the longest-running scripted show in television history.

“For more than a quarter of a century, The Simpsons has captured the hearts and minds of fans in a way that transcends ages, languages and cultures,” Kevin Reilly, Chairman of Fox Entertainment said in a statement. “This groundbreaking series is not only the longest-running scripted show in television history, it’s one of the greatest sitcoms of our time, and I’m looking forward to yet another landmark season.”

Season 25, which premiered on Sept. 29, will feature yet another impressive list of guest stars: Amy Poehler, Elisabeth Moss, Eva Longoria, Will Arnett, Zach Galifianakis, Bob Odenkirk and Daniel Radcliffe are all set to lend their voices to the animated series.

Also happening in season 25 is the death of a major character in The Simpsons world. “I’ll give you a clue that the actor playing the character won an Emmy for playing that character, but I won’t say who it is,” executive producer Al Jean shared in a conference call with reporters.

The Simpsons annual Halloween special, “Treehouse of Horror XXIV”, airs this Sunday on Fox and will open with a couch gag directed by Guillermo Del Toro.

Shall we celebrate with some Flaming’ Moe’s?

Categories
Letterman

This is spectacular news!!!

David Letterman Extends Contract Through 2015

NEW YORK (AP) — David Letterman, already the longest-tenured talk show host on late-night television, has agreed to extend his contract with CBS to remain on the “Late Show” into 2015.

The deal means Letterman will compete directly for at least a year with the two Jimmys — Kimmel, on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” and Fallon, who’s taking over at NBC’s “Tonight” show this winter.

Letterman joked on Friday that he had a lengthy discussion with CBS Corp. President Leslie Moonves “and we both agreed that I needed a little more time to fully run the show into the ground.”

Letterman, 66, has been on the air for 31 years since beginning at NBC in the time slot following Johnny Carson in 1982. His contract was set to expire next summer.

It’s unclear how long into 2015 the new contract extends. Neither CBS nor Letterman made any mention in Friday’s announcement of this being a final contract at the “Late Show.”

In the increasingly competitive late-night world, where Letterman also competes with new Emmy Award winner Stephen Colbert on Comedy Central, Letterman averaged 2.89 million viewers for the TV season that ended last month. That’s down 3 percent from the previous year.

Jay Leno and the “Tonight” show averaged 3.55 million viewers, the Nielsen ratings company said. NBC is getting ready to take Leno off “Tonight” for a second time, with his exit scheduled for Feb. 6. Fallon, who’s moving the show back to New York, starts after the Winter Olympics on Feb. 24.

Kimmel’s show on ABC has averaged 2.42 million viewers since it began competing directly with Letterman and Leno in January.

Letterman moved to the top of the ratings when Leno was briefly replaced by Conan O’Brien. But Leno took over again when he returned to late night.

Letterman has remained healthy following quintuple bypass surgery that temporarily took him off the air 13 years ago.

Categories
People

May he rest in peace.

Best-selling author Tom Clancy dead at 66

Best-selling U.S. author Tom Clancy, who thrilled readers with vivid descriptions of soldiers and spies in novels including “The Hunt for Red October” and “Patriot Games,” has died at 66, his publisher said on Wednesday.

Clancy, whose books sold more than 100 million copies, died on Tuesday in his hometown of Baltimore, Maryland, Penguin said.

“I’m deeply saddened by Tom’s passing,” said David Shanks, a Penguin executive who had worked with Clancy from the start of his writing career through the upcoming “Command Authority,” which is due out in December.

“He was a consummate author, creating the modern-day thriller, and was one of the most visionary storytellers of our time. I will miss him dearly and he will be missed by tens of millions of readers worldwide,” he added.

U.S. media reports said Clancy died at Johns Hopkins Hospital, though a hospital spokeswoman was unable to confirm those reports. The cause of death was not immediately disclosed.

Clancy’s works closely tracked Americans’ security fears, moving from Cold War face-offs to terrorist attacks and both fascinated readers with their high-stakes plots and enthralled military experts with their precise details.

The books also inspired Hollywood blockbuster films including “Clear and Present Danger,” starring Harrison Ford, and a series of video games, published by Ubisoft Entertainment SA.

Clancy’s career also benefited from fans within Washington power circles. His 1984 debut “Red October,” the account of a rogue naval commanded on a nuclear-armed Soviet submarine won praise from then-president Ronald Reagan, who declared it a good “yarn.”

In total, Clancy published 25 fiction and non-fiction books, which also included “The Sum of All Fears” and “Rainbow Six.” Later books moved on from the Cold War to deal with terrorism and friction between the United States and China.

FANS IN UNIFORM

The detail of Clancy’s novels sometimes raised eyebrows in the intelligence community. According to the New York Times, in a 1986 interview, Clancy recalled meeting Navy Secretary John Lehman whose first question about “Red October” was “Who the hell cleared it?”

But the accurate description of the U.S. military won him fans in uniform.

“His earlier books were ones that had great following in the military because of their accuracy,” said Tad Oelstrom, a retired U.S. Air Force lieutenant-general, who now serves as director of the national security program at Harvard University.

Oelstrom recalled meeting Clancy at a dinner in 1999 at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. Even at the height of his fame, when surrounded by high-ranking fliers telling war stories, Clancy was a careful listener, Oelstrom said.

“My suspicion is he was soaking up as much as he was giving, just because of the stories that were being told about the Vietnam era,” Oelstrom said.

His most recent book, “Threat Vector” debuted at the top of the Publishers Weekly bestseller list in December 2012. His publisher is a unit of Britain’s Pearson PLC.

Clancy is survived by wife Alexandra Llewellyn Clancy and their daughter Alexis Jacqueline Page Clancy. The author is survived by four other children Michelle Bandy, Christine Blocksidge, Kathleen Clancy and Thomas Clancy 3rd from a previous marriage to Wanda King.

Clancy grew up in Baltimore and in 1969 graduated from Loyola University in Maryland.

In a 1992 interview with The Baltimore Sun, he attributed much of his success to being “lucky,” saying that he had a normal middle-class American upbringing.

“I was a little nerdy but a completely normal kid,” Clancy told the paper. “Mom and Dad loved each other. It was like ’Leave it to Beaver.”’

Tom Clancy Bibliography

The Hunt for Red October (1984)

Red Storm Rising (1986)

Patriot Games (1987)

The Cardinal of the Kremlin (1988)

Clear and Present Danger (1989)

The Sum of All Fears (1991)

Without Remorse (1993)

Debt of Honor (1994)

Executive Orders (1996)

SSN: Strategies for Submarine Warfare (1996)

Rainbow Six (1998)

The Bear and the Dragon (2000)

Red Rabbit (2002)

The Teeth of the Tiger (2003)

Dead or Alive (2010, with Grant Blackwood)

Against All Enemies (2011, with Peter Telep)

Locked On (Dec 2011, with Mark Greaney)

Search and Destroy (July 2012, with Peter Telep) (Cancelled)

Threat Vector (Dec 2012, with Mark Greaney)

Command Authority (December 2013, with Mark Greaney)