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woensdag 14 december 2011

THE 'FRIENDS' FLOP MACHINE: HOW ONE SITCOM'S WRITERS ROOM SPAWNED A GENERATION OF DUDS

THE 'FRIENDS' FLOP MACHINE: HOW ONE SITCOM'S WRITERS ROOM SPAWNED A GENERATION OF DUDS

'Work It,' The 'Friends' Mafia, And TV's Misplaced Faith In Writers As Showrunners

Next month, a new sitcom called "Work It," about two out-of-work salesmen who dress up as women to get jobs, will make its debut on ABC. There's nothing new about the premise -- Tom Hanks and Peter Scolari covered the same ground on the early-80s sitcom "Bosom Buddies" -- and the tone isn't exactly novel either. The stars of the show, Ben Koldyke and Amaury Nolasco, are operating in the prevailing frat-boy mode perfected by Bradley Cooper and Seann William Scott.

In May, an 84-second trailer of "Work It" hit the Internet, instantly attracting more blogger rage than most shows accumulate over the course of several seasons. Gobsmacked by the very fact that "This got made! And is going to series!", The Futon Critic lambasted the show's "limp attempts at misogyny," "groan worthy madcappery" and "Mrs. Doubtfire hijinx."

The Best Week Ever blog took special umbrage at the network's attempt to position the series as "high concept": "Holy moly, ABC. If you're going to put a terrible show on the air, the least you could do is not try to make two bumbling fools dressed up like women for cheap laughs a 'high concept' in which the guys become moral compasses. It's not the iconic Louie poker scene, for heavens sake." The Dallas Trangender Activists Alliance launched a petition to keep "Work It" off the air, and a blogger for the Gay Voices section of The Huffington Post predicted that the series would face summary cancelation, "not because the content is offensive to queers, but because the show itself is just bad." (ABC did not respond to requests for comment.)

The setup is stale, the jokes are groan-inducing, there's not a major star anywhere near it, and yet one of America's major broadcast networks has spent millions to bring "Work It" to the air. How did this happen? The answer may lie not in what's on the screen, but in what's off it -- the writers who created "Work It," Andrew Reich and Ted Cohen, also happen to be veterans of a little show called "Friends," long the staple of NBC's once-dominant Thursday-night block of comedies. The last episode of "Friends" aired on May 6, 2004, and since then the members of its famous writers room have brought one new show after another to the market. And one after another, those new shows have fizzled, failing to recapture even a trace of the original comedy's hip, youthful, era-defining essence.

But still the members of the "Friends" Mafia return. "That show gave them a get-out-of-development-hell-free card," says one TV writer, who, like most of the people HuffPost spoke to for this article, declined to be identified for fear of retribution.

"Work It" follows two other Mafia-led failures from this season: CBS's "How To Be a Gentleman," from executive producer Adam Chase, and NBC's "Free Agents," from Alexa Junge. (Another, Fox's "I Hate My Teenage Daughter," headed by Sherry Bilsing, remains on the air.) And the list of disappointments from previous seasons is even more impressive. A partial sampling, ranked in descending order of episodes aired in the U.S.: "Melissa and Joey" (41), "Gary Unmarried" (37), "Joey" (36), "Jonas" (34), "Love Inc." (22), "Life on a Stick" (21), "The Class" (19), "The Weber Show" (17), "Kath and Kim" (17), "Worst Week" (16), "Hot Properties" (13), "Perfect Couples" (13), "Courting Alex" (12), "Romantically Challenged" (6), "Clone" (6), "The Men's Room" (4), "Come to Papa" (4), and "Three" (just a pilot). (The group has also scored some middling successes, including "Episodes," "My Boys," "Eight Simple Rules for Dating my Daughter," "What I Like About You" and "The United States of Tara.")

Tradition holds that Hollywood runs on the "What have you done for me lately?" principle, suggesting that members of the "Friends" Mafia would have lost their golden halos long ago. But some hits are so gigantic that their aura lasts for years -- seven and counting, in the case of "Friends." In its time, the "Friends" phenomenon rained gold on all who came near it. Over 10 seasons and 236 episodes, "Friends" held steady at or near the top of the ratings pile. No sitcom has occupied the year's No. 1 ratings slot since "Friends" last did so in 2001.

During the final season of "Friends," the show's six stars were each paid an astounding $1 million per episode, and by the end, NBC was paying Warner Bros. Studios, which produced "Friends," a record-holding $10 million per episode. Even in its afterlife, "Friends" continues to print money, earning Warner Bros. approximately $944 million to date in syndication rights, according to Variety magazine.

"When you have a big hit show, the writers on that show tend to be the big writers for the next 10 years, and you can ride that for a pretty long time," says Ken Levine, a veteran TV writer and producer of shows such as "M*A*S*H" and "Cheers," who now blogs about the TV industry.

In fairness to the members of the "Friends" Mafia, it should be noted that blame for the failure of any given show is notoriously difficult to assign. What with all of the meddling network executives, high-maintenance stars and competing creative visions, it's a wonder anyone ever manages to get the chemistry right. And the vast majority of writers working in the sitcom world have experienced far more failures than successes in the past decades, as network comedies have gone down like cannon fodder. It's also true that Schadenfreude, the official religion of the entertainment industry, accounts for at least some measure of the sniping that writers direct against the "Friends" diaspora. (Hollywood being a place where none dare risk offending, not one of the detractors wished to be quoted for attribution here.)

Still, after nearly a decade of misfires, there is some evidence that the "Friends" veterans offer living proof of the Peter Principle, which holds that "in a hierarchy every employee tends to rise to the level of his incompetence." Certainly, given Hollywood's reflexive impulse to reward the writers from successful shows with franchises of their own, it's worth asking whether the training that these young apprentices received as writers prepared them for careers as showrunners.

In its day, the "Friends" room was known for being young and unusually democratic. Eager to establish authenticity for their youthful characters, the creators of "Friends" -- Marta Kaufmann, David Crane and Kevin Bright -- brought in a crew of younger writers to staff the show. Most stayed with the series until the very end, in defiance of the revolving-door logic that dominates much of the business. And while many shows of the period were dominated by high-profile showrunners (Larry David of "Seinfeld," Phil Rosenthal of "Everybody Loves Raymond," Michael Patrick King of "Sex and the City"), Kauffmann, Crane and Bright were content to let their younger charges take the spotlight.

"Friends was about 20-somethings, so the 20-somethings who wrote for it got the credit," says one of their peers. As a result, an insular group of writers, hired at the very beginning of their careers, left the show a decade later armed with reputations as titans of comedy.

Lost in the chorus of hosannas for the victorious staff was the distinction between the showrunners and the rank-and-file writers who worked for them. First among writers, the showrunner is also the person responsible for every aspect of a television program -- overseeing the staff, supervising the final edits, ensuring that the jokes are funny and the characters and story lines are coherent. The individual writers are cogs in the showrunner's machine.

"There's a lot of talent by association," Peter Mehlman, a long-time TV writer and producer who served on the "Seinfeld" team, says of Hollywood's flawed method for assigning credit. "If you're on 'Friends,' even though you're spending 98 percent of your time in a room with eight other people shouting out jokes at each other at 4 a.m., somehow they assume you can run your own show."

Ultimately, Mehlman says, the writing work on a show like "Friends" is so collaborative that it is very hard to know who did what. "If you were credited as writing an episode of 'Friends,' it doesn't guarantee you wrote any of the plot lines."

The trajectory of Adam Chase offers a cautionary example of what can happen when success in the writing room is assumed to predict success in the showrunner's chair. After leaving "Friends" with an executive producer title in 2000, Chase received the same role on a new series, "The Weber Show," a vehicle for "Wings" star Steven Weber. Since then, he has created one flop -- "Clone" (6 episodes) -- and served as showrunner or heavy-hitter consulting producer for six more: "Life on a Stick" (12 episodes), "Love, Inc." (22 episodes), "Sons of Tucson" (12 episodes), "Better With You" (21 episodes), and the recently canceled "How to Be a Gentleman" (5 episodes).

Chase did not respond to a request for comment and CBS declined to comment.

Among writers who have been less lavishly rewarded -- and who, perhaps not coincidentally, have enjoyed fewer opportunities to fail -- there is a sense that some hidden hand must be at work, sending low-average batters like Chase to the plate again and again despite his past performance. For them, the explanation is simple: "Executives take comfort in what was successful, so if [a new project fails] they can just point and say, 'Well, they were on 'Friends.'"

Meanwhile, as the networks continue their search for the new "Friends," the shows that come closest to capturing the same youthful energy seem to be originating not among TV veterans, but among refugees from the world of feature films. Fox's "New Girl," one of this fall's biggest hits, for instance, was created by "No Strings Attached" screenwriter Liz Meriwether. And "Happy Endings," which comes closer than any series in years to replicating the "Friends" formula of young, urban, middle-of-the-road comedy, is the brainchild of David Caspe, a new-in-town former art student/feature writer whose only previous credit was the script for a soon-to-be-released Adam Sandler/Andy Samberg project titled "I Hate You, Dad."

Like many Americans in this age of digital upheaval, the "Friends" writers vaulted themselves onto a time-honored path to success and riches, only to find that the rules had been hopelessly scrambled. The long leash networks once gave to character-driven programs has been reduced to a choke chain. If you don't connect with an audience in a matter of weeks, you're through. Of the 27 shows to debut this past September, eight have already been canceled, and at least that many more hang in limbo. In the new media universe, where only the Superbowl and the Academy Awards command the kind of ratings "Friends" regularly drew, there just isn't enough money to finance a series while it searches for its rhythm.

Under the old model, "If you were on 'Friends' and you were well-liked there, you certainly would keep getting jobs," Mehlman says. "In those days, they used to hand out development deals like M&M's."

"The world has changed," adds veteran TV writer Ken Levine, speaking generally about trends in the industry. "There are fewer development deals these days, and studios are getting smart to the fact that just because a writer works on these shows -- and it's not just 'Friends' but any long-lasting hit, like 'Frasier' or 'Raymond' -- doesn't mean he's a good writer.

"Studios have been burned by making really bad deals and not doing their due diligence and finding out there are some writers on a staff who were really great and contribute a lot and others who were tagging along and didn't do that much."

In a world of loose budgets and easy deals, there would be no time and no cause to complain about the "Friends" Mafia. Their contemporaries would have scripts of their own to churn out, and deals of their own to negotiate. But the networks' struggle to shrink down for the 21st century seems to have only just begun, and there's every reason to believe that Schadenfreude will continue to haunt these once-promising writers until one of them -- any of them -- produces a hit worthy of the industry's investment in their careers.

Fixing the Factor: Four Glaring Issues With an Otherwise Decent Singing Competition

Fixing the Factor: Four Glaring Issues With an Otherwise Decent Singing Competition

In his recent post on The Daily Beast, Richard Rushfield accurately articulates the reasons that Fox's The X Factor trumps American Idol in nearly every possible way. While I wholeheartedly agree with his assessment, I'd argue that there are some glaringly obvious issues that ought to be corrected before the beginning of season 2:

Steve Jones: That 30 Rock arc with Jon Hamm taught us that being ridiculously handsome gets you a free pass to do nearly anything you want. I guess it's no surprise then that Steve Jones, with his dreamy brown eyes, cardboard personality, and profoundly bad timing, landed the role of host on X Factor. Among the things that X Factor really nailed was the casting of a group of judges that bicker and argue and hearken back to a time when American Idol was at least sort of fun to watch. How frustrating, then, to be stuck with a host so un-smooth and unsubtle that nearly every one of Simon and L.A.'s verbal spars gets interrupted. With a Pepsi sponsorship like the one X Factor has, is there really not enough money to steal Cat Deeley from So You Think You Can Dance? There must be something on Oxygen for our handsome friend Steve.

Nicole Scherzinger: I'll blame Nicole Scherzinger for Rachel Crow's elimination, and not just because I'm happy to blame her for anything at this point (after suffering through more than three months with this woman I'll put the entire financial crisis on her). Whether or not you believe that Rachel should have stayed on while Marcus went home last week, no one can dispute that Scherzinger shirked her responsibilities as a judge and proved that she wasn't up to the task. I know Paula pulled the same move during week 3, but she earned some leeway for having to face the inevitable loss of one of her own groups. No one could have begrudged Nicole for choosing to send Rachel home had she offered a reason for it; she simply chose to opt out, a choice that no legitimate judge with actual power gets to make, especially at so pivotal a time in the competition. If there was any question left that Scherzinger (who once critiqued a Drew performance with a set up of unintelligible mumbles followed by the admission that she was "just frustrated") was not on the same level as L.A. Reid or Simon Cowell, that question was certainly put to rest last week. It's almost as if the producers were telling the group of 30-plus, wide-eyed aspiring singers that they didn't have a shot the moment they assigned the former Pussycat Doll as their mentor. Rachel Crow is still young and forgiving enough to not blame Nicole for her premature elimination. For those of us with over a decade of experience judging the judges of reality TV, however, Nicole has soundly proven that she should be a one-term judge.

The Entire Groups Category: In one of the early live shows of the season, Paula gushed how the stunningly mediocre Lakoda Rayne was filling the gap left by the Dixie Chicks all those years ago. It was an awkward moment, as every member of the audience under the age of 23 whispered a collective "Who?" before sending their eighth Tweet of the night. Either America isn't ready for the resurgence of the boyband, the girl group (country-pop or other), or S Club 7 on steroids (I'm talking about InTENsity, and they really were) or we're simply not interested. But had Lakoda Rayne been able to actually harmonize, had The Stereo Hogzz been truly engaging performers, and had InTENsity managed to really coalesce around their most talented members, America's collective mind might have been swayed. Instead, they just felt like place holders, cruely sucking away spots from the surplus members of the boys and girls categories for whom L.A. and Simon simply had no space.

Melanie Amaro & The Case of the Persistently Quintessential American Idol Contestant: I know, I know: why Melanie? Her voice is so gorgeous and she can really belt out those ballads. And she might win! She's sympathetic, though not overwhelmingly so, yet she's completely controversy-free. During Thanksgiving week when the contestants were charged with singing for those for whom they were grateful, Melanie went ahead and chose God while Drew picked her BFF. As Rushfield pointed out, "Of all the X Factor contestants, only chanteuse Melanie Amaro, a 19-year-old mistress of the giant-note ballad, might have made an Idol contender." And frankly, she really, really should have been. Is there a single season of American Idol in which we haven't been treated to a quiet underdog with a golden voice belting out Whitney and Mariah? Not one that I can think of, which is exactly why they should have saved her for the oh-so-imminent eleventh season of Idol. No doubt that Amaro outsang Tiah Tolliver and Simone Battle on the first live show; there wasn't a set of ears in America willing to dispute that. But now we're nearing the finale, and Amaro is exactly the same artist we met at her audition. While we can depend on her to bang out a solid rendition of "Pick-any-Celine-Dion-song" before the finale, aren't you at least sort of wondering where Tiah would have been with a few more weeks of vocal coaching or what Simone might have done during dance week? Aren't you wondering just a little?

Since The X Factor has already been renewed for a second season, it only seems fair to give it a chance to right the aforementioned wrongs it committed throughout its freshman season. It is, after all, a much more exciting search for a superstar than American Idol has been in years. As this season draws to a close amid the coming holidays, let's join together in hope of a second season filled with many more Drews, Astros, and LA v. Simon battles... and far fewer Pussycat Dolls at the judges' table.

Endemol Agrees Debt Extension Until February 2012

Endemol Agrees Debt Extension Until February 2012

Endemol NV, the Amsterdam-based producer of television shows Deal Or No Deal and Big Brother, has agreed with its lenders to waive the terms of its debt pile, totaling more than EUR2 billion, until early February, a person familiar with the matter said Wednesday.

The extension allows the company breathing space to restructure the debt, after having breached its banking covenants earlier in the year, the person said.

Endemol is two-thirds owned by the company's lenders, which include Barclays PLC (BCS) unit Barclays Capital, Royal Bank of Scotland PLC (RBS) and a collection of hedge funds that bought debt in the company. The other third is owned by a consortium comprising Mediaset SpA (MS.MI), Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) and Cyrte Investments BV, a vehicle created by Endemol co-founder John De Mol.

Endemol has recently received bid offers from Mediaset, which is seeking to prevent its equity in the company being eroded by the debt restructure, and U.S. media giant Time Warner Inc. (TWX). Time Warner submitted an all-cash offer valuing Endemol's equity at approximately $1.35 billion earlier this week.

American Idol's Fantasia Barrino Welcomes a Baby Boy

American Idol's Fantasia Barrino Welcomes a Baby Boy

Fantasia Barrino has given birth to a baby boy, People reports.

The American Idol alum welcomed Dallas Xavier Barrino on Tuesday in North Carolina. Dallas weighed in at 7 pounds, 9 ounces.

"I feel so blessed that my son Dallas Xavier was born healthy, and is a wonderful new addition to our family," the 27-year-old singer tells the magazine. "I thank all my fans for their well wishes and continued support."

Fantasia Barrino: I'm Having a Boy

Barrino announced her pregnancy during a concert in August. She has yet to disclose who the baby's father is. When she appeared on The Wendy Williams Show in October, Williams asked Barrino if it was Antwaun Cook, a married man with whom she previously admitted to having an affair. Barrino replied: "I'm not gonna talk about that."

Barrino is already a mom to 10-year-old daughter Zion.

Steve Carell Returns to TV! Is Springfield Ready?

Steve Carell Returns to TV! Is Springfield Ready?

Steve Carell is back... in cartoon form.

The former Office star will lend his voice to The Simpsons, Entertainment Weekly reports. Carell will portray Dan Gillick, an accountant for mob boss Fat Tony, who must step up when Tony has to serve jury duty.

Check out the rest of today's news

"He's nervous, and then Fat Tony says that he's got to kill some people and then he's really nervous because he actually wants to do it," executive producer Al Jean reveals. There may be good in Dan, too, though: He also joins Homer's bowling team.

Carell's episode is slated to air next fall on Fox.

The Simpsons airs Sundays at 8/7c on Fox.

Does Miley Cyrus Have New Boobs?

Does Miley Cyrus Have New Boobs?

Miley Cyrus may have gotten an early holiday gift — or gifts.

The 19-year-old singer hit the CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute event Sunday flashing some major cleavage. Star magazine tracked down a handful of experts who say that based on the volume, it looks like she got breast implants.

Check out the rest of today's news

But Cyrus was quick to shoot down these rumors. "Thank you for the compliment but these babies are all mine," the singer tweeted Tuesday. "I wish they'd realize you don't have to be fake to be beautiful!"

What do you think? Are they real?

First Look: Debra Messing and Christian Borle on Smash

First Look: Debra Messing and Christian Borle on Smash

Debra Messing graces our TVs again in NBC's mid-season musical Smash, debuting February 6, and this time, she's got another willful sidekick! The Emmy winner stars as a Broadway songwriter alongside Legally Blonde Tony Award nominee Christian Borle, who plays her writing partner.

"The chemistry of that relationship is so essential," says exec producer Theresa Rebeck. And while Messing's character stays behind the scenes, expect her to belt out a song or two. Does she make the Great White grade? "She sounds pretty good!" says Rebeck. That's music to our ears.

Lindsay Lohan Won't Make Ellen Appearance

Lindsay Lohan Won't Make Ellen Appearance

the mag to release the issue early). Then her purse — containing $10,000 — was stolen. Now Lindsay Lohan won't be making a scheduled appearance on Ellen to promote the photos.

The 25-year-old actress, who is vacationing in Hawaii, missed her flight back to Los Angeles, where she was supposed to film Ellen DeGeneres' syndicated talk show, according to Us Weekly.

Lindsay Lohan checks in and is released from jail in under 5 hours

The actress initially was slated to tape the episode with DeGeneres on Wednesday so that it could air on Thursday to coincide with the magazine's release. DeGeneres had snagged the only interview Lohan agreed to do during the on-sale period of the issue.

No word yet on whether she'll reschedule or do press elsewhere. Requests for comment from Playboy were not immediately returned.



'William & Kate: Inside the Royal Marriage': From 'repliKates' to starting a family

'William & Kate: Inside the Royal Marriage': From 'repliKates' to starting a family

NBC aired a special Tuesday night (Dec. 13) titled "William & Kate: Inside the Royal Marriage," where Natalie Morales from "Today" took an in-depth look at the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's life so far since their April 29, 2011 wedding.

The special looked at every aspect of their lives so far, starting with the wedding. Amanda Ewing, of the Royal School of Needlework, gave an interview about the famous dress worn for the wedding - "It was amazing, it felt like we were in a spy novel," says Ewing, of the secrecy surrounding Kate's dress.

Natalie Morales then took us to Angelsey, the small island off the northwest coast of Wales where the royal couple resides. They apparently live in a farmhouse that is accessible only by a dirt road.

Fashion, of course, was a hot topic, as Kate's fashion choices have become ground-breaking styles all over the world. The special refers to the fervor of women clamoring for her outfits as looking for "repliKates." Heh.

James Sherwood, Royal fashion historian, also remarks somewhat snarkily, "What was most noticeable at the wedding was the way the Duchess of Cambridge looked instantly, unimpeachably royal. In fact, various members of the Royal family, mentioning no names (Princess Eugenia, Princess Beatrice) don't have that kind of swan-like deportment and the Duchess of Cambridge has it in spades."

The special ended by talking about the six weeks they'll have to spend apart when Prince William is stationed in the Falkland Islands, which is an archipelago located off the southern tip of South America. The show also touched on the pressure they are under to start a family.



'The Biggest Loser' finale: John Rhode, Antone Davis or Ramon Medeiros, who won the prize?

'The Biggest Loser' finale: John Rhode, Antone Davis or Ramon Medeiros, who won the prize?

A winner was crowned on "The Biggest Loser: Battle of the Ages" Tuesday night (Dec. 13) - was it Ramon Medeiros, Antone Davis or John Rhode?

The winner was John Rhode, who started the show at 445 lbs. His final weight was 225 lbs, for a loss of 220 lbs, which is 50.56% of his starting weight. Goodness.

The other two didn't have bad showings either, of course. Antone Davis came in second. He went from 447 lbs to 225 lbs, which is a loss of 202 lbs, or 45.19%. Ramon Medeiros was third, goign from 355 lbs to 201 lbs, or a loss of 43.38%.

In the at-home challenge for the eliminated contestants, the final three came down to Vinny Hickerson, Patrick Ferrari and Jennifer Rumple. Jennifer won the $100,000, having lost almost 44% of her starting weight of 330 lbs. Vinny came very close, needing only three more pounds to beat Jennifer, but she pulled it out.

Congratulations to all "The Biggest Loser" contestants, who all looked spectacular. And especially to Ramon and Jessica, who are still going strong.



Jon Stewart: 'All-American Muslim' Critics Upset Series Doesn't Stereotype Muslims?!

Jon Stewart: 'All-American Muslim' Critics Upset Series Doesn't Stereotype Muslims?!

Leave it to Jon Stewart and his "Daily Show" cohorts to ferret out new levels of nuttiness in the "All-American Muslims"/Lowe's/Florida Family Association brouhaha.

Conservative evangelical group FFA urged home improvement chain Lowe's to remove its advertising from the TLC reality series -- which follows a group of Muslim families living in Dearborn, Michigan -- because, the FFA says, the show depicts the families living like most other families in the country, and "is attempting to manipulate Americans into ignoring the threat of jihad."

Or, as Stewart put it on Tuesday's "Daily Show," the FFA seems to be upset that "All-American Muslim" challenges their "belief system" by not perpetuating the stereotypes of Muslims FFA holds.

Referring to other TLC programming and its lack of stereotypes, Stewart cheekily added, "I'm also troubled why no one on your show "Little People, Big World" whistles while they work, or makes candy for Willy Wonka."

Glee Exclusive: Find Out What Blaine Gave Kurt For Christmas!

Glee Exclusive: Find Out What Blaine Gave Kurt For Christmas!

Klaine ‘shippers everywhere are shouting “Bah, humbug!” over a missing scene in Tuesday’s Glee.

Among the publicity shots Fox released for this week’s Christmas-themed episode was an image of Kurt opening a present from Blaine in the halls of McKinley High.

But when the episode aired Tuesday night, the scene was missing from the telecast — leaving fans wondering both why it was cut and what the heck was in the box!

Well, TVLine has an answer to both burning questions.

First off, the sequence was trimmed because the episode was running long; it will, however, be included in the Season 3 DVD. (Another MIA sequence, Santana’s big “Santa Baby” performance, will be made available online as early as next week.) Second, and most importantly, sources confirm that had the present been opened in the episode, viewers would’ve seen Blaine give Kurt a… promise ring.

And not just any promise ring. A homemade ring made of gum wrappers. Blaine explains that financial issues prevented him from giving Kurt what he really wanted — an item from the Elizabeth Taylor collection — but something tells me Kurt was hardly disappointed by the no-frills offering. After all, “Extraordinary Merry Christmas” ultimately emphasized charity and selflessness over consumerism and flashy gifts.

As for how that ring will affect Klaine going forward — or whether we’ll see Kurt sporting it in the halls of McKinley — we’ll just have to wait to ring in the New Year.



Satellite TV news, serials widen Iranian-Arab gulf

Satellite TV news, serials widen Iranian-Arab gulf

Satellite television channels are widening the divide between Arabs and Iranians by airing alleged calls by Iran for revolt in Gulf states and what Tehran sees as Western-driven cultural propaganda aimed at toppling its Islamic theocracy.

Mistrust has long vexed relations between Shi'ite Muslim Iran and the U.S.-backed, conservative Sunni Muslim Arab monarchies on the other side of the Gulf.

But the atmosphere worsened dramatically this year as contagion from popular protests that overthrew three North African leaders reached Gulf Arab states with substantial but largely powerless Shi'ite communities.

Bahrain has accused Iran's Arabic-language news channel Al Alam of inciting Shi'ite-led protests that threatened the Sunni al-Khalifa ruling family earlier this year before they were suppressed with the help of Saudi and Emirati forces.

Likewise, Saudi Arabia has indirectly blamed Iran for unrest in its oil-producing Eastern Province, home to many Shi'ites.

"Around-the-clock broadcasts in Arabic by Iran's state-run radio and television stations incited our population to engage in acts of violence, sabotage, and insurrection," Bahraini King Hamad complained in November.

"Iran's propaganda fuelled the flames of sectarian strife." Tehran has denied egging on Shi'ite protesters abroad.

Iran's bete noires in the Arab world include Gulf-based television stations backed by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, which air popular soaps and romantic dramas deemed "immoral" by the Iranian clerical authorities.

The region has a long history of states beaming propaganda at each other's populations. But the current informal "TV wars" have exacerbated tensions between the Western-aligned Gulf states and Iran, kindled by issues like Tehran's shadowy nuclear power program and reliance of Arab dynasties on U.S. military aid.

"This (the "TV wars") is at the level of people's perceptions so it raises the level of anger and anxiety," said Theodore Karasik, director of research at the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis in Dubai.

AL ALAM CHANNEL

Launched in 2003, Al Alam has become popular among the Shi'ite majority in Bahrain and their brethren in Saudi Arabia for its hard-hitting coverage of unrest in the two countries. Al Alam often airs amateur footage of alleged police brutality.

Many Shi'ites say they watch Al Alam because mainstream Arab channels such as Al Arabiya and Al Jazeera pay little attention to the protests. Gulf Arab monarchies fear such publicity could boost the influence of regional Shi'ite giant Iran.

The two satellite channels, owned by conservative Saudi and Qatari investors, have devoted elaborate coverage to uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria, in contrast with demonstrations closer to home in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.

"Because there's no coverage from the international or free media, everybody is focusing on Al Alam and the (Lebanese Hezbollah's channel) Al-Manar," said a Shi'ite activist in the Eastern Province who did not want to be named.

"They're the only two that are covering the situation in Qatif," he said, referring to a town which has seen frequent protests by Shi'ites who complain of systematic discrimination, a charge denied by the Saudi leadership.

But many who watch Al Alam are aware that the satellite channel may be carrying exaggerated reports.

"If one person dies, they will say four people died," the activist told Reuters by telephone.

Al Alam has complained since late 2009 of being knocked off the air by the Saudi-based Arabsat network and Egypt's Nilesat, but this did not appear to have hurt its audience share.

According to an internal Bahraini government survey in May, cited by Western media, 90 percent of surveyed Shi'ites in the Gulf state obtained their news from Al Alam.

IRAN SEES ROMANTIC TELE-NOVELLAS AS THREAT

For Iran, steamy Hispanic tele-novellas and popular Korean and U.S. shows - all dubbed into Persian and aired by Murdoch-backed channels out of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates - pose the biggest threat, along with Western-style news from the BBC Persian and U.S.-funded Radio Farda (Tomorrow) services.

Iran's hardline Islamist rulers often accuse the United States and other Western countries of seeking to overthrow clerical rule through a "soft" or "velvet" revolution with the help of foreign satellite channels and Internet websites.

Launched in 2009, Farsi1 is popular among many Iranians, and its Murdoch-backed broadcaster this year launched Zemzemeh (Murmur), a channel targeting female viewers in Iran.

"Our content is non-political and is purely entertainment, so there is no reason for anyone to be concerned about our broadcasts." said Zaid Mohseni, the CEO of Broadcast Middle East, a Dubai-based joint venture of News Corp and Afghanistan's Moby group that broadcasts Farsi1.

"We basically fill a demand that's already there for good family entertainment programs and we don't see the need for anyone to censor or try to stop people from watching us."

Since the 1979 revolution that implanted strict Islamic sharia law in Iran, Iranian TV shows and films have had to heed religious values by avoiding scenes that show intimate relations between men and women or flout dress codes for women.

Such restrictions have pushed many Iranians to discreetly watch illegal satellite channels for uncensored entertainment and international news.

BROADCASTERS FACE JAMMING

Iran has piled pressure on the channels, arresting people accused of working for Farsi1 and BB Persian or having links to Radio Farda, and the Iranian police chief warned in November that companies advertising on satellite TV may face charges.

"As the level of rhetoric gets too (high), I assume there will be more moves towards blocking programs," Karasik said.

While Al Alam has been barred by some satellite operators, broadcasters say Iran has long used jamming stations to block the signals of Gulf-based and Western satellite stations.

Last week, five international broadcasters, including the BBC and the Voice of America, issued a statement calling on regulatory authorities to take action against "an increase in deliberate interference" with their signals this year in countries such as Iran.

They said satellite operators believed that jamming of programs in Persian originated in Iran.

TV Tonight 14th of December 2011: Europe, the USA, Canada and Australia.

TV Tonight 14th of December 2011: Europe, the USA, Canada and Australia.

The daily list in alphabetical order, of all the new episodes airing in Europe, the USA, Canada and Australia.

    American Horror Story S01E11: "Birth"
    Baseball Wives S01E03: "Season 1, Episode 3"
    Best Dish - The Chefs S01E33: "Episode 33"
    Bitchin’ Kitchen S02E07: "Girls' Night In"
    Black Gold S04E03: "Season 4, Episode 3"
    Brad Meltzer's Decoded S02E09: "Da Vinci"
    Chelsea Lately S05E188
    Chihayafuru S01E11: "Episode 11"
    Coach Trip S08E03: "Series 8, Day 3"
    Conan S02E19: "Christoph Waltz, Mike Zohn & Evan Michelson, Deer Tick"
    Criminal Minds S07E10: "The Bittersweet Science"
    CSI: Crime Scene Investigation S12E10: "Genetic Disorder"
    Days of our Lives S47E25: "Ep. #11735"
    Deal Or No Deal (UK) S07E93: "Episode 1773"
    Devil You Know S01E14: "The Ultimate Betrayal"
    Dickinson's Real Deal S08E18: "Series 8, Episode 18"
    Doctors S13E165: "Officers' Mess"
    Drinking Made Easy S02E11: "Newport, RI"
    Drop Down Menu S01E28: "Episode 28"
    Emmerdale S40E292: "December 14, 2011"
    Full Throttle Saloon S03E03: "Season 3, Episode 3"
    General Hospital (US) S49E179: "#12453"
    Halv Ã¥tta hos mig S07E59: "Västervik - Jenny"
    HGTV'd S02E01
    Hollyoaks S17E248: "December 14, 2011"
    Hot In Cleveland S03E03: "Funeral Crashers"
    Hot Like Us S01E07: "Episode 7"
    Hotel cæsar S28E124: "Season 28, Episode 124"
    I Hate My Teenage Daughter S01E03: "Teenage Cotillion"
    Inside the NFL S35E15: "15 11-12"
    Jamie's Christmas with Bells On S01E01: "Episode 1"
    Jeopardy! S28E63: "Show #6268"
    Jimmy Kimmel Live S09E176: "Kathy Griffin, Jamie Bell, Young Jeezy"
    Kiekens S01E03: "Season 1, Episode 3"
    Lady Hoggers S01E08: "The Last Stand"
    Late Show with David Letterman S18E176: "Robert Downey Jr., Rooney Mara"
    Live From Abbey Road S05E04: "The Kooks, Viva Brother"
    Maken-ki S01E11: "Episode 11"
    Mashiro-iro Symphony: The Color of Lovers S01E11: "Episode 11"
    Masterchef - The Professionals S04E24: "Series 4, Episode 24"
    Moonshiners S01E03: "The Law Comes Knockin'"
    NFL Turning Point S01E14: "Season 1, Episode 14"
    Nissene over skog og hei S01E14: "Season 1, Episode 14"
    One Life to Live S44E106: "Ep. #11085"
    Pointless S05E78: "Series 5, Episode 78"
    Prosto w serce S02E73: "Season 2, Episode 191"
    Psych S06E09: "Neil Simon's Lover's Retreat"
    Rastamouse S02E27: "Christmas Special"
    Sons of Guns S03E03: "Honey, I Blew Up the USS Kidd!"
    Strictly Come Dancing - It Takes Two S08E53: "Series 8, Episode 53"
    Survivor S23E14: "Then There Were Five"
    The Bold and the Beautiful S25E187: "Ep. #6216"
    The Café S01E05: "Fragile, Handle with Care"
    The Colbert Report S07E159: "Gen. Raymond Odierno"
    The Daily Show S16E159: "Melody Barnes"
    The Ellen DeGeneres Show S09E67: "Charlize Theron, Kevin Nealon, Christina Perri"
    The Exes S01E03: "Working Girl"
    The Impressions Show with Culshaw and Stephenson S03E06: "Series 3, Episode 6"
    The Jeremy Kyle Show S07E69: "December 14, 2011"
    The Joy of Teen Sex S02E06: "Series 2, Episode 6"
    The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson S07E213: "Kenneth Branagh, Patton Oswalt"
    The Real World S26E13: "San Diego: The @%!! They Should've Shown!"
    The Real World S26E12: "San Diego: An End to the Endless Summer"
    The Rosie Show S01E38: "Rosie's Holiday Dreams Come True with Justin Bieber"
    The Soup S08E49: "December 14, 2011"
    The Tonight Show with Jay Leno S19E209
    The View S15E71: "Rachael Ray, Guy Fieri"
    The X Factor (US) S01E23: "LIVE Performance Show #7"
    The Xtra Factor S08E34: "Best and Worst 2011 - 3"
    The Young and the Restless S39E184: "Ep. #9799"
    This is England '86 S02E02: "Series 2, Episode 2"
    Thuis S17E78: "Season 17, Episode 78"
    Toddlers and Tiaras S04E16: "Island of Dreams Pageant"
    Too Fat For 15: Fighting Back S02E18: "No Place Like Home"
    Top Chef S09E07: "Game On"
    Winx Club S05E22: "Day at the Museum"
    Work of Art: The Next Great Artist S02E09: "Exile on Main Street"

Brand new trailer for the Doctor Who Christmas special

Brand new trailer for the Doctor Who Christmas special

Want to take a closer look at The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe? Check out this new trailer from the BBC…

You’re here for one reason and one reason alone. The new trailer for the Doctor Who Christmas special, The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe. We shall, thus, shut up and let you watch it…




Power Rangers Costume Dispute Morphs Into Settlement

Power Rangers Costume Dispute Morphs Into Settlement

The company that owns the rights to the Power Rangers television series, brand and related products has prevailed over a website that sold colorful skin-tight battle suits and cheap helmets. SCG Power Rangers LLC has settled a lawsuit with Underdog Endeavors, operators of MyPartyShirt.com, and as a result, the site has agreed disgorge profits from the sale of Power Rangers costumes.

SCG filed the lawsuit a few weeks before Halloween, claiming the sale of shirts in various Power Rangers colors infringed its copyrights and trademarks.

The move came as the fashion industry has expressed interest in expanding copyright protection to clothing design. Copyright law doesn't permit "useful articles" like clothing to enjoy protection, but it does allow the protection of "any pictorial, graphic, or sculptural authorship that can be identified separately from the utilitarian aspects of an object."

In its lawsuit, SCG claimed copyright authority in the "artwork and design" of the Power Rangers uniforms. In addition, the company claimed violations of the Lanham Act by alleging the defendant had created confusion in the marketplace that the costumes were officially endorsed merchandise.

Legal observers are unsure about the viability of protecting Halloween costumes.

In 2002, one manufacturer of children's animal costumes sued a competitor for infringement. The lawsuit was dismissed by a skeptical district court judge, and then revived three years later by the 2nd Circuit, which remanded the case for further proceedings to determine whether specific elements like sculpted animal “heads” were conceptually separable from the utilitarian aspects of the clothing.

In another case, Lucasfilm sued the British designer who sculpted the original Stormtrooper helmets in the first Star Wars film and who was selling replica versions. George Lucas got a $20 million default judgement because the defendant didn't show up, but Lucas had to go to British courts to enforce the decision. There, the British legal system deemed the helmets  to have a "utilitarian," rather than an artistic purpose.

The mystery over whether costumes enjoy strong or soft IP protection will have to be cloaked until the next lawsuit comes along.

Rachel Valadez, the attorney for the plaintiffs, says her client has very favorable agreement with the defendant and the suit was dismissed this morning. As a result of the settlement, Mypartyshirt has agreed to disgorge all profits to SCG  earned in connection with the alleged infringing items and has reimbursed SCG's attorneys fees in full.



'Ruby' Canceled? Future of Style Series In Jeopardy

'Ruby' Canceled? Future of Style Series In Jeopardy

Style has "no plans" to renew 'Ruby,' the hit reality show about Ruby Gettinger's weight-loss journey. According to EW, the network isn't closing the door completely on the series, but there are no immediate plans for a fifth season.

"We thank Ruby for sharing her inspirational journey with the Style viewers, and we look forward to her serving as a 'Fight with Style' Ambassador in the fight against obesity," the network said in a statement.

The fourth season of 'Ruby' debuted to roughly half a million viewers in March 2011. The finale featured Ruby heading to New York to visit with Rosie O'Donnell.

The show has been a part of Style's original programming line-up since 2008.

'Glee': Michael Jackson Tribute Episode Details Revealed

'Glee': Michael Jackson Tribute Episode Details Revealed

Everybody is getting a piece of Michael Jackson when 'Glee' pays tribute to the late King of Pop on the Jan. 24 episode.

According to TV Guide Magazine, the cast will perform 12 songs from Jackson's extensive music catalogue, extending back to his time with the Jackson 5.

What's making New Directions so into MJ? Mr. Schuester, of course! After the former Troubletones express some regret about not being included in the Jackson family medley New Directions did at Sectionals, reliable Mr. Schue declares it Michael Jackson week.

"It was fun, man," Harry Shum Jr. told AOL TV about the Jackson family performance at Sectionals. "It was so much fun. It's always scary to do Michael, but I think we kind of interpreted it in our own way."

The Jan. 24 episode is still in its early phases of production, but TV Guide Magazine reports even the Warblers and Sebastian will partake in the Jackson tribute. Look for Blaine to take on 'Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'' and Finn and Rachel to do a duet of 'I Just Can't Stop Loving You.'

Christopher Meloni Officially Joins 'True Blood'

Christopher Meloni Officially Joins 'True Blood'

In the criminal justice system, sexually-based vampire attacks are considered especially heinous. (DOINK DOINK)

Yes, that means Christopher Meloni has officially joined HBO's 'True Blood' as a series regular. TVLine reports Meloni will play a very powerful vampire. This vampire just so happens to hold the fate of Bill and Eric in his very undead hands.

News of Meloni's involvement in 'True Blood' first broke in November.

After spending 12 years as Detective Stabler on 'Law & Order: SVU,' Meloni abruptly quit the show prior to Season 13. Danny Pino and Kelli Giddish were brought on as new 'SVU' detectives.

This is Meloni's first TV gig since leaving 'SVU' and it's a homecoming of sorts of Meloni. He appeared on HBO's acclaimed prison drama 'Oz' for several seasons.



Ratings: Fear Factor Return Grosses Big Numbers, Penultimate Terra Nova Matches Low

Ratings: Fear Factor Return Grosses Big Numbers, Penultimate Terra Nova Matches Low

Fear Factor, which in its last incarnation (circa winter 2005/06) was pulled from NBC’s schedule due to sagging ratings and to make room for the Friends spin-off Joey, came back with a bang this Monday night.

The stunts-and-gross-outs spectacular averaged 8.6 million total viewers over its two-hour run, while scoring a 3.4 demo rating. That represents gains of 43 and 111 percent over The Sing-Off‘s most recent performance in the time slot, and scored NBC an easy second-place status in both primetime hours.

NBC notes that Fear Factor delivered the network’s best non-Olympics 8 o’clock demo numbers since February 2008 (Deal or No Deal) and its best 9 o’clock rating since the Sept. 2010 debut of The Event.

Elsewhere on the night:

8 pm | A fresh bit of Broke Girls that opened the hour drew 12.46 mil and a 4.1, down 11 percent in the demo (to a series low) from its last 8:30 outing. Placing third behind Fear Factor, the penultimate freshman episode of Terra Nova (7 mil/2.1) dipped a tenth in the demo to match its series low. ABC’s I Want a Dog for Christmas, Charlie Brown (5.3 mil/1.3) was a distant fourth.

9 pm | A truly dopey installment of Two and a Half Men (14.7 mil/4.6) nonetheless led the night in audience and in the demo, dipping 10 percent in the latter; Mike & Molly (12.83 mil/3.9) too was down 7 percent in the demo. ABC’s You Deserve It slipped another 10 percent in the demo to place a distant fourth, trailing even a House repeat.

10 pm | A fresh Five-0 dominated with 11 million total viewers and a 2.8 rating, down just a bit week-to-week. NBC’s Rock Center (4.04 mil/1.1) just barely edged out a Castle repeat for second-place honors.



Castle Is Heading for a Wedding – Will It Get Rick and Kate Ready for Romance?

Castle Is Heading for a Wedding – Will It Get Rick and Kate Ready for Romance?

When ABC’s Castle returns with fresh episodes on Monday, Jan. 9, the first episode back will feature the wedding of Detective Kevin Ryan to the lovely Jenny Duffy-O’Malley. But will the undeniable romance of the big day spill over into the long-simmering but oft-stifled Castle/Beckett relationship, and maybe light a fire under those two?

For starters, Stana Katic tells us this much: Romance was in abundant supply during the filming of the episode, seeing as the fictional nuptials starred real-life marrieds Seamus and Juliana Dever, who play Kevin and Jenny.

“It was such a beautiful thing,” Beckett’s portrayer tells of shooting the ceremony. “I loved being able to see Juliana walk in with her wedding gown, because it was the kind of gown that she wanted when they were young actors getting married but they didn’t have the finances they needed to make the wedding as large as maybe it would have been in their dreams. This was a chance to kind of do a ‘second take,’ and it was fantastic to be a part of that real-life experience as well as that ‘movie-life’ experience.”

But returning to the million-dollar question — might the exchange of vows get Rick and Kate in the mood to finally take a leap of their own, and pursue a romance? – Katic echoes that which Seamus Dever recently told TV Guide Magazine. (After all, “Caskett” did just spend an entire episode handcuffed to each other, for better or for worse; anything else is merely legal documentation.)

“There’s a bit of foreshadowing for the future, yes,” she told us with a playful chuckle.



Glee Preview: 5 Questions For First-Time Director Matthew Morrison

Glee Preview: 5 Questions For First-Time Director Matthew Morrison

Mr. Schue is for the first time calling the shots off screen as Matthew Morrison steps behind the cameras to helm tonight’s holiday-themed episode of Glee (8/7c on Fox). How’d the first-time director do? “We just had a screening of it for the whole cast and crew yesterday at work and it got such a great response,” Morrison tells TVLine. “I’m very proud of it.” The ambitious undertaking was not without its challenges though. Read on to find out what “scared” Morrison most about making his directorial debut, and why he’s confident his co-stars will not be following his lead anytime soon.

Q: How did the cast adjust to seeing you as their boss as opposed to just a co-star?
A: That was the thing I was most worried about. I was scared. I didn’t know how they’d react. But there was such a good vibe on the set. Everybody had my back. Every cast member was so open to what I had to say.

Q: What’s the gist of the episode?
A: Sue is working for this homeless shelter for the holidays and she’s trying to get the glee club to come, but they already booked this PBS Christmas special. So Sue goes crazy a little bit, as Sue does. The episode is all about the kids getting it together and figuring out what the holiday spirit means.

Q: Any personal highlights?
A: Two of the acts are entirely in black-and-white. It’s an [homage] to the Judy Garland Christmas specials, and it’s very heightened and there’s a laugh track. And the black-and-white is beautiful.

Q: Why did you decide to direct?
A: I’ve been doing this role for three now and, while there are new challenges every week, it [has become] pretty manageable. This was completely outside of the box for me, and I found it so rewarding.

Q: Did any of your co-stars get bit by the directing bug while watching you in action?
A: No. Just the opposite. [Laughs] Everyone was like, “Oh, my God — you are working hard.”

Steven Weber Gets Hot in Cleveland, Baranski Back on Big Bang and More!

Steven Weber Gets Hot in Cleveland, Baranski Back on Big Bang and More!

Steven Weber has booked a cool gig on Hot in Cleveland.

TVLine has learned exclusively that the veteran actor has landed a guest spot in an upcoming episode of the TV Land comedy, playing the man who left Jane Leeves’ Joy standing alone at the altar.

Ready for more of today’s TV dish? Well…

• Big Bang Theory executive producer Bill Prady revealed via Twitter that Good Wife‘s Christine Baranski will reprise her role as Leonard’s mother on the CBS sitcom’s upcoming 100th episode. “Christine’s cameo will be shot in New York, uploaded and appear as a Skype conversation on Leonard’s laptop for the show [shooting] tonight,” Prady wrote.

• Sunday’s killer Boardwalk Empire finale brought in 3 million viewers — a season high. A sneak preview of Luck followed with 1.1 million viewers.

• Sounds like Pretty Little Liars‘ winter run (premiering Monday, Jan. 2) is going to be a doozy. According to EW.com, the ABC Family drama will finally reveal the identity of elusive tormentor “A” in the March 19 season finale.

• Netflix is close to giving a series order to Hemlock Grove, a thriller exec-produced and directed by big screen horror master Eli Roth, per Deadline.

• Seth Rogen has been named as host of the 2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards, airing Sunday, Feb. 25 on IFC.




First New 30 Rock Promo Raises the Question: What Is Liz Lemon's Secret?

First New 30 Rock Promo Raises the Question: What Is Liz Lemon's Secret?

30 Rock‘s sixth season is right around the corner (premiering Thursday, Jan. 12 at 8/7c), and with it comes everyone’s fave, Liz Lemon, who is — according to this just-released promo — harboring a big ol’ (or is it baby-sized?) secret.

A li’l Lemon is of course our guess, but also the most obvious one given the fact that the delay of the NBC comedy’s coming season was due to the real-life pregnancy of Tina Fey, plus Liz has been longing to have kids of her own over the past few seasons. And this new footage actually seems to support our theory — give or take an appearance by Kelsey Grammer. One final clue: The season premiere is titled, “Hey, Baby, What’s Wrong?”

Whatever it is, “The secret of Liz Lemon will be revealed,” Mister Voiceover Man promises in the promo. So, for now all we can do is sit tight and play the guessing game.



Revenge Finds Its Grayson Patriarch in 24 Alum William Devane

Revenge Finds Its Grayson Patriarch in 24 Alum William Devane

Knots Landing and 24 alum William Devane is about to get some Revenge.

Devane has been cast in two episodes of ABC’s new hit drama as Edward Grayson, the patriarch of the Grayson clan, who is summoned to the Hamptons by his daughter-in-law, Victoria, EW.com reports.

Even though Edward is the father of her estranged hubby Conrad, Victoria will turn to him for help in her brewing divorce battle. Sounds like father and son aren’t on the best terms.

Devane’s guest arc will air in February. Revenge returns with original episodes Jan. 4.




U.S. regulators act to quiet blaring TV commercials

U.S. regulators act to quiet blaring TV commercials

U.S. communications regulators cracked down on excessively loud TV commercials on Tuesday, implementing a bill passed last year to quiet commercials to the same volume as the programs they accompany.

The Federal Communications Commission has been fielding viewer complaints about loud commercials almost as long as commercial television has existed, the agency said.

The commission voted unanimously to require TV stations and cable and satellite operators to ensure that the average volume of a commercial does not exceed the average volume of the programming around it.

Commercials for OxiClean stain remover, ShamWow towels and HeadOn pain reliever "will never be the same," FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell said at the agency's open meeting.

Commissioner Mignon Clyburn added that the agency's latest rulemaking will put an end to the "frightening decibel levels that resulted in considerable alarm, anger and spilt popcorn."

The order adopted on Tuesday implements the CALM Act, authored by Representative Anna Eshoo and signed into law last December.

The California Democrat told Reuters her idea for the bill started after "being subjected to the blast of the high volume of advertisements" while watching a football game with family.

After discovering that loud commercials had been the top complaint to the FCC by consumers for decades, Eshoo said she drew up the bill, never anticipating it would garner such an overwhelming response from consumers and fellow lawmakers.

"While this certainly doesn't resolve the huge challenges that are facing the country ... we may get some peace and quiet in households across the country," she said, adding that the FCC's action came on her birthday.

The new FCC rules enacting the CALM Act will go into effect in a year, giving TV providers have until December 13, 2012, to comply.

Using certain equipment and getting certifications from distributors for ads imbedded into programming will satisfy compliance requirements.

Larger operators will have to perform annual spot-checks of commercials for two years, but smaller operators will only have to monitor commercials if a pattern of complaints specific to their station emerges.

It marks the first time the FCC has attempted to regulate the loudness of commercials. The limitations of analog television made it too difficult previously, but the emergence of digital TV technology now makes it feasible.


Chelsea Clinton debuts on NBC's "Rock Center"

Chelsea Clinton debuts on NBC's "Rock Center"

Chelsea Clinton filed her first report with NBC's 'Rock Center' on Monday, returning to her home state of Arkansas to profile Annette Dove, a woman who runs a program for disadvantaged children.

Clinton's profile is part of NBC News' "Making a Difference" series and Brian Williams, host of "Rock Center" and anchor of the "NBC Nightly News," introduced Clinton by saying she "wants to tell stories."

Clinton joined Dove in activities like cleaning trash at the side of the road and cooking. The latter provided a rare moment of humor in what was otherwise a serious but uplifting story as Clinton admitted that she doesn't cook much (but she did make Thanksgiving).

After Clinton's report, she sat down with Williams to discuss Dove's program and her own motivations for appearing on the show.

While both NBC and Clinton have faced some criticism because the hire was seen as catering to political royalty, Clinton reiterated that she has made a conscious decision to accept the public nature of her life and make something of it.

As for future reports, she wants to tell "stories of people who see a gap and step into it."



"American Horror Story" house goes on the market

"American Horror Story" house goes on the market

For sale: Historical brick home in Los Angeles. Includes a grand ballroom, Tiffany light fixtures, six bedrooms, five baths -- and maybe a body or three in the basement.

The house where FX filmed its pilot for the creepy hit "American Horror Story" has been placed on the market, and for a cool-as-a-corpse $4.5 million it could be yours.

The three-story, 10,440-square-foot home, also known as the Alfred F. Rosenheim Mansion, boasts "a museum-quality set of Tiffany glass doors," six vintage tile fireplaces, and and a formal dining room with antique gold and silver-leaf hand-painted ceilings, among other amenities, according to its listing.

The house is a "one-of-a-kind residence" that "evokes the quality and grandeur of a bygone era," the listing adds.

We'll bet ...

Not to worry, though; the sale of the home -- is Marilyn Manson in the market for new digs? -- won't affect the filming of the Ryan Murphy/Brad Falchuk series.

Connie Britton -- who plays Vivien Harmon on the series -- told the Washington Post in October that, while the show's pilot was filmed at the house, the series itself is filmed within replicas of the structure.

"When we're on the set, it feels like we're in that house, to the point where on the set you know if you run up the stairs to the second floor, it kind of ends. It sort of just ends into nothingness, like you could actually eventually walk off of a platform," Britton explained to the paper.

"The League" picked up for fourth season

"The League" picked up for fourth season

FX has ordered a fourth season of the fantasy football comedy "The League," now earning series-high ratings in its third season, the network announced Tuesday.

The show, produced by FX Productions, includes Mark Duplass, Stephen Rannazzisi, Nick Kroll, Paul Scheer, Katie Aselton and Jon Lajoie in its ensemble cast.

The series is currently averaging 1.7 million total viewers and 1.5 million in the 18-49 demographic, up 25 percent and 32 percent from season two. Season three has featured guest stars including Seth Rogen, Jeff Goldblum, Sarah Silverman, Ray Liotta, Will Forte and Eliza Dushku.

"'The League' continues to be one of our most successful comedy series both creatively and from a ratings standpoint," said Nick Grad, said FX executive vice president of original programming.

The series was created by the husband-and-wife team of Jeff Schaffer ("Curb Your Enthusiasm," "Seinfeld") and Jackie Marcus Schaffer ("Disturbia," "EuroTrip") who also serve as executive producers and directors.



"Boardwalk Empire" finale draws season high ratings

"Boardwalk Empire" finale draws season high ratings

"Boardwalk Empire" went out with a bang Sunday night -- and not just with the shocking demise of Jimmy Darmody.

The season two finale of HBO's Steve Buscemi-led, Prohibition-era drama posted a season high for the series, drawing 3 million viewers with its initial airing at 9 p.m. and picking up an additional 834,000 viewers with its 11 p.m. encore for a total of 3.8 million.

That marked a season high for the series, which averaged 2.7 million viewers this season for its 9 p.m. airings, and premiered in September with 2.9 million viewers (again, excluding encores).

The finale dipped slightly from last season's, which drew 3.3 million viewers for its 9 p.m. airing.

Sunday's "Boardwalk Empire" finale was followed at 10 by a preview of HBO's upcoming horse-racing drama "Luck," which averaged 1.1 million viewers. The series, which stars Dustin Hoffman and Nick Nolte, will receive its proper premiere January 29.