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‘American Idol’s’ Randy Jackson on Season 9

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  American Idol, Music, Pop Shop  |  January 11, 2010

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About 15 minutes into a conference call with reporters, Randy Jackson had answered several questions about the ninth season of “American Idol,” including the guest judges who will chiming in during the audition episodes, new permanent judge Ellen DeGeneres and the showmanship of Season 8 runner-up Adam Lambert. Those were expected questions, and sprightly answered, but there was something missing.

That is, until the next question.

“I know there are a lot of questions about Ellen, and the guest judges,” the male reporter asked. “But I think there’s also some contestants and some singing?”

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NBC: Tossing Conan or Jimmy under the bus?

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Jay Leno Show, Late night TV/Talk shows, Pop Shop, TV  |  January 08, 2010

More on Leno and late night:
Jay Leno’s late-night future up in air | Poll: Should Jay stay or go? | Video: Leno gets laughs out of rumors

Who's gonna get to keep 11:35?

Who's gonna get to keep 11:35?

NBC’s prime time/late night time slots seem like a game of musical chairs – First the Peacock network makes good on its promise to give Conan O’Brien the hosting gig of “The Tonight Show,” then takes away some of the luster of that accomplishment (no matter how they framed it) by giving Jay Leno, the abdicating “Tonight Show” host, his own 10 p.m. prime time show five days a week. People who like watching crime programs at 10 p.m., or “Dateline” episodes where Chris Hansen pulls the okee doke on “alleged” predators, or who just don’t find Jay Leno funny at any timeslot, cried foul.

And now that the show turned out to be a ratings turkey and, honestly, not all that funny, NBC is reportedly considering pushing Jay back to 11:35, meaning that Conan could be headed back to “Late Night,” and meaning Jimmy Fallon might be…oh, who knows? NBC, for their part, has released a statement confirming that they are committed to keeping Conan on NBC, which, as anyone whose ever been dumped by a vague text message claiming to want to be friends, knows doesn’t mean anything. Sure, they’re committed to keeping you around. But as what? And when? And what kind of friendship is that anyway, huh? And are you gonna pay Conan back for all those lunches when you “forgot” your wallet, NBC?

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Lionel Richie plays the hits “All Night Long” at Hard Rock

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Concert Reviews, Live Shows, Music, Pop, Pop Shop, R&B  |  December 14, 2009

LionelRichieComingHomeCover

Most of us old enough to be interested in a Lionel Richie concert might remember the former Commodore’s hosting gig at the 1985 “American Music Awards,” during which he proclaimed every other thing that happened that night “Out-RAGEOUS!” I don’t remember the show being all that outrageous, honestly, except that by the next morning, all the DJs were playing the clip of Lionel saying that word, over and over again. They may have been making fun, but Lionel stuck with it, calling his 1986 tour the “Outrageous” tour and even putting a song called “Outrageous” on his 2004 album “Just For You.”

At Sunday night’s satisfyingly hit-packed show at Hollywood’s Hard Rock Live, a pumped and energetic Richie was pimping a different phrase, one no less enthusiastic than “Outrageous!” but much more obvious.

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Burt Reynolds brings wit, personal insight to “Barrymore”

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Arts and Culture, Pop Shop, Theater  |  December 11, 2009

Burt Reynolds' natural charm comes through in 'Barrymore.' (Damon Higgins / The Post)

Burt Reynolds' natural charm comes through in 'Barrymore.' (Damon Higgins / The Post)

It’s fair to say that the Burt Reynolds who commanded the small stage at his eponymous theater Thursday night was not a lot like the one you may remember. Because he spent most of the two acts of William Luce’s “Barrymore” sitting in a chair, this was not the action-y canoeing, Trans-Am racing, football playing Burt Reynolds who will take down any fool daring to lean on Sharky’s Machine. (And heaven knows, we love that Burt Reynolds.)

Rather, the 73-year-old Hobe Sound resident, Jupiter cheerleader and bonafide big huge movie star, used his other Burt Reynolds skills: The confidence. The droll, self-deprecating wit. The perfect comic timing. That deep, deep voice that strikes a moderate amount of tension in the heart of the play’s off-stage “prompter,” played by Burt Reynolds Institute of Film and Television executive director Ken Kay, and in the audience, which spends about two hours in the flinty, haughty, naughty company of actor John Barrymore. And that voice and confidence combine to make Reynolds’ Barrymore as physically impressive sitting down as he would be running from Smokey with stolen Coors.

Luce’s play, set in 1942, in the wake of the attack on Pearl Harbor, finds Barrymore rehearsing with that unseen script “prompter,” although Barrymore has little interest in sticking to the script. Instead, he riffs on the tatters of his career, bolstered by the bottle and beset by his own ego, his famous family, naughty limericks, and anything but what the increasingly irritated prompter has been charged to do: Help Barrymore learn his lines to “Richard III.” But when Barrymore does snap, unexpectedly and beautifully, into Shakepearean mode, you get glimpses of the mastery and brilliance that created the legend he’s been busy dismantling.

The moment when Reynolds, as Barrymore, rises under an eerie spotlight to deliver Hamlet’s “To Be Or Not To Be” speech works both as a reminder of Barrymore’s awe-inspiring gifts, and of Reynolds’ dramatic talent, which he wasn’t always given credit for. What’s more, that moment, and others, betray the actor’s reason for picking Luce’s work as the premiere production of his new “Under The Bridge Players.” He sees echoes of his own career in Barrymore’s. Both were young, exciting, lauded stars whose careers seemed unlimited and starbound. But those careers careened off track in a haze of fame, excess and a willingness to believe one’s own P.R.

Although the second half seems a little abrupt, “Barrymore” works both because of the script, a welcoming mixture of sadness, self-aware reflection, humor and winking, and because Reynolds commits so much to it, lending the aforementioned confidence equally to Barrymore’s triumphant moments and to the ones where he’s being a jerk. And enjoying it.

Some of the uneven tone may have come from an unfortunate event – an audience member collapsed from an apparent seizure toward the end of the first act, cutting it short. I’m not sure how that act’s ending connected to the second, which started after the extended intermission. But that may have explained it.

Although it would be fun to see Reynolds doing another thriller where he gets to smack someone around, he’s proven in film and, again, in “Barrymore,” that his power and oomph doesn’t need a a gun, a car or a canoe to be heard loud and clear.

Posted in Arts and Culture, Pop Shop, TheaterComments (2)

“As The World Turns” DOA: Did these 4 dumb moves do it?

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Breaking news, Pop Shop, Soaps  |  December 08, 2009

CBS cancels ‘As The World Turns’

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So CBS continues its retreat from the daytime TV business with the announcement that it’s cancelling “As The World Turns,” the 50-year-old soap that introduced Meg Ryan, Courtney Cox, Ming Na, Parker Posey, Lauryn Hill, Julianne Moore, Lea Salonga and Tamara Tunie. Having cancelled “Guiding Light” in September, the network responded to low ratings and the fact that societal changes are against the whole genre – more women are working instead of being at home, and there are so many more choices even if you are home.

But “ATWT,” which, at one time, was my favorite TV show, period, can’t just blame those trends for a loss of viewership. I can name at least four storylines or character developments within the last ten years that had loyal watchers freaking out, mostly because a) they completely ignored history and b) they weren’t very good. Here are four off the top of my head:

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Posted in Breaking news, Pop Shop, SoapsComments (21)

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Top Chef Las Vegas: And then there were three!

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Pop Shop, TV, Top Chef  |  December 03, 2009

winetrainshd

And it’s not the three I wanted to see.

ALERT: HERE BE SPOILERS. READ AT YOUR OWN RISK.

At the start of the show, we see our four semi-finalists preparing to meet up for the last showdown before the big pretty finale. Jennifer says she’s doing this for her mom. Kevin says that the Voltaggio brothers are awesome. The Voltaggio brothers agree.

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Grammy Nod Concert: Beyonce, Taylor and…Hall and Oates?

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Grammys, Michael Jackson, Music, Music News, Pop Shop, TV  |  December 03, 2009
The Black Eyed Peas from left, apl.de.ap, will. i. am, Taboo, and Fergie, perform at the Grammy Nominations Concert on Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2009, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

The Black Eyed Peas from left, apl.de.ap, will. i. am, Taboo, and Fergie, perform at the Grammy Nominations Concert on Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2009, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

One of the most annoying things about award shows is that they’re usually entirely too long, for no reason, because the awards are padded with a lot of filler that has the nutritional equivalent of packing peanuts. CBS’ concert to announce the Grammy nominations is, appropriately, an hour long, because it’s not even an awards show. It’s the coming attractions. So, good on you, CBS. If you can only keep the actual show from bloat, we’ll all be happy.

If anything, the special seemed a little rushed, maybe because the producers, which include host and CBS star L.L. Cool J., were trying so hard to pack it full of relevant content that they loaded it with everything but the kitchen sink. Heck, if the kitchen sink can sing, the more the merrier.

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Survivor: Samoa – Flipping flippers and the flips they do!

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Pop Shop, Survivor, TV  |  November 20, 2009

laura-morett-survivor

Aww, yeah!

For the third week in a row, “Survivor” remembers its origins as a twisty, crafty stunner where anything can happen if greed, strategy and gobsmacked luck win out. Laura, the queen bee of the former Galu tribe and the head mean girl in Shambo’s head, took a powder in the most delicious blindside, which was made all the more spicy by Laura’s arrogant denial that it could ever happen.

And to her I say: Ha ha ha ha, ha ha ha ha, neh neh neh, goodbye!

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Early MTV game show host Ken Ober dead at 52

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Deaths, Game Shows, Pop Shop, TV  |  November 16, 2009

Ken

The main difference that most of your pop culture critics cite between old school MTV and the current version is that the new one doesn’t play a lot of videos. I’ve always thought the bigger discrepancy was the sense of production values – unlike the posh, shiny modern model, the original MTV, from its hosts’ hair to its sets, looked purposely like it was being made in your mother’s basement. And not the pretty, shiny refinished part, either. It was all uneven brick and cheerful shabbiness – and proud of it.

The difference was even clear in the programming – instead of dealing in the Barbie aspirations of “The Hills” and “The City,” or the crass excess of “My Super Sweet 16,” MTV’s first non-musical show was “Remote Control,” a lovingly low-production values pop culture game show hosted by comedian Ken Ober, and featuring the first glimpse of future stars Colin Quinn, Denis Leary and Adam Sandler. Ober, who died over the weekend after complaining of flu-like issues, was the chairman of a raucous, sometimes randy affair that was an absurdist mix of ’70s TV cheese fests like “Match Game” and “The Gong Show,” a kegger from a John Hughes movie, and a David Lee Roth video.

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Dear Saturday Night Live: Some positives and negatives

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Country, Music, Pop Shop, Saturday Night Live, TV  |  November 08, 2009

taylor_swift

Dear SNL:

It’s been suggested lately that when I write these blogs about you, that I go out of my way to point out the negative things about you and never, ever write about your good points. I don’t think that’s true, but since I just watched your most recent episode, featuring the delightful Taylor Swift (see, I said she was delightful!), I figured I would clearly mark my kudos and concerns with some helpful suggestions in the form of Dos and Don’ts.

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Posted in Country, Music, Pop Shop, Saturday Night Live, TVComments (8)

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