E-mail Help

This page will help you configure your e-mail client to allow e-mails from TVNewsCheck. Please select your e-mail client from the list below:

  1. On the Tools menu, click Options.
  2. On the Preferences tab, under E-mail, click Junk E-mail.
  3. Click the Safe Senders or Safe Recipients tab.
  4. Click Add.
  5. In the Enter an e-mail address or Internet domain name to be added to the list box, enter newsletters@newscheckmedia.com, and then click OK.
  1. Click Contacts along the left side of any page.
  2. Click the New Contact button in the top-left corner of the Contact Manager.
  3. In the form that appears, enter NewsCheckMedia in the Name field and newsletters@newscheckmedia.com in the E-mail field.
  4. Click "Save".
  1. In the upper-right corner of the page, click Options, and then click More options.
  2. Under Junk e-mail, click Safe and blocked senders.
  3. Click Safe senders.
  4. Type newsletters@newscheckmedia.com, and then click Add to List.
  1. If possible, locate and open a newsletter you have received from us (you may have to check your Spam folder). On the message toolbar, click Not Spam.
  2. Click Contacts in the left panel.
  3. From the drop-down menu, select New and choose New Contact from the list.
  4. In the Nickname field, enter NewsCheckMedia.
  5. In the Email 1 field, enter newsletters@newscheckmedia.com.
  6. Click the Create button.
  1. If possible, locate and open a newsletter you have received from us (you may have to check your Spam folder). Highlight the e-mail, and click on the This is not Spam button.
  2. Click the Mail menu and select Address Book.
  3. Wait for the Address Book window to pop up, then click the Add button.
  4. Wait for the Address Card for New Contact window to load.
  5. Enter newsletters@newscheckmedia.com into the Other E-Mail field.
  6. Make our From address the Primary E-Mail address by checking the associated check box.
  7. Click the Save button.
  1. If possible, locate and open a newsletter you have received from us (you may have to check your Spam folder).
  2. Click on Not Spam, which is above the list of e-mails.

If you require further assistance with your email client, please do not hesitate to contact help@newscheckmedia.com.

Classifieds

The Market

Symbol Last Change (%)
Nasdaq 2913.23 +9.15 (+0.32%)
NYSE 8083.03 +13.32 (+0.17%)
S&P 500 1349.26 +2.21 (+0.16%)
Updated 02/08 4:08p ET Quotes delayed at least 20 mins.
Source: Financial Content

Ratings

Overnights, adults 18-49 for February 7, 2012
  • 1.
    3.1/8
  • 2.
    3.0/8
  • 3.
    2.4/6
  • 4.
    2.0/5
  • 5.
    1.6/4
  • 6.
    0.6/1
Source: Nielsen
Reviews
Opinions
Features
  • Neil Genzlinger

    Smash, NBC’s series about backstage Broadway, comes with New York and Hollywood names off screen (Steven Spielberg, Therese Rebeck) and on (Debra Messing and Brian d’Arcy James). Given that pedigree, you’re expecting to be bowled over by the pilot, but it ends up feeling like a collage of devices from the zillions of previous backstage plays, musicals and movies. However, be patient — Smash gets better as it goes along and by Episode 3 it shows signs of becoming an addictive pleasure along the lines of this season’s Revenge.

  • Lori Rackl

    Pop some Dramamine before watching ABC's new horror series, The River, because the shaky camera work is more likely to make you seasick than scared. You can, however, skip the sleeping pill. The River's two-hour premiere should suffice. Billed as a thriller, the show tries hard to be terrifying and eerie in a Paranormal Activity kind of way. It ends up being hokey and, even worse, boring.

  • Robert Lloyd

    Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele, veterans of Fox's sketch comedy MADtv, have a new series of their own, Comedy Central's Key & Peele. It is a genial, at times almost genteel, half-hour in which the pair's obvious niceness shines through even their more pugnacious characters. (Key's version of road rage is to shout, "Selfish!") In a roundabout way, that's the point. The sketches are consistently smart and smartly acted and flow easily from ordinary premises to weird conclusions.

  • Hank Stuever

    Discovery's Bering Sea Gold doesn’t seem at first like it has crossed any new reality TV frontier, relying on elements and structure familiar to the form. Enticingly (to the network), it combines the ocean and the gold and the cold and the reactive testosterone among bad-tempered desperados. To which I am surprised to cry: Eureka, they’ve found it! Bering Sea Gold is a testament to how thoroughly absorbing the genre can still be, when it’s done right.

  • Joanne Ostrow

    Kiefer Sutherland displays his softer side in Fox's Touch, a touchy-feely drama merging paranormal, spiritual and sweetly familial elements. shows off his acting chops, long forgotten, in scene after scene. It's heavier lifting than usual for the actor who was often reduced to caricature in 24. Sutherland is all about vulnerability in a show whose goal is nothing short of proving the interconnectedness of human life. We'll see if audiences can tolerate the notion of profound interrelatedness as weekly entertainment.

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