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‘Crowded’ – Miranda Cosgrove Interview on the New NBC Comedy

Crowded Cast
Miranda Cosgrove, Patrick Warburton, Carrie Preston, Mia Serafino, Carlease Burke, and Stacy Keach star in ‘Crowded’ (Photo by: Paul Drinkwater / NBCUniversal)

iCarly star Miranda Cosgrove returns to series TV with the NBC comedy, Crowded, from executive producers Sean Hayes, Todd Milliner, James Burrows, and writer/executive producer Suzanne Martin. The timely comedy features an ensemble cast that includes Cosgrove, Mira Serafino, Patrick Warburton (Seinfeld), Carrie Preston (True Blood), Stacy Keach (NCIS: New Orleans) and Carlease Burke (Switched at Birth).

The Plot: After 20 years of parenting, empty nesters Mike (Warburton) and Martina (Preston) are finally reclaiming their wild side. But when both of their two grown daughters (Cosgrove and Serafino) unexpectedly move back in and Mike’s parents (Keach and Burke) scratch their plans to spend their golden years in Florida, their roost is full again.

NBC presented a panel featuring Crowded at the 2016 Television Critics Association’s winter event, and following the panel I sat down with a few other journalists to talk to Cosgrove about her new series and growing up on TV.

Miranda Cosgrove Interview:

Has it been easy to make a transition from pre-teen and teen roles to a series like this?

Miranda Cosgrove: “Yeah, I feel like it has because I come from doing sitcoms for a lot of my life. But I’m real excited about this one because I feel like my friends will think it’s cool. All of my friends can really relate to it because they all live at home with their parents. [Laughing] I think that’s another reason why I’m not embarrassed to be living at my parents’ house because all my friends do too.”


Do your parents have rules for living at home?

Miranda Cosgrove: “They don’t make me pay rent but I do dishes. I have to clean my room. [Laughing] Kind of like I’m a little kid living there.”

How different is doing Crowded from iCarly?

Miranda Cosgrove: “It’s pretty different. We didn’t have a live audience for iCarly. We did it for seven years and we never had an audience, it was just the crew. I was actually really nervous about that at first because I’ve never done anything like that before. I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, if it’s not funny, they’re not going to laugh.’”

Did you consciously choose to do more of a supporting part because in iCarly you were the star?

Miranda Cosgrove: “Well, with iCarly even though it was called iCarly, I felt it was a bit of an ensemble. Getting to work with all of those people is what I think made people like the show because we had such a great time. So it’s pretty cool to be in an ensemble and getting to work with all these people.”

Was Crowds an easy choice for a project after iCarly?

Miranda Cosgrove: “I feel like it’s not a crazy jump to something completely different, but it is a lot more edgy and a lot different than iCarly so that definitely drew me to it and made me excited.”

What funny stuff is coming up on Crowded?

Miranda Cosgrove: “I have a lot of episodes where my storylines are with Mia [Serafino], who plays my sister. And we just had a really good time together. I know everybody says this but we’re like really good friends in real life now and I think that adds a lot to the show. You can improvise and add a lot to it when you really are close with the person you’re acting with.”

Can you believe all of the new social media that’s emerged since iCarly?

Miranda Cosgrove: “I know, it’s crazy, right? At the time I felt like that was really cutting edge. Tying the internet in with the show was a new thing at that point, so it is kind of crazy how far it’s come.”

Do you ever feel like you missed out on anything by starting in the business so young, or was it an advantage?

Miranda Cosgrove: “I think in a lot of ways I’m really lucky that I got to start young. But then, yeah, definitely in some ways I felt like maybe if I had never done anything yet and I just did something completely new I could be seen in a different way more easily.”

Do you feel trapped by your persona a little?

Miranda Cosgrove: “Maybe a little bit just because I played that character on iCarly for so long. But at the same time I do feel lucky because I have a lot of people that know who I am and know about the show, and that’s pretty cool to have that.”

What do you think about School of Rock being on Broadway?

Miranda Cosgrove: “I went to see that! It was so good. I loved it.”

Was it bizarre seeing that?

Miranda Cosgrove: “It was a little weird. The little girl who played Summer, the part I played in the movie, is amazing. Some of the lines even sounded like me when I was little, so it was definitely a funny experience seeing that. But, it’s really exciting.”

Has your voice changed too much to do Despicable Me now?

Miranda Cosgrove: [Laughing] “No. I guess I have a naturally young voice! We’re working on the next one right now.”

What’s up next?

Miranda Cosgrove: “I love acting and I love comedy, so I’m really excited to be a part of this show. I hope people like it.”

Top 10 Must-See David Bowie Films

Labyrinth

David Bowie died on January 10, 2016 just days after releasing his final album. His final music video for the song ‘Lazarus’ seems especially poignant and designed as a farewell to fans. But the title also suggests a rebirth and rising from the grave. Well, we can only hope. And if anyone could figure out a way to return, it’s Bowie. He’s never seemed quite of this world. He played that up when he created his alter ego of Ziggy Stardust, a glittery, bisexual space alien who came to Earth to save it and became a rock star along the way. His talent certainly seemed otherworldly or at least beyond the scope of mere ordinary humans. He was unique and utterly riveting in whatever he did. Here are his ten best movie roles that reveal what an exceptional acting talent he was. With performances like these captured on film, Bowie will never really be dead.


10 Best David Bowie Films

1. The Man Who Fell to Earth as Thomas Jerome Newton (1976)

Bowie’s first feature film is his best. Director Nicolas Roeg cleverly cast Bowie (who had just three years earlier “retired” his extraterrestrial alter ego Ziggy Stardust) as a humanoid alien who arrives on Earth to find water for his dying planet. He starts a high tech company, makes billions, and then gets derailed by human greed and corporate ruthlessness. Bowie is perfectly cast as an innocent; a stranger in a strange land who tries to fit in but never can. It’s a stunning debut performance.

2. Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence as Major Jack ‘Strafer’ Celliers (1983)

Roeg played up Bowie’s other worldliness but Japanese director Nagisa Ôshima exploited his charisma. The film focuses on a Japanese prisoner of war camp where a defiant British Jack Celliers faces off against camp commander Yonoi (Ryuichi Sakamoto). Both Bowie and Sakamoto were rock icons in their respective countries so they brought with them a built in star quality that perfectly suited their roles. The film allowed Bowie to display his subtler acting skills in this emotionally complex and very human drama.

Ziggy Stardust

3. Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1973)

D. A. Pennebaker’s documentary cleverly captures Bowie as his glam rock alter ego Ziggy Stardust. It reveals in part how Bowie changed the music landscape and turned a concert tour into something more akin to performance art. An unflashy documentary about one of the flashiest performers ever.

4. The Hunger as John Blaylock (1983)

Tony Scott’s feature directing debut is all about gorgeous style and that’s reflected in his cast of Bowie, Catherine Deneuve, and Susan Sarandon. These are faces and bodies that the camera caresses and adores. Deneuve plays Miriam Blaylock, a vampire who takes a lover every few hundred years. But unlike her, her lovers eventually age but don’t die. Bowie plays her latest lover/victim and we get to see his beauty fade into Dick Smith’s amazing prosthetic make up effects.

5. Labyrinth as Jareth the Goblin King (1986)

Jim Henson’s fantasy film has a devout cult following and I include it this high up less for its artistic merits than for its enduring popularity with fans. Bowie plays the Goblin King and Jennifer Connelly is a pouty teen that must solve a labyrinth to rescue her baby brother stolen by him. Some delightful Henson puppetry intermixed with some painfully bad narrative stretches. But Bowie does get to sing and that’s always a pleasure.

David Bowie in The Prestige

6. The Prestige as Nikola Tesla (2006)

Christopher Nolan’s sleight of hand tale involves a rivalry between stage magicians. One of them seeks out Nikola Tesla in order to come up with an illusion to trump the other. Bowie’s entrance late in the film as Tesla is fittingly grand. Once again, a director understands that Bowie brings with him a presence that can immediately define a character that is only onscreen for a few minutes. Casting Bowie as the enigmatic real life inventor allows Nolan to use cinematic shorthand to convey the weight and importance of this character in his story.

7. Basquiat as Andy Warhol (1996)

You could call this stunt casting with one pop icon playing another, but it’s stunt casting that works. Bowie captures the quirky essence of Andy Warhol in this biopic about another artist Jean Michel Basquiat. Bowie seems to be thoroughly enjoying himself in the role and his scenes are the most enjoyable in the film.

8. The Last Temptation of Christ as Pontius Pilate (1988)

Martin Scorsese goes against type to cast Bowie as the Roman governor who wanted nothing more than to wash his hands of all responsibility for the fate of Jesus of Nazareth. Again a small role made big by Bowie. Always the rebel in his own art, it’s interesting to see him play a man who’s part of the establishment. Bowie reveals that his skill as an actor allowed him to play anything. It’s also a character that understands he needs to play a role in the political arena for the Romans.

Absolute Beginners DVD Cover

9. Absolute Beginners as Vendice Partners (1986)

Although Bowie’s music enhances many film soundtracks, it’s rare that he actually appears in a film (not a documentary) where he’s allowed to sing. This is a delicious exception. This highly stylized musical failed to stir much interest at the box office but it allows Bowie a show stopping number as an ad man. Bowie gets to sing a number called ‘That’s Motivation’ and dance atop a giant typewriter. It’s an over the top homage to the MGM musicals of the forties and fifties, and Bowie dazzles us.

10. B.U.S.T.E.D. as Bernie (1999)

For the last spot there were a few films in the running, Zoolander for a silly cameo and Just a Gigolo because he looked so damn good. But I decided to go with B.U.S.T.E.D. because it shows off his diversity. This androgynous rock star proves he can gracefully age and even play a gangster. A nice change of pace role.

Bonus Picks:

Bowie on stage: The Elephant Man as John Merrick (1980)
Search YouTube for some clips of his performance on Broadway, not surprisingly, he took well to the role of the deformed and socially outcast John Merrick.

Bowie in video game: Omikron: The Nomad Soul (1999)
Omikron: The Nomad Soul is an adventure game (developed by Quantic Dream) in which Bowie contributed to the storyline, appeared as a pair of characters, and performed music.

Bowie on TV: Extras (2006)
This is a better cameo as himself than in Zoolander plus he gets to sing and humiliate Ricky Gervais.

Bowie music video: ‘Lazarus’ (2016)
His final music video begins with the lyrics, “I’ve got scars that can’t be seen. I’ve got drama, can’t be stolen. Everybody knows me now. Look up here, man, I’m in danger. I’ve got nothing left to lose.” And it ends with him backing into a closet. Is a rebirth ahead or was this just his way of saying goodbye? Either way it’s brilliant.

Seth Meyers Will Host ‘Late Night’ Through 2021

Late Night With Seth Meyers
Late Night with Seth Meyers (Photo by: NBCUniversal)

NBC’s signed up Seth Meyers to host Late Night through at least February 2021. Meyers took over as host in February 2014 and averaged 1.658 million viewers overall during 2015’s fourth quarter. NBC says that’s an increase in ratings of 4% year-to-year, and Late Night has even outperformed The Late Show with Stephen Colbert even though it airs at a later hour than Colbert’s show.


“I can’t thank NBC enough for continuing to support our show and this more than makes up for my disappointment in not getting cast in The Wiz,” stated Meyers.

“As a writer, performer and host, Seth has a rich history at NBC and we are thrilled that he’ll be at the helm of Late Night for many more years,” said Robert Greenblatt, Chairman, NBC Entertainment. “His knowledge of both current events and pop culture is unparalleled and he brings that expertise to Late Night every night. The show couldn’t be in better hands.”

The network also announced Meyers will host a special New Year’s Eve edition at 10pm that will look back at the big events of the year. Late Night with Seth Meyers is executive produced by Lorne Michaels and produced by Mike Shoemaker.

‘The Walking Dead’ Midseason 6 Poster and Trailer

The Walking Dead Midseason 6 PosterWhat secrets are revealed on The Walking Dead midseason six poster? Well, we can safely assume Morgan (Lennie James) emerges from the breach of the city by walkers intact. It’s also fair to assume Rick (Andrew Lincoln) will still have people to lead through the apocalypse as the poster promises “a larger world.”

The Walking Dead returns for the second half of season six on Sunday, February 14, 2016 at 9pm ET/PT on AMC.

‘X-Files’ – Jimmy Kimmel Tells Scully and Mulder What We’ve All Been Thinking

Jimmy Kimmel David Duchovny Gillian Anderson X-Files

Jimmy Kimmel’s a huge X-Files fan who’s anxiously awaiting the new limited The X-Files series on Fox. But unlike the rest of us X-Files fans, Kimmel actually got to hang out with David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson who are reprising their roles as FBI Agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully. In this skit that aired on the January 12, 2016 episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live, Kimmel plays FBI Agent Keith who meets up with Mulder and Scully in a dark, abandoned lab that houses an actual preserved alien under glass. Mulder and Scully are, unfortunately, still stuck in the ’90s, using a huge portable phone (with an antenna!) and connecting to the internet via a dial-up modem and AOL. When Keith tells them we’ve moved on, they reminisce about the greatness of the ’90s with its Hootie and the Blowfish and beanie babies, and Scully and Mulder worry we won’t like them anymore. And then Kimmel as Keith say what X-Files fans have been thinking, suggesting they just go ahead and finally have sex. “It’s been like 23 years. Everybody knows,” says Keith. Scully and Mulder deny it but Agent Keith insists, “It’s time to do it already.”


The X-Files will premiere on Fox on Sunday, January 24, 2016 at 10pm ET/7pm PT after the NFC Championship Game.

The X-Files Details:

Thirteen years after the original series run, the next mind-bending chapter of The X-Files is a thrilling, six-episode event series from creator/executive producer Chris Carter, with stars David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson re-inhabiting their roles as iconic FBI Agents FOX MULDER and DANA SCULLY. Mitch Pileggi also returns as FBI ASST. DIR. WALTER SKINNER, Mulder and Scully’s boss, who walks a fine line between loyalty to these investigators and accountability to his superiors.

The upcoming event series will encompass a mixture of stand-alone episodes and those that further the original show’s seminal mythology. In the opening episode, Mulder and Scully take on a case of a possible alien abductee. The all-new episodes will feature appearances by guest stars, including Joel McHale, Robbie Amell, Lauren Ambrose, Annabeth Gish, Annet Mahendru, Rhys Darby, Kumail Nanjiani, and William B. Davis, who reprises his role as “Cigarette Smoking Man.” Three of the episodes are written and directed by Chris Carter, with the remaining new episodes written and directed by original series veterans Glen Morgan, Darin Morgan and James Wong.

Watch The X-Files video:

‘Money Monster’ Trailer with George Clooney, Julia Roberts and Jack O’Connell

George Clooney in Money Monster
George Clooney (Lee Gates, center) stars with Giancarlo Esposito (Captain Marcus Powell, left) in TriStar Pictures’ ‘Money Monster’

The official trailer for TriStar Pictures’ thriller Money Monster arrives with plenty of George Clooney, Julia Roberts, and Jack O’Connell. In fact, there might be a little too much of each as the new trailer lays out more of the plot than is really necessary and should come with its own spoiler alert warning. Directed by Jodie Foster, the cast also includes Outlander‘s Caitriona Balfe, Dominic West, and Giancarlo Esposito. TriStar’s aiming for a May theatrical release.


The Plot:

In the taut and tense thriller Money Monster, Lee Gates (George Clooney) is a bombastic TV personality whose popular financial network show has made him the money wiz of Wall Street. But after he hawks a high tech stock that mysteriously crashes, an irate investor (Jack O’Connell) takes Gates, his crew, and his ace producer Patty Fenn (Julia Roberts) hostage live on air. Unfolding in real time, Gates and Fenn must find a way to keep themselves alive while simultaneously uncovering the truth behind a tangle of big money lies.

Watch the Money Monster trailer:

‘Second Chance’ – Rob Kazinsky and Rand Ravich Interview

Rob Kazinsky in Second Chance
Rob Kazinsky as Jimmy Pritchard in ‘Second Chance’ (Photo by Justin Stephens © 2015 Fox Broadcasting Co)

Fox will premiere the new dramatic series Second Chance starring Rob Kazinsky (True Blood), Tim DeKay, Dilshad Vadsaria, Adhir Kalyan, Ciara Bravo, and Vanessa Lengies on January 13, 2016. Second Chance is written and executive produced by Rand Ravich and follows a 75-year-old ex-sheriff (played by guest star Philip Baker Hall) who dies and is brought back to life in the body of a 35-year-old (played by Kazinsky) with his memories intact.

In support of the series’ debut, Kazinsky and Ravich participated in a conference call to discuss the show’s premise, the idea of second chances, and how Kazinsky got into the role of Jimmy Pritchard.

Interview with Rob Kazinsky and Rand Ravich:

Rob, what actually connects with you about this character? What did you find fascinating about Jimmy that gave you an into playing him?

Rob Kazinsky: “Well, when I read the script…I only read two good pilot scripts in pilot season and this was one of them. This character was very [different]. I’m not your typical 32-year-old guy. I’m kind of grumpy and cantankerous and a bit weary myself, so there was an element of it just feeling kind of right in my soul. Then I looked at these guys and I thought my father’s this age and my father is pretty, pretty close to Jimmy Pritchard in a lot of ways, so there was an opportunity to play this grumpy side of myself and represent my father on screen and how my father would react to all these things and the out-of-date mannerisms which have kind of died with the modern philosophization of manners.

There was a time when men were gentlemen and they stood when their lady entered the room, and they did things the right way before politicians and lawyers and social media got involved […]with what is socially right and wrong. Once upon a time, you just knew what was right and wrong. There was an element of this old-timey justice bringer, this old-timey family man, this guy who just is indicative of everything that once made a man, and putting him in this now defunct time period of today, there’s something really intriguing about that, something really heart-warming about it. It’s nice to sit there and say, ‘Hey, you can be a gentleman again.'”

Rand, basically you’re writing for a young character and an old character in a young person’s body. Do you view it that way? Do you look at it as two different characters played by the same person?

Rand Ravich: “No, I look at it as an old man being reborn in a young man’s body. It’s always, for us, I think for Rob and for myself, with me writing and Rob acting, it’s always one character. It’s Pritchard; he’s looking out through new eyes, but he is re-entering the world because when he checked out of the world 15 years ago and shuffled off to his Barcalounger to end his days, he had stopped growing and stopped being part of the world, but now he’s re-entered.

But he is that person, so he has to learn all these things again. Only his body is young. His attitudes have been formed, like all ours have, and are pretty rigid and take a beating as he re-enters the world. He is not ready for 2016. It’s one guy down there, one guy who is changing, but one guy.”

Do you think the world would be better if everyone could be brought back to life and have a second chance?

Rand Ravich: “I don’t know if the world would be better. I’m not sure it could be worse, but the thing, just to spin it towards this character, is that what we love about this character is that he did not ask for a second chance. I’ve read a lot of stories where somebody says, ‘If only I could do it one more time.’ This guy liked his life. He liked being an old curmudgeon. He had basically given the finger to the world that I’m done with you, and that’s the guy that was dragged back practically kicking and screaming to this second chance. That’s what we love about this character is that he did not ask for it; it came to him.”

Rob Kazinsky: “There’s this whole nature versus nurture thing as well. If you brought people back, they wouldn’t be different people, and that’s what Jimmy messes with as well. He has all these other opportunities in his new life, but people are still people. He’s still prone to the same desires, the same needs, the same fallibilities. If you brought everybody back into an already over-populated world, there’d just be a queue of people lining up to kick Hitler in the nuts.”

Rand Ravich: “Right. It’s that thing when you say I wouldn’t make those mistakes again, you probably won’t; you’re just going to make all different ones, which is what we love about the character, too. He’s very far from perfect and his trying and failing as he gets this second chance is what makes him so lovable and interesting.”

Did you have to do anything physically to get into the mindset of this character, to get into his body in order to embody him?

Rob Kazinsky: “Well, I’ve been a fighter most of life, lots of boxing and jiu-jitsu and lots of stunt work, lots of injuries. I’d say my body isn’t far off of a 75-year-old man’s body. Even yesterday, I woke up and I couldn’t move my head at all. I think my physicality fits quite nicely with an old man.”

Rand Ravich: “In your favor, in this technological world where people are just pushing buttons, Rob has a tremendous physicality that the old man Jimmy Pritchard’s lived a life on the street and was dealing with people and putting his hands on people. Rob has that physicality of an animal, a real person out in the world, which is very gratifying for the character. It works very well for it.”

What do you think will make the show appealing to viewers?

Rand Ravich: “I think there are a lot of moving parts to the show. I think there are a lot of really interesting questions to ask, and characters are going to, but the fundamental element which weirdly enough is how we ended up with our final and best title is the thing that everyone thinks about, from the kindergarten playground on, if only I had a chance to do that better. It’s driving home from every party. It’s when you get out of class or a marriage or a relationship or any experience, ‘God, I wish I had been there and could do it again.’

So, the idea of a second chance, the idea to go back and repair what you’ve done to your family and what you’ve done to your town and watching the unintended consequences ripple out of what you didn’t expect to happen this time, I think, because that’s a question everybody asks, and the specificity of the second chance in relation to family — I wish I had a second chance with my family, with my son, with my daughter. I think that’s questions, I think, we’ve all asked, consciously or unconsciously. I think that’s what’s going to draw people in.”

Rob, how difficult is the American accent for you to do? Is it fun or is it challenging?

Rob Kazinsky: “I’d love to see Rand’s face right now. American accent is a permanent barrier. It’s a struggle to fight with and it’s something I’ve never really had to do before. You develop a line of skills in your life to make this job work, and then suddenly there’s this whole new element to stand between you and finding the realism of it. That’s one of the great challenges of this job so far, for me, has been finding this character and how to make him a human being when there is this barrier, the things you instinctively want to say in your own voice and then filtering it through this augmented voice into this different accent. It’s almost a whole new character in itself.

There’s been a whole voyage of discovery for me of finding new ways of saying things and new ways of being, and what an accent informs in terms of physicality and in terms of repetition and in terms of mannerisms and habits. There’s been ups and downs with it, and only you and the viewers will be able to tell me how successful I was. It’s been a challenge but one that I’ve actually enjoyed 90% of the time.”

Rand, the series really features Rob as Jimmy, but you’ve got a really interesting group of supporting players, too. Is there one that you really like writing for and that you hope the audience really catches on to?

Rand Ravich: “They are so diverse. He was brought back in a science fiction landscape, but he is this man who has been sheriff of Seattle and lives on the streets as a sheriff all those years. I am writing for characters from these two distinct worlds. The character of Jimmy Pritchard is the most fun to write because he is the fish out of water. He is a hands-on, rough-and-tumble guy from another time who is thrust into this technological landscape of 2016. He is the most fun because it’s his viewpoint that’s so different from everybody else’s.

Diametrically opposed to that, the character of Duval [played by Tim DeKay], who plays his son, is an everyman. When you watch the show through his eyes it’s, ‘Holy s**t, my father who I had this tremendously problematic relationship with, is now back, younger than me, more handsome, and he cures cancer.’ To be with an everyman and watching the world unfold through Duval’s eyes is from a different point of view, but it is equally as interesting. Those two, those characters are the engine that drives the show, and they are incredibly interesting to write for.”

Rob Kazinsky: “Don’t tell Tim that you said I was more handsome than him.”

Rob, did you meet with Philip Baker Hall to look at his mannerisms and the way he carries himself?

Rob Kazinsky: “Not before we shot the pilot. We weren’t going to be able to get together before we actually started shooting. My research of him just consisted of watching all his movies, which, by the way, takes about seven years to do because he’s done so many. There was a lot of watching him and trying to mimic his manner of speaking and his delivery, and then when he was filming on set and the pilot, I would go and watch what he was doing and see the filming and then speak to [our co-stars who] were very helpful in the pilot because I would sit down and talk to them and say, ‘So how does it feel working with him? How does it feel when I’m working with you? What can I do to make it feel similar?’

There was a voyage of discovery, certainly, in the first couple of episodes of staying with it, but then obviously at some point, I had to evolve beyond that as well and was able to make him slightly more myself, I imagine.”

What would you say are Jimmy’s greatest weaknesses and strengths?

Rob Kazinsky: “Both, one in the same, they’re the person that he is. There’s the experience of his life which has led him to…that’s his greatest strength, the way that he understands people and he can read situations, read people. His desires and his wants give him a certain strength, but then at the same time, they are deep-seated negatives that detract from him being a decent person at times. The dichotomy of most human beings is that nobody’s perfect. So, his great strengths are also his big weaknesses.”

Tim Dekay and Rob Kazinsky in Second Chance
Tim DeKay and Rob Kazinsky in ‘Second Chance’ (Photo by Sergei Bachlakov © 2015 Fox Broadcasting Co)

What is the best part of filming the show?

Rob Kazinsky: “I’d probably say Tim DeKay is, for me. Rand writes these two great characters, and Tim and I get to have a really good time playing with them. Tim and I have developed a very good working relationship based on a lot of trust and mutual respect. Coming in to work with Tim every day has made my job an awful lot easier. His enormous experience has helped me find my character easier and make just working as hard as we’re working every day just that little bit easier.”

What kind of car is it that you’re driving in the series and that we’ve seen in the trailes? Did you have fun driving it?

Rob Kazinsky: “Correct me if I’m wrong, but it’s a ’72 Buick Riviera. Might be wrong on the year. Rand probably knows for sure.”

Rand Ravich: “I think it’s a ’71 but close enough.”

Rob Kazinsky: “’71. I was way off. Yes, so it’s a ’71 Buick Riviera, which looks amazing. It really does look amazing, but yet it’s awful. It’s like driving a boat in stormy weather. It has very little power, very little steering, it drifts, and I blew one up in the pilot. Like most classic cars, it’s a grumpy, old, out-of-its-time, not-up-to-date mess, just like Jimmy Pritchard. So, it’s a perfect car.”

Rob, there are some elements of the superhero to the rejuvenated Jimmy. What’s the best part of playing the enhanced Jimmy and what’s the worst?

Rob Kazinsky: “Interesting. I’d say the best thing about his enhanced powers is that they’re not ridiculous. They’re just essentially about the idea of what we could all be if we were at our best. Everybody has the capability of doing exceptional things physically. If you spent your life running, you’d be a great runner. If you spend your life lifting, you’d be very strong. We’re not talking about Superman here. We’re talking about the best that a human being can be.

The realism of that, that kind of — I really refrain using the term super powers. It’s just his power. It’s just who he is and it’s just not much more beyond what any human being could do if they were at their absolute utmost.

The worst thing about that is that I don’t lift up any cars or jump tall buildings or fly because those are things that are definitely on my bucket list to do.”




Brooke Shields is Back on TV with ‘Flower Shop Mystery: Mum’s the Word’

Brooke Shields Flower Shop Mystery
Brooke Shields in ‘Flower Shop Mystery: Mum’s the Word’ (Photo © Crown Media United States, LLC)

Brooke Shields returns to TV for Hallmark Movies & Mysteries’ newest franchise, Flower Shop Mystery, based on Kate Collins’ books. Shields leads the cast of Flower Shop Mystery: Mum’s the Word which is set to premiere on January 17, 2016 at 9pm ET/PT. Her co-stars include Beau Bridges and Brennan Elliott, with Shields, Nancy Bennett, Brad Krevoy, and Amanda Phillips Atkins executive producing. Gary Goldstein adapted Collins’ work and A Killer Among Us helmer Bradley Walsh directed the romantic drama.

The Plot: “Abby Knight (Shields), a former lawyer turned proud flower shop owner is starting over after the death of her husband with the support from her father (Bridges), a new business and her daughter off to college. Life is good in the peaceful town of New Chapel but when a black SUV rams her prized vintage car, she’s determined to track down the driver. She begrudgingly accepts the help of a new neighbor, the handsome and charming ex-Marine Marco Salvare (Elliott) who just bought the bar down the street. But their budding relationship is threatened when an acquaintance is murdered and Abby’s good friend is the prime suspect and it all links back to the hit and run. Caught up in a tangle of menacing phone calls, police corruption and murderous road rage, Abby must work against the clock to find the killer or the next flower arrangement might be for her own funeral.”

This new mystery series marks Shields’ first project for Hallmark Movies & Mysteries and at the 2016 Television Critics Association winter press event, she talked about now being a part of the Hallmark family.

Brooke Shields Interview:

What can you say about your character?

Brooke Shields: “I play an ex-lawyer but I remain a lawyer in my brain. [Laughing] I can’t help but meddle and solve mysteries in my town. I move out of the big city and I move my hometown to be closer to my daughter and my dad. I run a flower shop and it’s amazing what stuff I dig up!”


Is this less of a time commitment than a regular series? Are you busy with other projects?

Brooke Shields: “This is taking up a lot of time, even though it’s not a series. We’re doing 15 of these movies. They say they are doing them, so we’ve really been doing just that. I don’t know, I probably will be working on another series by this next go-around but right now I’m just concentrating on this. I have a book that just came out in paperback called There Was a Little Girl. It was on the bestselling list of the New York Times as a hardcover so now it’s on paperback.”

Is there a certain inspirational message about Hallmark that appeals to you about working with them?

Brooke Shields: “Absolutely. What’s been so refreshing is that it’s all about entertainment. You know, predominately about entertainment. I think especially in the world today what we see the minute we turn on TV, the images that we’re bombarded with, it’s really nice to be a part of a brand that is about entertainment. It pulls on your heartstrings but it also doesn’t make you feel bad. It makes you feel good. It’s wish fulfillment. It’s fun to do.

Ours is very comedic, so for me I love the comedy. We’ve amped up the comedy a lot more and I think that’s different for them with regards to the Mysteries. I said, ‘Look, if you’re going to have me we might as well amp up the comedy because it will differentiate itself from the rest.’”

Once you get attached to Hallmark projects, you never get out.

Brooke Shields: “I’m actually beginning to see that! I was like, ‘Wow, I’m in!’ But, no, there’s a sense of loyalty. It’s not just about propriety. I’m an executive producer as well. They’re actually interested in it being a collaborative process, and that’s rare.”

With your relationship to Broadway, what is your relationship to music as an actor?

Brooke Shields: “I’m more motivated by music than probably most things with regards to mood-altering. I find that the times that I’ve been on Broadway, I’ve been much more in tune to everything in my life including myself when I’m vocally aligned.”

Do you use music to prepare even in non-musical projects?

Brooke Shields: “All of the time. It depends on what the role is, what I want to listen to. When I’m jogging as Abbie, it depends on what the scene is. I think it’s important. It does affect you because it’s one of the senses that we often overlook.”

What’s on your playlist for this show?

Brooke Shields: “This one has run the gamut. Like, it’s really run the gamut from the stuff that I loved in the ‘80s to ‘40s, like some jazz. She’s very close to her dad and there’s a level of what I used to listen to with my family, my mom and my dad.”

What sort of shows do you watch with your kids?

Brooke Shields: Now we watch more Hallmark because now they’re obsessed. My kids feel like they’re in it. I watch Better Call Saul, but not with my kids.”

Do you still reflect back on Endless Love?

Brooke Shields: [Laughing] “I’m always reflecting back and marveling at the fact that I’m still here. I’m still answering questions!”

‘Penny Dreadful’ and ‘House of Lies’ 2016 Premiere Dates Set

Penny Dreadful Season 3 Photo

Showtime’s announced the premiere dates for House of Lies season five and Penny Dreadful season three. House of Lies starring Don Cheadle and Kristen Bell will return on Sunday, April 10, 2016 at 9pm ET/PT, and Penny Dreadful is scheduled to kick off on May 1st at 10pm ET/PT.

House of Lies is currently shooting an episode in Havana, Cuba, making it the first series to be shot there since diplomatic relations were restored.

Details on House of Lies Season Five:

Marty (series star and executive producer Don Cheadle) is now a man with a singular focus – ascending from millionaire mogul to global dominator. He’s upping the stakes in a highly calculated winner-take-all power play with the Pod – Jeannie (Kristen Bell), Clyde (Ben Schwartz) and Doug (Josh Lawson). Business is booming but, on the home front, he’s juggling a new baby daughter, teenage son Roscoe (Donis Leonard Jr.) and Jeremiah (Glynn Turman), who has a new girlfriend, Rita (guest star Emmy® winner Wanda Sykes). Additional guest stars for the fifth season include Emmy nominee Keegan-Michael Key (Key & Peele), Emmy nominee Ken Marino (Children’s Hospital), Emmy nominee Malcolm-Jamal Warner (Major Crimes), John Cho (Star Trek), Donald Faison (Scrubs), and Nicky Whelan (Matador, Franklin & Bash). From the hit tell-all book House of Lies: How Management Consultants Steal Your Watch and Tell You the Time by Martin Kihn, House of Lies stars Cheadle in his four-time Emmy-nominated and Golden Globe-winning performance as Marty Kaan. Produced by Showtime, it is created and executive produced by Matthew Carnahan. Jessika Borsiczky, Don Cheadle and David Walpert return as executive producers for season five.

Details on Penny Dreadful Season Three:

This season on Penny Dreadful, Tony® Award-winning star Patti LuPone (American Horror Story), who guest starred last season as the Cut-Wife, returns as a series regular in the new role of Dr. Seward, an American therapist who treats Vanessa (Eva Green) with an unconventional new approach. Wes Studi (Hell On Wheels) joins as a series regular as Kaetenay, an intense, enigmatic Native American with a deep connection to Ethan (Josh Hartnett) who also becomes an ally to Sir Malcolm (Timothy Dalton). The third season also adds Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Henry Jekyll (Shazad Latif). Other guest stars include Screen Actors Guild® Award nominee Christian Camargo as Dr. Alexander Sweet, a zoologist who strikes up an unlikely friendship with Vanessa; Sam Barnett as Dr. Seward’s mysterious young secretary; and Jessica Barden as Justine, a young acolyte to Lily (Billie Piper) and Dorian Gray (Reeve Carney), and Perdita Weeks as Catriona Hartdegan, a scholar with expert knowledge of the supernatural. Simon Russell Beale returns as Dr. Ferdinand Lyle. Rory Kinnear (as The Creature) and Harry Treadaway (as Dr. Frankenstein) also star.

Penny Dreadful is a frightening psychological thriller created, written and executive produced by three-time Oscar® nominee John Logan (Hugo, The Aviator, Gladiator) and executive produced by Logan’s Desert Wolf Productions, along with Oscar winner Sam Mendes (American Beauty, Skyfall) and Pippa Harris (Revolutionary Road, Call The Midwife), both of Neal Street Productions. Penny Dreadful is a co-production with SHOWTIME and Sky.

Heidi Klum, Mel B and Howie Mandel Return to ‘America’s Got Talent’

America's Got Talent Host Heidi Klum
Heidi Klum (Photo by: Andrew Eccles / NBC)

The judging panel has been set for the 11th season of NBC’s America’s Got Talent. NBC announced Heidi Klum and Mel B will return for their fourth seasons as judges and Howie Mandel will return for his seventh. It was previously announced Simon Cowell will also be taking a seat on AGT‘s judging panel. Nick Cannon is also confirmed to return as host.


“Howie, Mel and Heidi have an undeniable chemistry together and bring unbridled energy to everything they do,” said Paul Telegdy, President of Alternative and Late-Night Programming, NBC Entertainment. “We are very excited to bring them back along with Nick Cannon as host, and with the addition of creator Simon Cowell as a judge, the panel just got a little more interesting. We can’t wait for the new season to begin.”

“Without sounding too arrogant I am going to call us the Fantastic Four,” said Cowell. “I like this panel because they are slightly nuts. And now let’s find a star.”

“It’s great to have Howie, Mel, Heidi and Nick back on AGT and to welcome Simon and his unique judging style. This panel knows how to spot great talent and how to have a lot of fun while doing it. It’s going to be an entertaining season!” said Trish Kinane, FremantleMedia North America President of Entertainment Programming and AGT Executive Producer.

The search is underway for contestants for season 11, with auditions taking place in 12 cities including Kansas City (Jan. 23), Atlanta (Jan. 30), Los Angeles (Feb. 6), Orlando (Feb. 19) and Dallas (Feb. 27). For more info on the auditions, visit AGTAuditions.com.

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