“Heroes” hints

That old saying about hindsight being 20/20 was never more accurate on Monday night when it was revealed that the cheerleader’s real daddy is none other than Nathan Petrelli (Adrian Pasdar).
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
(Milo Ventimiglia, Adrian Pasdar)

Way back in July, I was chatting with Milo Ventimiglia about the relationship between his character and cheerleader Claire (Hayden Panettiere), who seemed quite smitten by Peter Petrelli.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
(Hayden Panettiere, Milo Ventimiglia)

Could it be that Claire and Peter hook up later?

“No, I think that would be illegal in several states,” Milo said, referring I thought to the age difference between the teen and the twentysomething Peter.

But maybe when she turns 18?

“I think he’s really more of a big brother or an uncle to her,” Milo said, spilling pearls before swine.

Oh, I get it now. Peter’s her uncle.

Comments (1)

“Survivor”: What works, what doesn’t

Host Jeff Probst knows that he thinks has worked, and what hasn’t worked, on the hit series “Survivor.”

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
(Host Jeff Probst)

“One comes to mind, right away, is the outcasts in Pearl Islands,” Probst says of the ideas that didn’t work for him. “That’s one where we stepped too far. I argued until I had no voice left.”

In the Pearl Islands, “Survivors” who were voted out were allowed to come back into the game. That meant that people who could have stayed on longer ended up getting voted out before those who were brought back into the game.

Probst also thinks that the series bailed out too soon on the racially segregated tribes in the last cycle set in the Cook Islands.

“I wish we had a little more guts to stick with it, but I don’t run a network, and I don’t run `Survivor’ so don’t know what (else was in play),” Probst says.

So what do you think worked, or didn’t work, in other “Survivor” seasons? And more importantly, check out the season premiere of “Survivor” at 8 p.m. Thursday and let us know.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
(19 new castaways, (alphabetical) Alex Angarita, Kenward “Boo” Bernis, Yau-Man Chan, Earl Cole, Jessica Deben, Erica Durousseau, Cassandra Franklin, Liliana Gomez, Andria “Dre” Herd, Stacy Kimball, Sylvia Kwan, Mookie Lee, Lisette “Lisi” Linares, James Reid, Edgardo Rivera, Anthony Robinson, Gary Stritesky and Michelle Yi, are set to compete when “Survivor: Fiji” premieres at 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 8 on CBS.)
Photo: Bill Inoshita/CBS

Comments off

Next Top Model?

Here kitty, kitty. Time to check out the latest faces on the catwalk we call “America’s Next Top Model.”

In this eighth cycle, we’ll check out the 13 fierce finalists fighting for the right to look gorgeous and hang around other beautiful people.

I was thinking about what Miss J told me last month, about how models aren’t supposed to be the most beautiful woman in the room, but the most interesting one.

Haven’t really seen that yet on the show, but maybe this season.

This season, “Model” promises “tougher challenges and photo shoots ranging from the very glamorous to high-tech to controversial,” while the women live under one roof in a posh Los Angeles mansion.

The two-hour premiere remiere of “America’s Next Top Model” airs at 8 p.m. Wednesday, February 28 on the CW. And here are your finalists:
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Brittany

Occupation: Bartender

Age: 21

Hometown: Savannah, Georgia

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Cassandra

Occupation: College Student

Age: 24

Hometown: Seattle, Washington

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Diana

Occupation: College Student

Age: 21

Hometown: Garfield, New Jersey

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Dionne

Occupation: College Student

Age: 20

Hometown: Montgomery, Alabama

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Felicia

Occupation: Sales Associate

Age: 19

Hometown: Houston, Texas

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Jael

Occupation: Band Manager

Age: 22

Hometown: Detroit, Michigan

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Jaslene

Occupation: Online College Admissions Advisor

Age: 20

Hometown: Chicago, Illinois

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Kathleen

Occupation: Hairstylist

Age: 20

Hometown: Brooklyn, New York

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Natasha

Occupation: College Student

Age: 21

Hometown: Dallas, Texas

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Renee

Occupation: Stay-At-Home-Mom

Age: 20

Hometown: Maui, Hawaii

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Samantha

Occupation: Sales Associate

Age: 19

Hometown: Pinson, Alabama

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Sarah

Occupation: Photographer

Age: 20

Hometown: Lake Zurich, Illinois

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Name: Whitney

Occupation: College Student

Age: 21

Hometown: West Palm Beach, Florida

The winner of The CW’s “America’s Next Top Model” will be managed by Elite Model Management. She also receives a $100,000 contract with cosmetics giant CoverGirl. Finally, the winner will appear on the cover and six-page fashion spread in Seventeen magazine.

Comments (13)

And now for a different Jimmy Kimmel

Now that his pal, comic Sarah Silverman had her own show on “Comedy Central,” will we be seeing Jimmy Kimmel actually acting?

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
(Sarah Silverman with Jimmy Kimmel)

Jimmy makes one cameo appearance that if you blink you will miss it,” Sarah says. “He plays Joan the Dispatcher in a party scene for Jay’s birthday.”

Jay Johnston plays a policeman who goes out with Sarah’s sister Laura, who is played by Sarah’s real-life sister Laura. The names, apparently, remain the same so the actors can concentrate on more important stuff in this irreverent comedy.

“It’s (Jay’s) birthday party, and Jimmy says to Brian (Posehn) by the punch bowl – as the camera pans, you just see him and he’s dressed as a woman, but it’s very not trannyish. It’s very like a
short woman’s haircut, very little makeup,” Sarah says. “And he says, `They call me Joan the Dispatcher because there’s
another Joan in accounting.’ “

Brian takes a beat, then he improvised, “You’re tall.”

“That’s it,” Sarah says. “But it’s very sweet.”

Or at least as sweet as it gets in the comedy revolving around the self-centered Sarah and her life sponging off her sister and hanging with her friends. “The Sarah Silverman Program” premieres at 10:30 p.m. Thursday on Comedy Central.

Comments (1)

Romijn Mixes Biz with Pleasure

Oh, why oh why weren’t we paying better attention when Rebecca Romijn told us the identity of her character on “Ugly Betty”?

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

When we asked during a set visit what the name of her character was, she said “Alexis” with a twinkle in her eye. The blue blinded us to the fact that she was tipping us off about the fact that her character is Alex, the sex-changed, not really deceased brother of Daniel.

But no matter. We move on.

Rebecca’s fiance Jerry O’Connell, who stars in the NBC series “Crossing Jordan,” makes a guest appearance on “Ugly Betty.” Jerry plays Joel, a man Alexis meets while slumming in a sports bar with Wilhelmina (Vanessa Williams).
Sounds like fun.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

( Rebecca Romijn, left, and Jerry O’Connell kiss as they leave following the screening of the film “X-Men: The Last Stand,” at Cannes. Photo: AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

Comments (2)

“Everwood” star gets new series

Emily VanCamp, who charmed viewers as Amy Abbott on “Everwood,” joins the cast of ABC’s “Brothers & Sisters” later this season.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Emily plays Rebecca Harper, the daughter of the late William Walker (Tom Skerritt) and his mistress Holly Harper (Patricia Wettig). Rebecca has been a carefully guarded secret for the last two decades, but should pop into the spotlight shortly.

The series, starring Calista Flockhart, Rachel Griffiths and Sally Field, is about a wealthy California family rocked by the secrets kept by their late father/husband.

Greg Berlanti (“Dawson’s Creek,” “Everwood”) was brought on board after the pilot was made and his influence has helped put this series on the right track.

Comments off

Dancin’ with the (“Scrubs”) stars

How much fun was that “Scrubs” musical?

The best since “Buffy, the Vampire Slayer” and probably a little more accessible to the “Scrubs” fans.

“The musical is all original music. It’s written — a lot of the songs are written by the gentleman that wrote in “Avenue Q,” big Broadway musical,” says Bill Lawrence, creator of “Scrubs,” when he talked to critics the day before the show aired last week. “The
writing staff, Debra Fordham, who wrote the show, and the writing staff wrote the lyrics.”

While Bill praises the singing talents of most of the actors, he took a little jab at Sarah Chalke’s pipes.

“You may ask Zach to sing today because he’s got a
good voice,” Bill says. “You may not ask Sarah to sing because I’m
very close to her.”

Sarah says her first indication that perhaps her love of music was greater than her talents was when she was 10 and singing Christmas Carols with her school choir at the mall.

“The teacher said, `Chalke girl, if you could just
mouth the words for this performance, that would be
great,’ ” Sarah says. “So I actually did mouth the words. I’m like (mouthing) `Here comes Santa Claus’ for an hour. It was so sad.”

Parts of the episode started popping up on the Internet well before the show aired last Thursday, which brought about a strange encounter for Zach Braff.

“You know you’ve made it when Perez Hilton almost talks to you,” Zach says. “His quote apparently — I didn’t read it. I just heard it. His quote was `This is so gay I love it.’ ”

Th episode took a week of rehearsal, six or seven days of shooting, and a full 50-piece orchestra recorded at Capitol Records. All of the actors had voice lessons and were in the studio with a guy who
spends most of his time teaching Broadway people how to
sing.

Zach says that he actually went to theater camp at Stagedoor Manor in Loch Sheldrake, New York.

“If you’re a kid and you couldn’t care less about Little League and you want to sing and dance, I highly recommend it,” Zach says. “As my father used to say slightly disappointed, I don’t
think you need to bring a mitt.”

Bill says the “Scrubs” writing staff is mostly kind of frat-boyish
former “jock-y” guys.

“One of the reasons that you feel safe in a comedy room is when the door closes, we could all admit the fact that we love musical theater,” Bill says. “Even though I spent most of my time in high school, you know, and someone would be like, “Did you see that
musical ‘Annie’?” And you would be like, “Lame.” And
then you would walk away, (Bill singing) “It’s a hard knock life.’ ”

Zach say that when he first met Bill, he was “pretty “jock-y” and “alpha-male-y” and the two bonded over Bill knowing the lyrics to “Les Miserables” in French.

Each one of the songs was an homage to a specific song to a specific musical that one of the writers loved, including of course the big Act I closer from “Les Miserables.”

“That sort of roughly happens in Act I of our show that everyone
has their own melody,” Zach says. “And at the end, they all sort of come together.”

Bill admits it’s still uncomfortable for him to talk about loving musicals.

“You’re out. You’re out of the musical closet,” Zach says.

Bill says the reason why they finally did the musical episode this season was because he was convinced this would be the last season of “Scrubs.”

“The neat thing is, yes, we did it because going in, I said this might be the last year. That will be our special one this year, but now, very oddly, you know, “Scrubs” is actually doing better
than it’s done in recent years,” Bill says of the sixth season surge. “And the decision seems to have kind of come back into our lap as to whether or not we are going to go forward. I think we’ll probably
do another big special one next year, and I would imagine
that next year will be the last year of the show.”

Comments off

How Nice is Zach Braff?

“Scrubs” creator Bill Lawrence jokes that it slightly bothers him that when he met Zach Braff, he was just a waiter.

“Now, if I meet any attractive woman under the age of 40, she’s like, “Oh, my gosh. What’s Zach Braff like?” Slightly wealthier than
the waiter I met seven years ago. That’s what he’s like,” Bill says. “The nicest thing about Zach is I’ve actually had some
empathy for the actors and actresses that go through the
star-making system, and Zach has managed to not be a diva
and not be a guy that’s any different than the humble
dude that I met when I first cast him.”

To illustrate his point, Bill decided to tell a personal story about a trip to Las Vegas. Seems Zach was with this girl…

“Which story are you going to tell?” Zach asks nervously.

Sort of a personal story. We’re in Vegas, right?

“The point being, if you heard that story from someone else, it might be that they went with their cast members to Las Vegas and were doing everything that young, rich, talented actors do,” Bill says.

Not so with Zach.

“Zach had taken the head of our props department for his birthday, so it was head of our props and a couple grips and a second cameraman,” Bill says. “And that’s just not the behavior you usually see of somebody that’s getting to write and direct movies and is the star of a TV show.”

Comments off

Being “Second Becky”

Prior to hitting it big with “Scrubs,” actress Sarah Chalke’s claim to fame was being the second actress to play daughter Becky on “Roseanne.”

“Second Becky has one perk, and and she’s going to blush when I say this,” “Scrubs” creator Bill Lawrence says. “But we were at the Golden Globes the other night, and we walked by George Clooney, who then went — because he was on “Roseanne” — “‘Roseanne’s second Becky!” and gave her a huge hug, and I am almost positive she has not showered since then.”

“I don’t plan to,” Sarah says.

“Being second Becky got you a George Clooney hug,” co-star Zach Braff says.

“It’s worth all of those four years,” Sarah shoots back, referring to the hellish set that she endured.

Comments off

No Love for the Liev

San Francisco native Liev Schreiber has a solid stage rep, with the New York Times calling him the foremost Shakespearean actor of his generation.

The Yale School of Drama graduate won a Tony Award in 2005 for the revival of David Mamet’s “Glengarry Glen Ross.” No acting snob, he’s also mixed in a stint as Cotton Weary in the “Scream” trilogy.

But fans of “CSI” are up in arms about this man intruding on their show and perhaps taking the place of their beloved William Petersen.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

(Like many “CSI” fans, Catherine (Marg Helgenberger) and the CSI’s find it challenging to get a good read on their interim member Michael Keppler (Liev Schreiber, standing), a seasoned CSI assigned to their team while Grissom is away on a teaching sabbatical.)

Enjoy Liev while you can folks. He started his four-story arc last week and will be featured on “CSI” at 8 Thursday on CBS-Channel 5.

But soon he’ll move on to other projects including a New York revival of Eric Bogosian’s “Talk Radio.”

The good news for Schreiber fans is that he hasn’t yet ruled out another imited run on “CSI.”

Meanwhile, Petersen _ who has made no secret of the fact that he might be getting tired of his “CSI” gig as Grissom _ took the break to do a play in Providence. He’ll be back.

So just sit back and give Liev a chance.

Comments (1)


Warning: include(/home/l43szz25h9np/domains/suetube.org/html/cgi-bin/footer.php): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/l43szz25h9np/domains/suetube.org/html/wp-content/themes/almost-spring/footer.php on line 25

Warning: include(): Failed opening '/home/l43szz25h9np/domains/suetube.org/html/cgi-bin/footer.php' for inclusion (include_path='.:/opt/alt/php73/usr/share/pear') in /home/l43szz25h9np/domains/suetube.org/html/wp-content/themes/almost-spring/footer.php on line 25