The FCC last Friday approved SJL Holdings' purchase of two small-market ABC O&Os, WJRT Flint, Mich., and WTVG Toledo, Ohio. Upon closing, ABC will get $16.8 million for WTVG and $13.2 million for WJRT. The deal had been announced last November.
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The FCC last Friday approved SJL Holdings' purchase of two small-market ABC O&Os, WJRT Flint, Mich., and WTVG Toledo, Ohio. Upon closing, ABC will get $16.8 million for WTVG and $13.2 million for WJRT. The deal had been announced last November.
Fans of Sex and the City have finally gotten their wish: Their beloved sex-focused sitcom is back on the air ... sort of. The four women have become four men, of course, and the writing isn't as good. Oh, and the laugh track so annoying, it's offensive. And did I mention that the costumes would be considered fashionable if you were holding a yard sale? Men at Work on TBS is almost quaint, it's so old fashioned. If it had any meat on its bones, you'd be tempted to say it's the sadly ignoble epitome of TV's long-festering emasculated-men syndrome. But it's so much of a big, forgettable, innocuous shrug, it's not even worth any actual vitriol.
The USA Network's motto is "Characters Welcome." Apparently they're especially welcome if they resemble Oscar Madison and Felix Unger. Already stocked with Odd Couple knockoffs in Psych and White Collar, USA adds to its inventory Common Law, another comic crime-fighting show about mismatched partners. But this latest entry exhibits very little of that kind of spark as it tries to wring laughs from the juxtaposition of counseling and police work. It looks too flat and schematically plotted to succeed as the type of lightweight summer fun we’ve come to expect from USA.
Johnny Carson: Fantastic entertainer, miserable human being. That's the lasting message of Johnny Carson: King of Late Night, the new PBS American Masters film, a rich history of a rare product of television who dominated the small screen for decades. Unprecedented access to personal archives plus all existing episodes of The Tonight Show (1962-92), distinguishes this film by Peter Jones. Telling interviews with family and colleagues, including second wife Joanne Carson, former Tonight Show executive producer Peter Lassally and a number of biographers sharpen the picture. The clips are carefully selected to illustrate specific personality traits, the performance highlights are given context and meaning beyond funny lines and memorable moments.
AMC's The Pitch is a sharply-made if slightly off-putting reality series that follows different advertising agencies each week as they compete for new accounts. The inspiration for the show — made clear by its own ad campaign — is to harness some of the verve generated by the network's acclaimed Mad Men. The Pitch has a way of making the ad world seem like a real downer — a repugnant exercise in egotism laced with depressing bouts of creative compromise.
HBO's Veep stars Julia Louis-Dreyfus as former Sen. Selina Meyer, who accepts the vice presidential duty and regrets it almost immediately: She has no real power and gets muscled by the Senate, Congress and the (so-far-unseen) president, who delegates all the truly crappy jobs to her. Louis-Dreyfus has found perhaps her best post-Seinfeld role and takes to it with such fervor — the constant swearing, the barely veiled desire to become president, the unhappy give-and-take with other politicians and a delightful disdain for average citizens — that you can't help but applaud what is clearly an Emmy-worthy effort. Her work alone makes Veep a gem, but there's even more to like.
Award season is in many ways still upon us as winners and finalists are being announced and still being picked, in some cases. It got me to thinking: when has a journalist "made it?"
The lack of diversity identified by critics of HBO's Girls is systemic; more popular shows like Two and a Half Men or How I Met Your Mother exist in a world that rarely considers race.
The broadcasters who constitute and direct the National Association of Broadcasters have given a big vote of confidence to Gordon Smith as their leader and front man. It's a smart move.
He's 80. He's got a new book out. And a weekly show on cable. But the man once called "the Face of CBS News" is still battling his old network. (The Daily Beast)
Indian billionaire Subhash Chandra, who made a $1.8 billion fortune off television network Zee TV, largely credits meditation for his business success. Veria Living is the U.S. health-and-wellness channel he launched in 2007. (Forbes)
Some people may be surprised to hear that newsrooms are fertile ground for depression. In fact, newsroom depression is much more common than you think. I know this firsthand. (RTDNA)
Don't ask C-SPAN founder and outgoing CEO Brian Lamb about the future of journalism. "I have no idea. None." What he knows is that technology has transformed journalism in a way that's "magic," and that the Internet has enabled individuals across the world to adopt the mentality he had when C-SPAN first hit cable systems in 1979. (Nieman Journalism Lab)
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