ABC to Air Two-Hour McCartney Tour Movie
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – In 1968 he was “Back in the U.S.S.R.” and now, in 2002, former Beatle Paul McCartney is “Back in the U.S.”
Television network ABC said on Wednesday it will air “Back in the U.S.,” a two-hour special chronicling the singer’s American tour of earlier this year, on Nov. 27 at 9 p.m. EDT.
The network said a crew followed the McCartney to 34 cities over the span of 14 weeks, shooting performances of hits like “Yesterday,” “Maybe I’m Amazed” and “Live and Let Die.”
The film will feature more than two dozen songs, as well as candid footage shot on McCartney’s chartered jet and in the band’s dressing rooms.
McCartney also served as executive producer of the program. ABC is a unit of Walt Disney Co.
Category: Television
Give it to him!
Letterman Wants Highway in His Name
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) – David Letterman has an offer: He’ll pay for new road signs if Mayor Bart Peterson renames the highway that circles Indianapolis the “Dave Letterman Expressway.”
On the “Late Show” that aired on CBS Thursday night, the talk-show host extended the offer after joking for weeks about renaming Interstate 465.
“How about this: What if we change the name of that to the ‘Dave Letterman Expressway’?” Letterman said in an on-air conversation with Peterson.
“You know, Dave, I will tell you, I like that idea,” the mayor said.
Letterman had been saying he would pay $10 million for the renaming rights, but when he actually reached the mayor he pledged only to pay for new signs.
“What happened to the $10 million?” Peterson asked.
“That’s a different telephone call,” Letterman replied.
Letterman grew up in Indianapolis and graduated from Ball State University in Muncie.
Mmmmmmmm…Heigl!
Romy and Michele Return for ABC
Romy and Michele, the primary characters of the 1997 comedy ROMY AND MICHELE’S HIGHSCHOOL REUNION, are returning for the ABC telepic ROMY AND MICHELE: BEHIND THE VELVET ROPE. The project is described as a prequel to the feature film. Mira Sorvino and Lisa Kudrow will not return for the film, but Katherine Heigl will take over as Romy and Alex Breckenridge will play Michele.
Booooooooo!
This News Sucks!
Ron MacLean and the CBC have reached a deal.
Bruuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuce!!
New Duo Debut On ‘Saturday Night Live’
HOLLYWOOD (Variety) – Performers Fred Armisen and Will Forte will join “Saturday Night Live” as featured players when the comedy-variety series makes its season premiere Saturday.
Matt Damon will host the season opener, with Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band appearing as the musical guest.
Armisen has brought his comedy and cast of characters to “Late Night With Conan O’Brien,” the Chicago Comedy Festival and programs on British television. He also has appeared on HBO’s music show “Reverb” and in his own eponymous interstitial series on “HBO Zone.”
Forte comes to “SNL” from L.A.’s improv-sketch theater the Groundlings, where current cast members Chris Kattan, Chris Parnell and Maya Rudolph got their start. Forte’s experience has been predominantly behind the camera — serving as producer on “That ’70s Show”; story editor for “3rd Rock From the Sun” and “Action”; and writer for “Late Show with David Letterman” and the MTV Movie Awards.
It’s your chance to be “heard”
Much Ado Over Nothing?
I think Hockey Night In Canada will be better without him as he now asks questions with his own agenda, but if you think CBC should find a way to get Ron MacLean to stay on the show sign this petition.
ROCK THE WEST WING
The West Wing producers writing nonprofit group Rock the Vote into this season’s second episode. The show will talk about youth empowerment and feature performances by Aimee Mann and Barenaked Ladies.
Ron MacLean out as ‘HNIC’ host
Hockey Night In Canada will look vastly different to Canadian hockey fans this season after the CBC announced Monday that host Ron MacLean would not be back after 17 years with the network.
The CBC released a statement Monday afternoon saying negotiations with MacLean had ended at an impasse.
“CBC Television is disappointed that we have not been able to reach a successful contract agreement with Ron MacLean,” the release said. “CBC Television recognizes the significant contribution Ron has made to the success of CBC Television’s Hockey Night in Canada and countless other sporting events.
“We felt that our offer was fair and respectful. Our offer recognized and rewarded Ron’s contribution to CBC Sports.”
MacLean reportedly was looking for $600,000 a year in his new deal after earning $400,000 a year in his old contract.
Don Cherry, MacLean’s long-time partner on Coach’s Corner, signed a new deal last week reportedly worth $700,000 a year.
“All I’m going to say is I can’t believe it and I really believe that they both will get back together,” Cherry told The Canadian Press. “I didn’t think it would get this far.”
Cherry said he is not yet wondering who will be his sidekick on the Coach’s Corner segment.
“No way,” said Cherry. “I’m thinking positive that Ron will be there.”
Aside from Hockey Night In Canada, MacLean was also a fixture on the CBC’s Olympic coverage, hosting in Salt Lake City last February, as well as at the Sydney Summer Games in 2000, Atlanta Summer Games in 1996, the Winter Games in Albertville in 1992 and the Seoul Olympics in 1988.
MacLean’s work has earned him four Gemini Awards as best sports broadcaster in Canada.
He began his career in his native Red Deer, Alta., before joining the CBC in 1986.
He became national host of Hockey Night In Canada in 1987, replacing Dave Hodge.
Will will be missed! Sorely missed!!!
‘SNL’ Heads Into 28th Season
NEW YORK (AP) – A new season, the 28th, dawns on “Saturday Night Live” this week and, as always, the question is how the pendulum will swing.
The NBC comedy institution is uniquely elastic in quality. You can chart its health on a graph like the stock market, from glory years to gory years and all sorts of middling seasons in-between.
Right now, the show is on a high. After a descent into bathroom humor during the mid-1990s, the comedy is now sharp and topical.
The “Saturday Night Live” writing staff, largely together for about seven years, returns to work this week with a new Emmy Award in hand.
But the loss of two performers ó Ana Gasteyer and Will Ferrell ó may herald a challenging year. Ferrell, in particular, was a valuable utility player in the mold of Dan Aykroyd or Phil Hartman.
Matt Damon is host of Saturday’s season-opener, with Sarah Michelle Gellar and Arizona Sen. John McCain on deck the next two weeks.
“Is it a transition year from several good years into one of its lulls?” asked Tom Shales, a television critic for The Washington Post and co-author, with James Andrew Miller, of a just-published oral history of the show, “Live From New York.”
He’s anxious for the answer, and so is Lorne Michaels, the show’s founder and executive producer.
“I think it’s a big loss,” Michaels said. “But the nice part of the show is, having lived through these transitions a lot of times, from the audience’s perspective, people are patient with it.”
Even during the down years, there are still a handful of good shows, he said.
“When a cast is at its peak and the writing staff is solid, you get an evenness,” Michaels said. “It never goes below a certain level. You never worry that when people are up there they’re going to sort of forget why they’re funny.”
During the years that “Saturday Night Live” is bad ó think early ’90s or mid-’80s ó viewers seem to take it personally, Shales said.
“It’s like the official satirical television show of the United States,” he said. “Therefore, we demand that it be consistently hilarious and clever all the time. That’s a lot to ask for. They sure work hard to do it and don’t always succeed.”
Shales’ and Miller’s book is both breezy and illuminating, particularly about the show’s formative years.
Written with Michaels’ blessing, it combines tabloid fodder ó backstage escapades and Laraine Newman’s stories about how she sniffed heroin while Gilda Radner downed ice cream ó with insights into the program’s creative chemistry.
“SNL” was the first network television program controlled by baby boomers and has changed with each succeeding generation, Shales said.
“The form wasn’t completely new but the content was ó the attitude, the youthfulness, the point of view,” he said. “It put TV into the hands of a generation that had grown up with it. It’s a pretty trite thing, but it’s true. It hadn’t been done before.”
In recent history, Michaels looks back on a classic December 2000 skit with Ferrell and Darrell Hammond portraying an “Odd Couple” co-presidency between George W. Bush and Al Gore as a pivotal moment.
The previous spring, Michaels cut two skits with Hammond’s Gore impersonation because they fell flat with the audience during dress rehearsal.
Now, particularly after Sept. 11, the audience seems much more interested in topical humor, he said.
Jimmy Fallon and Tina Fey, the two “Weekend Update” anchors, are the show’s poster children, probably more so now that Ferrell is gone.
“It has its own audience,” Michaels said. “People stay with the first half-hour knowing that `Update’ is coming. I think now with many people, the earliest time they go to sleep is after `Update,’ and that’s a tribute to Jimmy and Tina.”
Fallon “could walk away from the show right now and make two stupid teenage movies a year,” Shales said. “He’s aiming higher than that, which I think is good. He also knows that he needs at least another year there to hone his craft.”
Two new cast members are likely to join the show to replace Ferrell and Gasteyer, although Michaels said their contracts aren’t done yet.
Michaels continues to dominate the show he created, where he’s remained except for a 1980s hiatus.
“I can’t picture it going on without him and yet the `Tonight’ show is still on the air and I couldn’t picture it without Johnny Carson,” Shales said.
“He’s got a certain talent for doing the show, to keep people from killing each other and balancing out all those egos. He doesn’t even spend much time there anymore. He seems to have such a presence that even if he isn’t in the office, people think that he is.”
Michaels indicates that’s a question NBC won’t have to worry about for a while.
“I have very young children,” he said, “so I expect that I’ll be working for a while.”
Love him now!
Star Says Next ‘Raymond’ Season May Be Last
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Everybody who loves “Raymond” better get their loving in now, because he may not be around much longer.
The 2003-2004 season of CBS’s hit comedy “Everybody Loves Raymond” may be the show’s last, series namesake Ray Romano told TV Guide in the magazine’s newest issue released on Sunday.
The show is currently in its seventh season, and Romano recently won his first Emmy award for best actor in a comedy series. He told the magazine he wanted to go out on top.
“You don’t want to leave when you’re sliding down,” he said. He said he definitely did not see the show going to a 10th season, and added “I don’t even see nine.”
Romano told the magazine he has thought about a number of options for his post-“Raymond” career, including returning to his roots in stand-up comedy or making a movie.
“You definitely won’t find me sitting around eating Oreos,” the comedian said.