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AMC Mad Men

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    AMC TCA party held at the Friar's Club, Los Angeles.

Comic Con '07

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TV Essentials

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    HDNet and Dallas Maverick iconoclast talks about his colonoscopy and other stuff. Relentlessly honest.
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    All around nice guy. Sweeping knowledge of the biz. To experience true, scrupulously fair and balanced reporting, go here.
  • Aaron Barnhart
    another midwestern critic, not easily fooled. His sly, dry wit will make you laugh. Iron fist in a velvet glove.
  • Maureen Ryan
    "Mo" Ryan: Unpretentious. Breathlessly informed. Prolific. If you can't watch everything, go here to keep up.

The Hopelessly Addictive 'Primeval' Comes to BBC America!

Finally! U.K.'s Primeval is here! Wheeeee! Saturday, Aug. 9 @9p.

Paleontologist Nick Cutter (Douglas Henshall) and his entourage converge on England's Forest of Dean following reports of terrifying beasts afoot. A Scutosaurus loose in the forest leads the scientists to an anomaly, a portal leading to Earth's late Permian period, 250 million years ago.

Prehistoric creatures slip through the portal, creating much real time havoc. Cutters' beloved wife also disappeared years ago in the Forest of Dean.

"Every single thing we thought we knew about the universe is wrong," says Cutter.

Whew! To say the series premise is big and bold is something of an understatement. Ten minutes into the pilot I was hopelessly hooked. This show is addictive. Yes, the premise is bold and predators seethe, but the characters will draw you in like a black hole.

CLICK HERE FOR THE REST OF MY REVIEW

BBC America's High-Octane Torchwood: Car Chases! Shoot-outs! Brawls! & The Big Snog

It’s late. The streets of Cardiff, Wales are empty, and shiny from a recent rain. One elderly woman totters to an intersection as a spicy red convertible pulls up. The driver – an alien with a spiny head – peers over the door.

The walk sign shifts from red to green. “Ehhhhhh,” hisses the creature. It motions the woman safely across, then rips away.

Seconds later, a black SUV approaches. “Excuse me,” asks the passenger ever-so graciously, “have you seen a blowfish driving a sportscar?”

The elderly pedestrian silently points up the street and the SUV charges off into the night.

“Bloody Torchwood!” grumbles the woman.

It’s the opening scene in BBC America's season two Torchwood which premieres Saturday, January 26, 9:00 p.m. ET/PT.

The launch is an action-packed, blazing hour of non-stop television fun. A car chase, a shootout, and a bar brawl ensue – and that’s just the first fifteen minutes or so!

CLICK HERE FOR MORE OF THE TORCHWOOD REVIEW

HDNet to Air Torchwood

HDNet just announced that they have acquired the HD rights to the first twenty-six episodes of Torchwood, the darker cousin spin-off of BBC's Dr. Who series starring John Barrowman as Captain Jack Harkness.

CLICK HERE FOR THE REST OF THE STORY!

ComicCon: Crowds Go for Torchwood.

Yesterday's BBC America ComicCon panel celebrating the U.S. launch of Torchwood, the Dr. Who spin-off, attracted a capacity/SRO crowd in the 1500 seat room. Lines formed 90 minutes before the presentation's start and snaked down and around the hallways.

Once seated, fans were treated to lengthy clips from the pilot episode. They cheered loudly when star John Barrowman (Captain Jack Harkness) appeared on screen. The panelists took the stage and the moderator slogged through the required softening up questions like (paraphrasing) "were you nervous about doing a spin-off of an iconic series" and "was it intimidating?"

However, the panelists - Torchwood producers and writers - were a tough group to crack. While unfailingly polite, they steadfastly resisted handing out spoilers and/or other details of consequence.

Lead writer Chris Chibnall praised Barrowman in a lighthearted manner.

"We knew we had John Barrowman - we knew it had to be fun, it had to be outrageous, it had to be dramatic, we had to build a team around him." said Chibnall. Then, quoting someone else's remark, "'I can't imagine any other actor in the world [playing the part]...it's just the perfect fusion of actor and part.' He's a proper hero, a proper leading man. The kids love him. The adults love him."

Chibnall finished up brightly. "He's an omni-sexual 51st Century guy. That's how we like our heroes in Britain these days."

Then producer Richard Stokes broke in. Stokes wasn't speaking into the mic consistently so his remarks were garbled in a few spots but I believe he was talking about Eve Myles who plays Gwen Cooper.

"He [Russell T. Davies] also knew he wanted Eve [garbled] who is one of the most talented tv actors I've EVER worked with," Stokes gushed like a firehose, "she's absolutely extraordinary [garbled] In every thing she does...she's absolutely extraordinary. and Russell knew and so wrote the part for her."

Thankfully, the fans took the mic and asked the hard questions. One wondered if British television series would ever launch simultaneously in the U.S. Another solicited comment on whether or not persons of color were treated fairly in terms of character development (apparently a subject of debate on the Internet) on Dr. Who. Audience members thanked the writers for developing bi-sexual characters in a complex manner. One said she read that Torchwood - a more adult show that airs in Great Britain at a later hour in the evening than Dr. Who - was heavily censored for U.S. consumption. Chibnall adamantly denied the charge and asserted that only two to three minutes had been sliced from the running time of each episode.

Chibnall's assertion closely syncs with what the press was told during the TCA/BBC America Torchwood panel. (See my TCA/Torchwood post.) Many in the ComicCon audience had already accessed the British version so fans will surely be keeping close tabs on the BBC America edits.

Another audience member observed that Torchwood is "not your typical spin-off" and wondered if there was a "partnership between the two shows." He called Torchwood more of a "sister show." The writers confirmed the observation and said there was a "fantastically collaborative spirit" between the Torchwood and Dr. Who. Much like the Vancouver-based Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis, the productions share writers, directors and, sometimes, actors. Torchwood and Dr. Who share one unit base because it was the only studio tall enough to accommodate both sets, according to the panelists.

Torchwood at TCA: Barrowman Charms

Television Critics Association/Los Angeles

Yesterday's Torchwood/BBC America panel was only slightly less rambunctious than the Jekyll session when writer-creator Steven Moffat cheerfully slagged NBC over the American version of Coupling. John Barrowman, the Torchwood lead, seemed to relax as the panel progressed.

Torchwood, a spin-off of the enormously popular British Dr. Who series, is a Cardiff Wales-based crime fighting unit that battles sewer-dwelling aliens. Barrowman plays Captain Jack Harkness, a cheeky character on Who that takes a serious turn on Torchwood.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS POST ON MY MULTICHANNEL BLOG.

BBC America to Revamp News; Coupling/Jekyll Scribe Steven Moffat Slags NBC

Television Critics Association/Los Angeles.

Garth Ancier, the fresh prez of BBC America, announced yesterday that the BBCA 7p news feed of BBC World will soon be replaced by what he called a "special U.S-facing, hour-long newscast " provided by BCC World. Ancier noted that BBCnews.com and BBC.com are "together the 5th largest website source of news" in the U.S.

"It's kind of extraordinary when you realize it's based in London, " mused Ancier, "so looking at this from a news background standpoint, having come from CNN, I thought this was a huge asset." Ancier said he wanted to raise the profile of BBC news in the U.S. but provided no further details.

With the formal announcements out of the way, Ancier turned his attention to the panels which he anchored in a living room-like setting on stage. TCA panels can be stiff and overly rehearsed. Not so with the sometimes raucous BBCA sessions which showcased three, new upcoming series - Jekyll, a modern day Jekyll & Hyde story with an X-Files twist; Torchwood, the Dr. Who spin-off based on the popular Captain Jack character; and Hotel Babylon, a series set in an ultra-chic hotel.

The Brits proved to be far more willing than their publicist-leashed American counterparts to give straightforward answers and to engage in the occasional potty humor.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS POST ON MY MULTICHANNEL BLOG

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