Hugh Laurie - Articles & Scans

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  1. Aleki77
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    dal TVGUIDE di luglio 2008

    fonte:house_daily (thanks m-ouse)

    Edited by ;precious - 20/7/2009, 11:21
     
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    HQ
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    fonte: house_daily

     
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  3. ;precious
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    fonte: hughlauriefan

     
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    The Hollywood interview: The Good Doctor

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    Following his phenomenal success with House, Hugh Laurie finds he has a more secure job than the average banker, he tells LA correspondent Patricia Danaher.

    There's just a slight touch of the curmudgeon about Hugh Laurie when he ambles in to talk to HQ in the Beverly Hills Four Seasons this week. Though perfectly polite and proper, it takes a while to warm him up and to see more clearly the lines between his most successful screen persona, the grouchy Dr Gregory House, and the actor who has admitted that he is very moody and suffers from depression.

    With the sixth season of House about to begin on US television this month, what is not to be happy about in an industry which is notoriously unstable and where even big name stars are taking paycuts?

    "Much as I love House, and it is the greatest blessing that a fellow could imagine, it's very unusual," he said. "No actor can imagine playing any character for six years.

    "I heard recently on the radio the average length of salaried employment in the United States now is three and a half years.

    "When I started out as an actor, people joined a bank in order to work for 40 years and, if you became an actor, well, you were just rolling the dice, and it seems so weird now that it's all absolutely back-to-front, that I've got more of a regular job than people who work in an insurance company.

    "That just seems absolutely bizarre."

    Wearing a beard and looking tanned and healthy, he is just back from a summer in London with his family. When he is not filming in LA, he's busy rehearsing with his band for a concert they plan to perform in LA in October.

    Motorbikes and music provide the respite Laurie sorely needs from the toll of playing such a melancholy character.

    "There are days when I sort of feel that it's getting on top of me a bit, the sort of darkness, the relentless melancholy of this character. Although I love him and I find him funny and brilliant and interesting and entertaining in all sorts of ways, there is a sadness about him and a cynicism which can get you down a bit at times," he admits.

    "Music is a big escape and boxing. I went boxing this morning, as a sort of recreation that I do, and speed in boxing is a very important element. I sometimes relate it to my experiences trying to play the piano, trying to do something difficult on the piano and how one can develop speed.

    "The obvious answer is repetition, the 10,000 hours referred to in Malcolm Gladwell's very splendid new book Outliers which says that just relaxation is the thing. Relaxation leads to speed.

    "It is the speed and facility with anything you can do with your hands, whether it's boxing or playing the piano or, on occasion, acting -- if one can relax and just let things go, things usually come easier and quicker."

    Given his very impressive résumé as a comic writer and performer in so many British TV shows in the 80s and 90s, such as the still beloved Blackadder, where does Laurie get his laughs these days in the US?

    "Jon Stewart. I think we're all lucky to be living in the age of Jon Stewart. I think he is the greatest living American. That would be my regular dose.

    "I also think Family Guy is about as good as anything gets. I find that endlessly delightful. That's about it.

    "I don't watch drama. It's hard to watch because I see what's going on, the technical aspect of it. I see both in terms of acting and also film-making. I'm very aware when I see a tracking shot going down a hallway; I can sort of see in my head the 20 grips pushing the camera, and I can see the actors' tricks, and I can see the light bouncing off the thing."

    Having turned 50 in June, he is ageing very nicely indeed and is making all-out efforts to stay fit, while struggling to give up the cigarettes.

    There's also that second novel to be finished for which the advance cheque has long since been cashed. I take the risk of asking him how the old writing is going.

    "Slowly. It's coming very, very slowly," he laughs.

    "I'm embarrassed to say that cashing the cheque for the advance on my second novel, that came very quickly, but the writing came much more slowly.

    "I have unfortunately not really had the necessary time. In my experience of writing, you need big chunks of time. Maybe some people can write when they have a spare hour. I don't find that.

    "I find that one needs large periods of time to get the whole thing. One's brain is a bit like an oil tanker. It takes a long period to get up to speed and sometimes it takes four or five hours of really doing nothing before you start.

    "I haven't had periods of time like that over the last few years. I hope that my publishers would accept as a reasonable substitute for my planned second novel, the fact that the first novel has got more attention than it otherwise would have done if I hadn't done House, so maybe that's their quid pro quo, but it's certainly something I plan to continue as soon as I get the chance."

    And what are the things that motivate him to keep up this prodigious and exacting creative output?

    "I think being expected in a place -- that's all I can say. If I'm expected to show up somewhere and I tell someone I'll show up, I'll show up.

    "It's not much more complicated than that. I am not a great existentialist. I try to be. I am not. I sort of muddle through the way I think most of us do.

    "I don't have a sort of a life plan. I just go from one week to the next, one day to the next and in my working day I go from one scene to the next.

    "It's that simple. I'm a simple soul."
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  5. Aleki77
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    A very English icon





    Hugh Laurie rocketed to international stardom in the US TV series House – last year, the hospital drama attracted a record worldwide audience of 81.8 million. Gabrielle Donnelly talked to the actor, and discovered a modest, unassuming man who is torn by separation from his family in the UK



    Hugh Laurie worries about his American accent. “It tends to slip,” he says with a dissatisfied frown. Then he quickly corrects himself. “Well, it doesn’t really slip, because a slip would be something I was unaware of, and I am very much aware that I am constantly making mistakes. We are very aware of accents, we British, aren’t we? We’re terrible snobs, and obsessed by language and what it reveals about people’s backgrounds, their class and education – a nation of Professor Higginses, really. I hear myself making mistakes on the set all the time, and it drives me mad when I cannot get a word right.”



    We are meeting – amid trolleys and off-camera bangs and crashes – on the set of House, the hugely acclaimed American TV show in which he plays the brilliant but insufferable doctor of the same name.



    He’s about the only one who does worry about the accent. During the five years since he took on the role of Dr Gregory House, misanthrope, painkiller-addict, and genius, Hugh has become so closely associated with the character that many American fans of the show have forgotten that he is British at all. The series hit the 2009 Guinness Book of Records last year as the World’s Most Popular TV Show, with an estimated 81.8 million viewers in 66 countries. It has won fistfuls of awards, and earlier this summer Sky TV snapped up the new, fifth series for prime-time viewing in Britain. It is a huge hit in France, with more than 10 million viewers. There, Laurie’s maverick anti-hero has been dubbed “the greatest seducer in the world” which, considering their president’s antics, is some accolade. And all for a fictional character who, if you were unfortunate enough to meet him, would be every bit as likely to take away your painkillers as to take your pulse.



    “He’s certainly no angel,” Hugh agrees of his alter ego. “I think if he existed in real life, he would have been quite quickly punched by someone. But I think a reason that people seem to like him so much on television – apart from his entertainment value – is that all of us want to believe that, somewhere in the world, there is somebody out there who has got the answer.



    “I think we’re all a bit baffled and bewildered by life. We can’t quite make sense of it, and are probably rather frightened by it a lot of the time. And to feel that there is someone who is smart enough and determined enough and ruthless enough to work out how things function and to reach the answer on how to deal with them... I think in a way that is a reassuring thing. I don’t know if those people actually exist, but it’s an attractive idea to have. Well, it is to me, anyway.”



    To read more articles like this, subscribe to Saga Magazine today.

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  6. romaromina
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    rompo un pò se chiedo un piccolo riassunto del penultimo articolo?
     
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  7. mvitto
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    grazie Alex-House&Cameronthebest @ http://cottoncandy.forumfree.net/

    CITAZIONE
    Un'icona molto inglese

    Hugh Laurie è diventato una star internazionale grazie alla serie televisiva americana Hosue - lo scorso anno il medical drama ha raggiunto un record mondiale di audience di 81,8 milioni. Gabrielle Donnelly ha parlato con l'attore e ha scoperto un uomo umile che è fatto a pezzi dalla separazione dalla famiglia nel Regno Unito.

    Hugh Laurie è preoccupato per il proprio accento americano. "Tende a sbavare" dice con un cipiglio non soddisfatto. Poi si corregge in fretta. "Bè, in realtà non sbava, perché una sbavatura sarebbe qualcosa di cui non mi accorgerei, mentre io sono costantemente cosciente degli errori che faccio. Siamo molto attenti agli accenti, noi inglesi, non è forse così? Siamo dei terribili snob e ossessionati dalla lingua e da ciò che essa rivela riguardo la formazione delle persone, la loro classe e l'educazione - una nazione del professor Higginses, davvero. Mi ascolto sempre mentre faccio errori sul set e mi arrabbio quando non riesco a pronunciare correttamente una parola"

    Ci incontriamo - tra carrelli, i rumori e i colpi delle macchine fotografiche - sul set di House, il programma tv americano grandemente acclamato nel quale lui inpersona il ruolo del brillante ma insopportabile dottore il cui nome è House appunto.

    Lui è l'unico che si preoccupa dell'accento. Durante i cinque anni, da quando ha preso a interpretare il dottor Gregory House, misantropo drogato di antidolorifici e geniale, Hugh è diventato così intimamente associato al personaggio che molti fans americani del programma si son dimenticati che lui è un inglese a tutti gli effetti. La serie l'anno scorso è entrata a far parte del libro dei Guinness World Records del 2009 come lo show televisivo più popolare al mondo con una stima di 81,8 milioni di spettatori in 66 paesi. Ha vinto moltissimi premi e all'inizio di quest'estate la Sky TV si è aggiudicata la prima serata della nuova quinta stagione in Gran Bretagna. E' un gran successo in Francia, con più di 10 milioni di spettatori. Qui, l'anti-eroe anticonformista di Laurie è stato soprannominato "il miglior seduttore del mondo" che, considerando il modo di fare buffo del loro presidente, è una sorta di riconoscimento. E tutto per un personaggio fittizio che, se fossi abbastanza sfortunato da incontrarlo, sarebbe persino capace di rubarti gli antidolorifici mentre ti prende il polso.

    "Di sicuro non è un angelo" dice Hugh del proprio alter-ego. "Penso che se esistesse nella vita reale, qualcuno gli darebbe in fretta un pugno ma penso che una ragione per cui sembra piacere molto in tv alla gente - a parte il suo valore d'intrattenimento - sia che tutti noi vogliamo credere che, da qualche parte nel mondo, c'è qualcuno là fuori che ha la stessa risposta"

    "Penso che siamo un pò tutti sconcertati e disorientati dalla vita. Non riusciamo a farcene una ragione e buona parte delle volte ne siamo anche abbastanza spaventati. E sentire che c'è qualcuno intelligente, determinato e spietato abbastanza da scoprire come funzionano le cose e da ottenere la risposta su come affrontarle... Penso che per un certo senso sia una cosa rassicurante. Non so se queste persone esistono davvero ma è bello avere un'idea allettante come questa. Bè, è bello per me, in ogni caso"

    Per leggere altri articoli come questi, iscriviti al SAGA Magazine oggi

     
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  8. mvitto
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    da OGGI con data 09 September 2009

    contains spoilers

    le prime due domande/risposte nella seconda pagina sono interessanti come spoiler sulla premiere ;)

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    Edited by ;precious - 1/10/2009, 16:55
     
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  9. Aleki77
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    Scan TV Guide




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    thanks: knackeredwriter - hugh_lovers LJ
     
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  10. ;precious
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    Hugh talking about RSL in Sky magazine interview

    Courtesy of vicodin_martini at hughbunnies

    CITAZIONE
    Do you get on well with other members?

    Very well. It's a real blessing. They are an absolutely fantastic bunch. Although ever time I say that I think of that saying, 'If you look around a group of people and you can't identify the jerk, it means it's you!' We don't have a lot of time to carouse around in nightclubs, but we do hang out. I get on particularly well with Robert Sean Leonard, who plays Wilson. He's a fantastic bloke. Without him, I probably would've gone insane long before now.


    The friendship between your characters is a big part of the show...


    Well, House is this great analytical brain - the great brain with the questionable heart. It's all a bit Sherlock Holmes - deliberately so. There's a play on Watson with Wilson. Their friendship is the great alliance on the show. It's Wilson's account of his brilliant friend in the same way the Dr Watson would tell stories about his brilliant friend Sherlock Holmes. House is nothing without Wilson.

    Is that what made you want to do the show?

    When I first read the script, I thought Wilson was the main character, the guy with the 'handsome, open face.' Then there's House who comes in and is sort of barbed. It never occurred to me that they would actually do it the other way round with 'Barbie', as I'm now going to call him, at the centre of it and Wilson as the character who arrives occasionally to comment or support or counteract. In a way, that was the boldest thing they did - put the 'damaged, weird person' at the centre and the conventionally heroic person in support.

    fonte: rsl_daily
     
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  11. ;precious
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    gli scans di Oggi del 9 Settembre da hughlauriefan

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  12. ;precious
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    Sorrisi - August 2009

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    Visto - 09/11/09

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    fonte: hughlauriefan
     
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  13. Aleki77
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    Sept 21st TV Guide Scans SPOILERS


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    :tnx: Scans provided by knackeredwriter, hughlaurie LJ

    thanks hughbunnies LJ bonorattle

    Edited by ;precious - 1/10/2009, 17:34
     
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    SPOILER

    Q&A: Hugh Laurie Of 'House' Talks Season 6 Expectations, Cuddy Fantasy And More
    September 16th, 2009 10:00am EDT


    CITAZIONE
    Hugh LaurieHouse ended last season with a double twist. At first it seemed like Dr. House and Cuddy finally got together and he'd kicked Vicodin. Then they revealed that their tryst was a hallucination caused by House's Vicodin addiction. The season finale showed House entering a psychiatric institution, which is where the new season will pick him up.

    Hugh Laurie gave reporters a preview of House's journey to come over the summer. For years we have been analyzing House's behavior, the actor being the character's de facto defender as his real world spokesperson. The issue of whether his entertainingly vicious banter is justified by his ability to solve rare medical mysteries has been at the heart of the show for its five years and counting.

    Now the issue deepens. His painkiller addiction has compromised his sobriety, and if he's not practicing medicine, can he still get away with insulting others? House returns September 21 on Fox.

    Starpulse: Did you think it was a bold move at the end of season five to say, "Okay, the Vicodin is having a demonstrable affect on House?" Up until then, we'd been saying he's functional.

    Hugh Laurie: Well, once the guy starts hallucinating people and events and conversations and more than conversations, liaisons, let me put it that way, then yes, this is someone who probably should be led gently away from the controls of the aircraft.

    It's sort of an answer to the ethical questions that's been so fascinating. Does being a great doctor justify the means of medicating himself?

    Right, well, it was one of the lines we had early on. It wasn't the pain killers that were the problem, it was the pain that was the problem. Is it preferable to have someone operating sober but in a condition of enormous physical pain. That's probably not a particularly desirable thing either. It's an interesting question and the line is never really drawn. It's sort of an unknowable thing.

    We also debate whether his behavior is justified by his brilliance. Does this threaten that hypothesis?

    Well, that's a very good question because certainly at the beginning of the season, that is stripped away from him. He is no longer practicing medicine, he's no longer healing, solving medical problems. So then, without that, who is he and what is he really there for? He has to ask himself that. I'm not saying he's hidden behind that gift but he has certainly used that gift to define his role and define his character, his reason for existing. You take that away and he's forced to ask some pretty hard questions.

    Were you disappointed that the love scene with Cuddy proved to be a fantasy?

    Well, speaking as an actor, it was real enough. Let me put it that way. Yes, I suppose. As a viewer, I would hope that House would find some genuine comfort at some point, that he would find some connection with another warm body with whom he could travel through this lonely cosmos. It was not to be but it may yet be. It may yet come to pass.

    This is great too but I think House and Cuddy are good for each other.

    Well, good. Me too, me too.

    Does this experience make House bitter or has it humbled him?

    The season opener, the two hour story at the beginning of the season is a pretty humbling one. He is laid bare to a considerable degree. Apart from anything else, he's in a place where his biggest single gift, his biggest single reason for living is taken away from him and that is to heal. He's no longer healing, he is the healed. So without that, of course he, like everyone else, is forced to start to examine who he really is and what he's there for because up until that point, he's always had one supreme answer which is he's there to solve medical problems, to cure people.

    You're a doctor on TV yet we saw you ride a motorcycle without a helmet on the studio lot.

    I didn't realize who I was [meeting]. I just saw a lot of people and I, of course, averted my gaze, which of course you shouldn't do on a motorcycle either. That's probably more dangerous than not wearing a helmet. Of course I would wear a helmet and take every reasonable safety precaution and I would advise young people to do the same.

    Will we see House escape from the looney bin?

    You guys and the looney bin. It's a psychiatric institution.

    Didn't House call it that?

    The fictional character, yes. He did but House is damaged. I wouldn't describe him exactly as a role model, either in his vocabulary or behavior, but I take your point. It's funny, because the show House has become associated with NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness. We've gotten especially to people being flippant. I'm not saying you were being flippant but terms like looney bin, we start get right sensitive about.

    I was only quoting House.

    I know, I know, you're absolutely right. You're in the clear. It's my fault.

    Will he be regaining his senses and authority this season?

    Well, as far as the season goes, I honestly don't know. They tell me about a week after they've told the transport department. That's when I hear.

    Do you lose your position?

    Yes, I begin the season without a medical license. That is revoked, or suspended rather. It is in the gift of the psychiatrist in charge of my case played by Andre Braugher to decide whether I am sufficiently stable to begin practicing medicine again.

    But House wasn't stable to begin with.

    That's true, so the zero on the graph is pretty far down that way.

    What does he have to do to regain his license?

    That, I don't know, because I still don't have it. Four shows in, I still don't have it.

    Have they given you some ideas as to when?

    No, no idea.

    So will he make house calls until then?

    He's got a couple of ways around it which I don't want to give away because they are kind of entertaining. Obviously, he will regain his status eventually but at the moment, he's very much on probation.

    House seems to have made peace with his flaws. Have you learned from House, the way he's done that?

    I would say not, no, but then I wasn't really looking to do that. I would feel like an odd sort of character if I went looking for the fictional characters I was playing to teach me things. That seems to be the wrong way around. I would hope it would work the other way around, I hope.

    But he seems like he's okay with who he is.

    I'm not sure about that. I think there's a front. There's a façade and he is tough enough to make as if that's the case but I'm not sure it is all the time. I think he is assailed by the same sorts of doubts that assail us all.

    Is House a good patient in the institution?

    House, as you might probably have guessed, does not go willingly. No, he's not a particularly bitable character and does not cooperate very easily.

    Are his insults more vicious to his handlers than they've been to his patients?

    I'd say it's neck and neck.

    Do any particularly clever ones stand out to you?

    I don't remember lines. I honestly can't remember the lines when I'm standing in front of the camera, never mind 10 hours later, 10 days later.

    Are the makeout scenes with Franka Potente hallucinatory too or are they real?

    You mean did I actually shoot them or did I imagine that I shot them? No, with Franka's character, that is real. That is real.

    What do you watch on TV?

    Lots of things but I'm not a list maker. I don't want to be quoted with lists of things but there are lots of good things.

    Do you think it's a good time for television?

    Yeah, I do. Although, that's always a very hard question to answer because so much of it is related to one's own aging process. What is to me a Golden Age of television was actually a Golden Age of me, that's to say when I was 15. So everything looked great at 15. If I was to see those same shows now, I would probably look at them differently. At least I hope I would.

    Could you have portrayed House as a Brit? Was there ever any discussion in the beginning?

    There was a discussion. It lasted for about 15 seconds. It was never really explained to me at the time because I was the hired help. My guess is that they decided that here was a character who was sufficiently alien, problematic. If they made him foreign as well as an acerbic drug addict, maybe the American public would actually go, "Hold on a second, I don't want this guy in my home." I don't know, maybe that was their thinking but that's me and it's merely a guess.

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    Edited by ;precious - 1/10/2009, 17:34
     
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  15. ;precious
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    SPOILER

    Dave on Demand: In 'House' premiere, Laurie is crazy good



    CITAZIONE
    Hold your calls, folks, We have a winner.

    The very night after the Emmy Awards, Hugh Laurie all but engraved his name on next year's best-actor statue with his tour de force performance in the season-opener of House.

    In the two-hour episode, an institutionalized House was dragged over the rocky road that leads to surrendering to his addiction. It was a misanthropic One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. The cynical House in group therapy? Priceless.

    Beyond showcasing Laurie's acting chops, it was a nearly perfect episode, wonderfully written and directed, with great guest stars like Andre Braugher and a sensational score that included artists from Radiohead to Iron & Wine.

    All right, enough gushing. I feel, as Jon Stewart observed this week on The Daily Show after an uncharacteristically earnest moment, like I just pulled a sincerity muscle. Now back to our regularly scheduled snark.

    Whoa, cowboy. In Arlington did Jerry Jones a stately pleasure dome decree.

    NBC was nearly drooling over the opening of the Dallas Cowboys' new stadium Sunday night. Announcer Al Michaels dubbed the complex "Jerry World" in honor of the team's insufferable owner.

    It was a little embarrassing, though, when during the stadium's first official act - Jordin Sparks singing the national anthem - the microphone went dead. A billion dollars on decor, and they can't spend 10 bucks on audio equipment? I've been to better-run karaoke bars.

    The annoying part is that during the game, NBC cameras showed us more of Jones up in his luxury box than they did of Tony Romo on the field. We were even treated to the sight of Jones picking his nose.

    It's easy to see how he made his fortune in oil. He's quite a driller.

    Capacity crowd. On the season opener of How I Met Your Mother, Robin went to a hockey game at Madison Square Garden with the muscle-bound Brad.

    They were seated in the second row from the ice. Behind them were three more rows of fans and then the arena's back wall.

    Man, the Rangers must have a lucrative TV rights package, because they're sure not making any money on ticket sales.

    How'd you get here? I don't know which shocked me more: the appearance of Robert Knepper (T-Bag on Prison Break) as a goth gypsy in the opening scene of Heroes, or the realization that Saint John Powell, the tempered British hatchet man on Mad Men, is a nearly unrecognizable Charles Shaughnessy, Mr. Sheffield from The Nanny.

    Aye aye. Forget Law & Order and CSI. The strongest franchise on TV is NCIS, which just rolled out NCIS: Los Angeles to great success.

    I always thought of the Navy as a bunch of seasick swabbies. Who knew this branch of the service was such a hotbed of murder and intrigue?

    Dangerous duty, but pretty cushy. Have you noticed on these two shows how almost nobody lives on a Navy base? They all have apartments. Nice ones.

    Winning ways. Some are born funny. Others have it thrust upon them.

    Like Jon Cryer. After winning the Emmy for best supporting actor in a comedy on Sunday night, he quipped from the stage, "I used to think that awards were just shallow tokens of momentary popularity. But now, I realize they are the only true measure of a person's worth as a human being."

    That's funnier than anything he's ever said on his sitcom, Two and a Half Men.

    Enjoy your Emmy, Jon. You earned it. For the acceptance speech alone.

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29 replies since 2/7/2008, 15:12   4007 views
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