Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts

White House TV comedy aims for laughs, not politics

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - There is a crazy family living at the White House, but it's not the Obamas. It's the Gilchrists, whose never-ending follies pulse and push upcoming TV comedy romp "1600 Penn."

Starring Bill Pullman as U.S. President Dale Gilchrist and Jenna Elfman as his first lady, the show's co-creator Josh Gad said on Friday that there is plenty of precedent for family madness at the Oval Office.

"You can look as far back as Mary Todd Lincoln ... and you can see dysfunction in the halls of the White House," Gad told reporters on a conference call, referring to the wife of Civil War President Abraham Lincoln.

Gad, who shot to prominence in the Tony-winning musical "The Book of Mormon," also plays the error-prone, good-intentioned son Skip, who with his three younger siblings backstop the earnestness of his father and step-mother.

"We really wanted to dissect what it meant to be a family in the most extraordinary of circumstances - and what's more extraordinary than being the first family?" Gad said.

The show, which takes its title from the 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue street address of the White House, debuts on January 10 on NBC.

It sees Skip crashing a Latin American trade meeting at the White House and helping convince the region's leaders to abandon the arm-twisting Brazilian president and cut a deal instead with his father - summoning their courage with booze.

It is all part of Skip's plan to redeem himself after causing a public relations embarrassment by burning down a fraternity house at his college.

"It's like a drop of a political thing that will spark a family problem," Elfman said, whose character struggles to win the trust of her step-children and fights the media's trophy-wife label.

"1600 Penn," is co-created by Jon Lovett, a former speechwriter for President Barack Obama.

The White House has been successful grounds for TV in the past, inspiring shows like Aaron Sorkin's drama series "The West Wing" from 1999-2006, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus's Emmy-winning turn as a frustrated vice president in the satirical "Veep."

But Gad said "1600 Penn" has no interest in party politics and that President Gilchrist's party affiliation is deliberately vague.

"I can't emphasize that enough," Gad said. "We never set out to make a political show."

Nevertheless, Pullman, who played the president in the 1996 blockbuster film "Independence Day," said the 2012 U.S. presidential race gave him plenty of fodder to study.

"It was a surreal time to be making this because of the campaign going on," Pullman said. "Every day that we were shooting (the race) was in the news."
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Roll Up! "Magical Mystery Tour" gets U.S. TV debut

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Give four pop stars turned hippies a movie camera in 1967 and what do you get? The Beatles' "Magical Mystery Tour" film, which will receive its long-awaited U.S. broadcast television debut on Friday on PBS.

Long a curiosity in the United States, the film will be accompanied by a new documentary about its making. A restored version was released on DVD and blu-ray in October.

The third film for The Fab Four, after a "A Hard Day's Night" in 1964 and "Help!" a year later, "Magical Mystery Tour" is a shambolic trip through the English countryside on a bus filled with odd characters, but thin on plot. It first aired on BBC television the day after Christmas 1967.

Although it was initially panned by British critics, time has delivered some justice to the project, Jonathan Clyde, the producer of the documentary, told Reuters.

"'Magical Mystery Tour' has always been the black sheep of the Beatles family, but I think it's been rehabilitated into the Beatles canon," Clyde said. "It's no longer the 'mad uncle in the attic' that nobody wants to talk about. It's been let out."

In the United States, little was known about the film at the time of its release.

Beatles fans only had the album of music, or saw a poor print of the film in a double-feature midnight showing with "Reefer Madness," a 1936 anti-marijuana propaganda film often screened decades later for comedic effect.

"I first saw it in 1974 at a university," Bill King, the longtime publisher of Beatles fanzine Beatlefan, said of "Magical Mystery Tour." "By then, though, it had taken on mythic status. I loved it."

At the time of its making, The Beatles were arguably at their creative peak on the heels of a seminal album, "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," and their summer of love anthem "All You Need Is Love," which debuted on global TV.

SCRIPT WANTED

But even before "Sgt. Pepper's" release in June 1967, Paul McCartney had already conceived of the film project. The only thing he was missing: a script.

"Paul had drawn out a pie chart," said Clyde, also a longtime consultant for The Beatles' company, Apple Corps. "It just said things like 'Get on coach,' 'Dreams,' 'End Song.' They really had no idea what it was going to be like."

The group hired a bus, a film crew, and a handful of extras and set out around England, creating scenes with everything from magicians to Ringo Starr's oversized Aunt Jessie being stuffed with spaghetti by waiter John Lennon.

McCartney did most of the directing.

"It really had something for everyone, which is something I like about it," Clyde said. "It was really a nod not only to the younger people watching, but to their parents' generation, as well."

The film also was loaded with six new Beatles songs, presented as what now would be considered music videos.

The music itself, including songs "I Am the Walrus" and "The Fool on the Hill," was as innovative as any of the band's music that year - and mostly recorded just before filming started.

"The Beatles were driven and inspired by having a deadline," said Giles Martin, son of Beatles producer George Martin. The younger Martin remixed the songs at the legendary Abbey Road studios for the DVD and broadcast.

"And songs like 'Walrus' are a brilliant mix of both The Beatles as a rock and roll band and as masters of groundbreaking experimental recording," Martin added.
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Hulu Plus doubles subscribers to 3 million

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Hulu Plus more than doubled the number of subscribers who pay for access to its premium content in 2012. The streaming service now numbers 3 million paid subscribers, Hulu CEO Jason Kilar announced in a blog post Monday.

That's a far cry from the nearly 30 million subscribers the company's main rival Netflix attracts, but it is a sign that Hulu is moving in the right direction. Because the company had not released its numbers publicly for months, some analysts had privately speculated that its growth had stalled. Hulu's paid-subscription service launched in 2010.

In addition, revenue at Hulu grew over 65 percent in 2012 to close the year at $695 million.

"When it comes to building things that matter, most entrepreneurs hope to have the good timing and the good fortune to find and ride (and ideally shape) one massive wave," Kilar wrote. "At Hulu, we are doubly fortunate in that we are at the crest of two massive waves that we believe will persist for the long term: the rise of online video advertising and the rise of online video subscription services."

Like Netflix, Hulu has also gotten into the original content game - launching documentary shows with the likes of "Super Size Me" director Morgan Spurlock and the campaign dramedy "Battleground." In 2012, the company said it invested $500 million in content.

Kilar wrote that Hulu now has 430 content partners, producing 50,000 hours of video on Hulu and Hulu Plus.

However, advertising, not subscriber numbers remains the major driver behind Hulu's revenue, and here too the company said it is expanding. In 2012, Kilar wrote the company attracted some 1,000 advertisers, a 28 percent uptick from last year.
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"X Factor" judge L.A. Reid quitting TV talent show

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - L.A. Reid, "The X Factor" judge, says he is leaving the TV talent show next season after two years on the panel.

Reid, 56, chairman and chief executive of Epic Records, told "Access Hollywood," the television program and website, he has decided to leave the Fox reality singing show to return to the record label full time.

"I have decided that I will not return to 'The X Factor' next year," Reid told "Access Hollywood" late Thursday. "I have to go back and I have a company to run that I've kind of neglected, and it saddens me a little bit, but only a little bit."

He added that the show was "a nice break, it was a nice departure from what I've done for the past 20 years, but now I gotta go back to work."

Fox declined to comment on Reid's departure on Friday.

Reid joined "The X Factor" when Cowell introduced the show in the United States in September 2011. Reid sat alongside Paula Abdul, former Pussycat Dolls singer Nicole Scherzinger and Cowell.

Cowell fired Abdul and Scherzinger after a disappointing first season and brought in pop stars Britney Spears and Demi Lovato.

But "The X Factor" audiences have dropped this year to an average 9.7 million from about 12.5 million an episode in 2011.

The show broadcasts a two-part finale next week with the winner earning a $5 million prize and record contract.

Epic Records, a unit of Sony Music Entertainment, which commands a roster of artists including Avril Lavigne, will sign the winners of "The X Factor."
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"Best Funeral Ever" premiere delayed after Newtown school shootings

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Fans of death-centric reality TV will have to wait a little longer to dig into TLC's "Best Funeral Ever."

TLC has pushed back the premiere of the special to January 6 at 10/9c in light of the school shootings in Newtown, Conn. last week.

"Best Funeral Ever" was initially scheduled to premiere on December 26 at 8/7c.

"Best Funeral Ever" centers around the Golden Gate Funeral Home in Dallas, which specializes in elaborate specialty funerals catering to the deceased's interest. In the special, a doo-wop singer famous for his rib-sauce jingle receives a barbecue-themed sendoff, while a disabled man who was unable to ride roller coasters in mortal life receives a State Fair-themed funeral.

Since last Friday's horrific shootings, a number of programs and other entertainment-related events have been moved out of sensitivity. Syfy, for one, decided not to air its scheduled episode of "Haven" on Friday night, because it contained elements of fictionalized school violence.
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