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maandag 28 november 2011

ABC Announces Premiere Date for The Revolution

ABC Announces Premiere Date for The Revolution

ABC's new daytime show The Revolution will debut on Monday, Jan. 16, the network announced Monday.

The Revolution will feature fashion guru Tim Gunn, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition host Ty Pennington, celebrity trainer Harley Pasternak, women's health expert Jennifer Ashton and therapist Tiffanie Davis Henrie and focus on providing life-changing tips and tools to transform viewers' lives. The series (airing 2/1c) will also include a weekly highlight of one woman's personal journey over the course of five months.

Ty Pennington jumps on board The Revolution for ABC

The Revolution is produced by 3Ball Productions, the company behind The Biggest Loser. The show replaces longtime soap One Life to Live on ABC's daytime schedule.


TV ratings: 'Once Upon a Time' down some as NFL dominates Sunday

TV ratings: 'Once Upon a Time' down some as NFL dominates Sunday

Fast national ratings for Sunday, Nov. 27, 2011

NFL games -- both the scheduled contest on NBC's "Sunday Night Football" and an afternoon game that bled nearly an hour into primetime on CBS -- ruled Sunday night's ratings. "Once Upon a Time," meanwhile, declined some from previous episodes (though it still performed pretty well), and ABC's first Hallmark Hall of Fame movie, "Mitch Albom's Have a Little Faith," drew pretty meager ratings.

NBC led the night with 14.2 million viewers and an 8.7 rating/13 share in households, beating out the 13.5 million viewers and 8.2/12 for CBS (numbers for both nets will change in the final nationals when the live NFL telecasts are accounted for). ABC (7.8 million, 4.6/7) finished third overall, while FOX -- which also had an NFL overrun in some markets -- delivered 5.3 million viewers and a 3.0/4.

Thanks to "Sunday Night Football," NBC also led the adults 18-49 demographic with a 5.4 rating. CBS took second with a 3.6. FOX's 2.4 beat out ABC's 1.8 for third.

Sunday hour by hour:

7 p.m.

CBS: NFL overrun/"60 Minutes" (22.9 million viewers, 13.8/21 households)
ABC: "America's Funniest Home Videos" (7.6 million, 4.2/6)
NBC: "Football Night in America" (6.9 million, 3.6/6)
FOX: NFL overrun (8.8 million, 5.0/8)/"The Cleveland Show" (4.1 million, 2.3/3)

18-49 leader: NFL overrun/"60 Minutes" (7.0)

8 p.m.

CBS: "60 Minutes"/"The Amazing Race" (15.4 million, 9.3/14)
NBC: "Sunday Night Football" - Steelers-Chiefs (15.25 million, 9.3/13)
ABC: "Once Upon a Time" (10.7 million, 5.9/8)
FOX: "The Simpsons" (5.6 million, 3.0/4)/"Allen Gregory" (3.1 million, 1.8/3)

18-49 leader: "Sunday Night Football" (5.6)

9 p.m.

NBC: "Sunday Night Football" (18.1 million, 11.0/18)
CBS: "The Amazing Race"/"Person of Interest" rerun (9 million, 5.5/8)
ABC: Movie - "Mitch Albom's Have a Little Faith" (6.4 million, 3.9/6)
FOX: "Family Guy" (5.5 million, 3.2/5)/"American Dad" (4.45 million, 2.7/4)

18-49 leader: "Sunday Night Football" (6.8)

10 p.m.

NBC: "Sunday Night Football" (16.4 million, 10.1/16)
CBS: "Person of Interest" rerun (6.8 million, 4.4/7)
ABC: "Mitch Albom's Have a Little Faith" (6.6 million, 4.3/7)

18-49 leader: "Sunday Night Football" (6.8)

Ratings information includes live and same-day DVR viewing. All numbers are preliminary and subject to change, especially in the case of live telecasts. Source: The Nielsen Company.


Madison Square Garden Stock Jumps More Than 10% After NBA Labor Pact

Madison Square Garden Stock Jumps More Than 10% After NBA Labor Pact

Miller Tabak analyst David Joyce upgraded his rating on the shares from "neutral" to "buy" amid the tentative deal.

NEW YORK - Shares of Madison Square Garden Co. rose more than 10 percent in early Monday trading following an agreement in the NBA labor dispute.

As of 10:25am ET, the stock of MSG was up 11.2 percent at $28.65. That gave the company, which is controlled by the Dolan family, a market value of $2.1 billion.

Miller Tabak analyst David Joyce early Monday upgraded his rating on MSG from "neutral" to "buy" and lifted his shorter-term price target to $30 from $27, citing the apparent end of the labor dispute.

And Morgan Stanley analyst Benjamin Swinburne, in a report entitled "Game On," wrote that "the likely end of the NBA lockout is an incremental positive for MSG shares - both in terms of near-term earnings and the removal of a major overhang."

The benefit of the proposed 66 game season versus his prior assumption of 50 games "should have a modest positive impact on earnings per share," he added.

Swinburne also commented on the NY Knicks, which MSG owns. "The new deal brings harsher luxury tax penalties, which should help to limit the payrolls of high-revenue teams such as the Knicks," he said.

A labor agreement unveiled this weekend is tentative and still needs approvals, but would get the season started on Dec. 25.


HGTV Acquires Canadian Lifestyle Series 'Love It Or List It'

HGTV Acquires Canadian Lifestyle Series 'Love It Or List It'

The home design series is the latest Canuck-made show to land on the U.S. cable channel as it reaches across the border to fill out its programming schedule.

Australia’s Beyond Distribution has sold the U.S. cable channel 52 hours of the lifestyle series Love It Or List It from Canuck indie producer Big Coat Productions.

The property series, which airs on W Network in Canada, has homeowners decide between renovating their home or buying new real estate.

A fourth season of Love It Or List It is in the works.

HGTV earlier acquired or co-produced Canadian property and design-themed series Selling New York, Selling Los Angeles, Income Property and Junk Brothers as it reached across the border to fill out its U.S. schedule.

Beyond Distribution also said it sold the Margaret Cho-starrer Cho Dependent to Logo in the U.S. market.

'Supernanny' Jo Frost on Her TV Replacement: 'I Am Not At All Happy'

'Supernanny' Jo Frost on Her TV Replacement: 'I Am Not At All Happy'

A year ago we heard the news that 'Supernanny' Jo Frost had quit her successful ABC television show to get married and have children of her own. Now, just as 'Supernanny' production company Shed Media is about to launch 'America's Supernanny' on Lifetime, Frost's come out swinging and denies that was ever her plan.

She says that not only was the story about her starting a family totally invented by Shed Media, but that their new 'Supernanny,' Deborah Tillman, doesn't have the right credentials for the job.

Frost told 'The Daily Mail' that "I decided to leave after season seven, earlier this year. But then they [Shed Media] made up this story that I was running off to get married and have children. I am not at all happy. I feel like I worked really hard to get where I am. I am Supernanny. That's me. I only know that Deborah Tillman is an accountant and a businesswoman. She has never been a nanny."

The 'Mail' quotes a source as saying that Frost quit after 'Supernanny' producers refused to give her a raise and told her that she was expendable. Frost told the 'Mail' that "I don't really want to get into a public slanging match. Let's just say that my leaving 'Supernanny' was not exactly the Disneyfication of the story that it was made out to be."

There's a marked change of direction in 'America's Supernanny,' which premieres Tuesday night on Lifetime. The 'Mary Poppins' cape and the Naughty Step are gone, and in their place Tillman (known as "Miss Deborah" on the show) will introduce her parenting techniques such as Calm Down Corner and Lose What You Like.

Tillman originally trained as an accountant, but after several bad experiences finding childcare for her son she quit her job and went on to found Happy Home Child Learning Centers, a small chain of preschools in northern Virginia. She also earned a a master's degree in early childhood special education from George Washington University.

Talking about her new TV role, Tillman told 'The Washington Post,' "I don't want to mimic anybody. This is me being very real, very transparent. It's not a role. I just go in and do what I would normally do and put techniques in place to help families."

However, Frost is not convinced that Tillman's qualified to replace her: "She has teachers who are the real ones who do the work. She sits behind a desk. Until you have dealt with the sick and the mess of children, it is very hard to advise anyone else. I have been a nanny since I was 14. I've been in the trenches. What qualifies her to offer advice?"

Could there soon be a 'Supernanny' TV showdown? Frost says she is far from retiring: "I am working on a brand new show of my own for America. Ask anyone who Supernanny is. It's me. End of subject."

Dunder Mifflin Lives! Staples Starts Real Line of 'Office' Paper

Dunder Mifflin Lives! Staples Starts Real Line of 'Office' Paper

Dunder Mifflin paper is finally real. Yep, the fictional paper company that employs our favorite Scrantonites on NBC's 'The Office' (Thursdays, 9PM ET on NBC) is coming to life, thanks to Staples.

According to Wall Street Journal, Dunder Mifflin will be a new brand of copy paper available on Staples' Quill.com. The new paper comes through a licensing deal with NBC's parent company, Comcast. WSJ reports Comcast will receive about 6 percent of revenue from Dunder Mifflin paper sales.

Dunder Mifflin paper packages will come with slogans from the show, such as "Our motto is, 'Quabity First'" and "Get Your Scrant on."

Now in its eighth season, 'The Office' is still one NBC's most-watched shows, despite a sizable drop in Nielsen ratings, with a loyal following. Season 8 episodes of the series have been averaging around 6 million viewers.


Regis Philbin's Next Project: A Family Talent Show?

Regis Philbin's Next Project: A Family Talent Show?

Regis Philbin has been gone from 'Live!' for less than a month and he's already plotting his return to TV.

According to the New York Post's Page Six, Philbin's next TV project could be a family talent show. The 80-year-old TV mainstay has formed RAF Productions with former 'Live! With Regis and Kathie Lee' director Barry Glazer, Edward Walson and Cort Cassidy.

"We're contemplating a show that is sort of a talent show, but it involves the whole family," Philbin told Page Six. Philbin said the show will be on primetime once it comes to fruition.

Another possibility is a variety-esque show.

"In our business you don't want to say variety because it's frowned upon now, but something with people who are performing," he said.

After weeks of insisting he's not retiring -- just moving on --Philbin confirmed to Page Six that his departure from 'Live!' all came down to business. "It wasn't that ABC didn't try to negotiate with me," he said. "As it happens in this business, sometimes you don't really like the terms so you just walk away with that in mind."

Philbin first hinted at contract disputes in a radio interview. "The contractual issue just never worked out," he said, "but I was going to leave before that anyway."

Following his announcement that he was 'Live!' after 28 years, rumors swirled that Philbin would star in his own reality show. He filmed a pilot, but the project isn't going forward.

While his next projects continue to be in early planning stages, Philbin has ruled one potential gig out: Being a contestant on ABC's 'Dancing With the Stars.'

"Oh, no, no. That's too much for me! I thought about that, though, back when I was kidding myself," he told AOL TV. "It's a good show, but it's not for Regis."



Bethenny Frankel's Talk Show Fails to Find Syndicated Home

Bethenny Frankel's Talk Show Fails to Find Syndicated Home

Bad news for Bethenny Frankel: The reality star has been left out in the talk show cold, according to New York Post's Page Six.

The former 'Real Housewives of New York City' star had a talk show set up at Telepictures, but after failing to find a syndicated home for the daytime series, the company has reportedly dropped the project.

The daytime landscape has gotten mighty crowded as of late. Anderson Cooper's 'Anderson' has been picked up for a new season and Katie Couric, Jeff Probst, Ricki Lake and Steve Harvey all have landed talk show deals and homes for their series.

However, now that her syndication deal is reportedly dead, Page Six reports Frankel has received offers from cable stations and networks. Could Frankel's talk show end up on Bravo to bookend Andy Cohen's 'Watch What Happens Live'?

Frankel's proposed advice-based talk show took shape after she appeared in segments on 'The Ellen DeGeneres Show.' She began work on the talk show in early June 2011, but the project failed to woo stations because Frankel came of as "too aggressive," according to the post.

Don't fret Bethenny fans, the Bravolebrity will be back on the network with another season of 'Bethenny Ever After.'

Secrets of MTV

Secrets of MTV

Before The Real World, The Hills and Snooki, the M in MTV stood for music. In their new book, I Want My MTV: The Uncensored Story of the Music Video Revolution, journalists Craig Marks and Rob Tannenbaum look back on the cable channel's halcyon days of the 1980s and early '90s, when it became a trend-setting, star-making machine for the recording industry. The book is based on interviews with 400 executives and performers who witnessed the era of excess, experimentation and hair bands. Here are a few nuggets.

1. The slogan "I Want My MTV" was based on an old ad campaign for hot cereal ("I want my Maypo"). But it worked, as teenagers would call cable companies and imitate Mick Jagger's reading of the line.

2. VJs were required to identify Michael Jackson as "The King of Pop" at least twice a week. To coax Jackson into appearing on an anniversary show, he was given an award in the form of a six-foot statue of the MTV Moon Man.

3. VJ "Downtown" Julie Brown flashed people on the set whenever she felt the energy was lagging. Said producer Alex Colletti, "I can't tell you how many times I saw her knickers."

4. Van Halen lead singer David Lee Roth was once hospitalized after smashing his television because he was so anguished that MTV reduced the airplay of one the band's videos.

5. The first VMAs did not have a seven-second delay and the F-word was used early and often.

N.B.A. and Players Reach Tentative Agreement

N.B.A. and Players Reach Tentative Agreement

The N.B.A. and its players reached an agreement early Saturday morning, officially ending the second-longest lockout in the history of the league.

The final negotiations took 15 hours, but it was ultimately decided that a 66-game compressed regular season will begin on Christmas Day, according to the New York Times.

NBA Cancels First 2 Weeks of Season

"We've reached a tentative understanding that is subject to a variety of approvals and very complex machinations," N.B.A. commissioner, David Stern, said at 3:40 a.m., "but we're optimistic that that will all come to pass, and that the N.B.A. season will begin on Dec. 25, Christmas Day, with a tripleheader."

For now, the regularly scheduled Christmas games will be played as planned: Boston Celtics vs. the New York Knicks, followed by the Miami Heat vs. the Dallas Mavericks and the Chicago Bulls vs. the Los Angeles Lakers. The remainder of the schedule, which will need to be tweaked in order to accommodate for the lost time, should be released within the next few days.

"We're really excited," said Peter Holt, the San Antonio Spurs owner and chairman of the league's labor-relations committee. "We're excited for the fans. We're excited to start playing basketball, for players, for everybody involved."

Kris Humphries Will Not Sue Kim Kardashian

Kris Humphries Will Not Sue Kim Kardashian

Despite rumors to the contrary, it turns out Kris Humphries will not be suing his soon-to-be ex-wife after all.

Earlier this week, several sources reported that the basketball star planned to file a $10 million lawsuit against Kim Kardashian, based on the assumption that he would be poorly portrayed in E!'s Kourtney and Kim Take New York.

Kourtney and Kim Take New York: 7 Signs Kim and Kris were doomed from the start

However, Humphries has "absolutely no plans" to sue Kardashian, 31, and understands he has no control over the final edits of the show, according to TMZ.

In the premiere, which airs Sunday at 10/9c, Humphries acts aggressively toward Kardashian, calls her annoying, and tells her he "doesn't feel married." The two fight on several occasions in the episode.

Angelina Jolie on '60 Minutes': 'I didn't die young, so I'm very lucky'

Angelina Jolie on '60 Minutes': 'I didn't die young, so I'm very lucky'

For some of her "60 Minutes" interview, Angelina Jolie talks about her wild past and how she has settled down now.

"I went through heavy, darker times and I survived them. I didn't die young, so I'm very lucky," says Jolie. When pressed for details, she remains vague.

"Nothing I want to go into a lot of detail about. But people can imagine I did the most dangerous and I did the worst and for many reasons, I shouldn't be here ...too many dangerous things, too many chances taken, too far," she says.

But she does make assurances that she hasn't completely lost her bad girl side.

"I'm still a bad girl. I still have that side of me, it's just in its place now. It belongs to Brad, or it belongs to our adventures," says Jolie.

As for the constant tabloid fodder that is her relationship with Brad Pitt and their six children, she says, "I don't see those [magazines], but I assume they're not me ... I find them quite shallow and often very wrong."

And what's their secret to their successful family? Complimentary work schedules and a great example to draw from in her late mother.

"We never work at the same time," says Jolie, of herself and Pitt. "My mother was a full-time mother. She didn't have much of her own life, everything was for her children. I will never be as good a mother as she was. She was just grace incarnate, the most generous, loving [gets choked up] She's better than me."

Angelina's directorial debut, "In the Land of Blood and Honey," opens Dec. 23.

'Desperately Seeking Santa's' Laura Vandervoort: 'A nice twist on the typical Christmas story'

'Desperately Seeking Santa's' Laura Vandervoort: 'A nice twist on the typical Christmas story'

ABC Family is kicking things off with "Desperately Seeking Santa," which star Laura Vandervoort tells Zap2it is not your typical Christmas movie.

"I play Jennifer Walker. She's a girl very driven to succeed, make it up the corporate ladder at a mall in Boston," says Laura. "She comes up with this idea to have sexy Santa or hunky Santa instead of the regular Santa. She holds auditions with local men to be the new hunky Santa. It's a fun Christmas comedy, but it's also a romance. I'm a romantic at heart and I really related to the script."

Naturally, Jennifer finds her hunky Santa, in David Moretti (Nick Zano) and then the romantic sparks fly. But he also teaches Jennifer that there's more to life than work.

"In the end, she realizes she has no family, she's always just been about work, and she realizes with this new man in your life that family comes first. Having love in your life is more important than succeeding in the corporate world," says Laura.

"I consider Jennifer to be the Scrooge in this film. It's a nice twist on the typical Christmas story. Eventually she realizes that Christmas has more meaning than sales and profits at the mall," she continues.

The film was actually shot a year ago, but Laura tells us it was nice to be doing Christmas-y things at a non-Christmas time of the year.

"Christmas is one of my favorite times of the year. It was nice to have the Christmas songs and the cozy sweaters even though it wasn't Christmas. We had the hot chocolate, it felt like a little Christmas for real," says Laura.

"Desperately Seeking Santa" premieres Sunday, Nov. 27 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on ABC Family.

Weed Wars: TV Review

Weed Wars: TV Review

Discovery Channel's show explores the world of medical cannabis, focusing on Harborside Health Center, the largest medical marijuana dispensary in the nation.

While it’s debatable whether marijuana is a so-called gateway drug to more dangerous and addictive narcotics, there’s little doubt that medical marijuana represents a gateway to the outright acceptance of pot. For proof, one need look no further than Weed Wars, Discovery Channel’s illuminating new series about the day-to-day operations of Oakland, California’s Harborside Health Center, the world’s largest medical cannabis dispensary.

“I have a very close personal relationship with the cannabis plant.” Steve DeAngelo, the long-haired owner of Harborside tells the camera during a cut away interview. “I knew intuitively it was not an evil plant.”

While the federal government has not given its blessing to medical marijuana, voters in California did so back in 1996 when they legalized the sale of weed to treat a variety of conditions. The ensuing years have seen an explosion of dispensaries across the state bringing what had long been California’s leading cash crop even more out of the shadows while enriching doctors who have doled out hundreds of thousands of prescriptions for pot.

“We have some patients that come in here who, um, have less clear medical issues.” Terryn, a mellow sales clerk and licensed pot grower says during a tour of Harborside’s impressive retail facility.

Patients flood the dispensary 365 days a year from 11 a.m. until 8 p.m. seeking pot remedies to treat everything from nausea cased by chemotherapy to depression to insomnia.

“Everybody who works at Harborside Health Center is a legal a medical cannabis patient, so they’re all quite familiar with the medicine.” says DeAngelo says, who is happy to be filmed doing bong hits.

STORY: Medical Marijuana Show Premieres on Discovery Channel This Fall

Part activist, part hard-nosed businessman, DeAngelo’s evangelical fervor for cannabis comes off as simultaneously genuine and self-serving.

“Whether or not they realize it, most regular cannabis users are using cannabis for the purpose of enhancing their wellness,” DeAngelo says of his 80,000 registered patients. “They may be using it to spark their creativity, or their libido, or get a longer nights sleep, all of those things are legitimate wellness issues.” 

The question that dominates the show’s premiere episode, however, is whether a new city ordinance raising taxes on dispensaries will force Harborside to declare bankruptcy. “I just learned that we’ve got a tax bill for a million dollars that’s due a week or ten days from now” Steve tells his brother Andrew, who is Harborside’s general manager, and Luigi, the operation’s CFO.

It’s the kind of “dude, no way” twist that you might find in Seth Rogen flick, and gives rise to several hand-wringing cut away interviews with Andrew, who you swear might have been that stoner guy in your college dorm.

STORY: 'Weed Wars' Stars Are On a Mission

As with shows like Deadliest Catch or Storage Wars, that introduce the country to little known, fascinating environments, Executive Producer Chuck Braverman (Beverly Hills 90210, Abused ) has tapped into a setting and a cast of characters that you likely haven’t encountered on television before. Whether the travails of Harborside and its employees will make for engaging viewing over an entire season, or whether the feds will simply lower the boom and put the operation out of business before we can find out, remains to be seen.

In the meantime, the first few episodes deliver something unique for reality television, and which a sleepy-eyed Andrew DeAngleo sums up pretty neatly. 

“You can never forget, every day you get to walk home not handcuffed, is a good day.”

'Once Upon A Time's' Raphael Sbarge Teases Jiminy Cricket's 'Deep Dive'

'Once Upon A Time's' Raphael Sbarge Teases Jiminy Cricket's 'Deep Dive'

The actor tells THR what his character's back-story reveals about Henry, addresses Emma Swan's mythic identity, and confirms someone else will die this season.

From the writers of Lost, ABC’s Once Upon a Time balances the land of fairy tales with the modern world of its Storybrooke, Maine. Each week, it unveils more about its fabled characters and the curse that keeps them trapped and without any memory of who they truly are.

“I guess this is similar to Lost in that they have a large ensemble and what they do is that they take a few characters and they kind of take them, effectively on a deep dive,” Raphael Sbarge, who plays Archie Hopper aka Jiminy Cricket, tells The Hollywood Reporter.

“That deep dive is able to really open up that whole world,” he says with the knowledge that Sunday’s episode will do the same for his character.

While the curious-natured Henry (Jared Gilmore), explores the mysterious sinkhole that has opened up in town for clues, Archie struggles to find some independence from his family’s business. In the process, we’ll learn more about Jiminy Cricket and his relationship to Regina (Lana Parrilla) aka The Evil Queen, as well as Henry.

“This story is very much about Jiminy Cricket,” he says. “But it’s also about, essentially, Henry’s journey, as well. It’s about what he’s struggling with and how he has to find his way with his stepmother and what complexities lay ahead for him, too.”

raphael-sbarge-jared-gilmore-jennifer-morrison-once-upon-a-time-abc-Sbarge says that information on future episodes is kept “pretty tight” on-set, so he’s sometimes not privy to information that form the basis for some of the audience’s burning questions – such as Emma Swan’s (Jennifer Morrison) fairy tale land persona.

“Essentially, I don’t [know],” Sbarge, 47, says. “It’s not clear yet. We know obviously that she was a little girl put into safety in the canoe or whatever that was made of wood. We know that she’s 28. She has come back and obviously she’s there to help fight the curse. That’s what we know.”

“But it’s going to be interesting to see how that opens up,” he continues. “What her fairy tale character is, I don’t know yet and I’m really excited to see what they’re going to do with that.”

VIDEO: 'Once Upon a Time's' Ginnifer Goodwin and Jennifer Morrison Explain Its Version of 'Ever After'

While he doesn’t know Emma’s double identity, he can confirm reports that an unexpected character will meet their end within the next several episodes.

“I can tell you that it’s true. Someone is going to die,” he says. “I guess that’s similar again to Lost where it does obviously add to the high stakes element of the show.”

Once Upon a Time airs Sundays at 8 p.m. on ABC.