October 21, 2014
‘Gotham’ Recap: Gordon Puts Everything Right, Before the Commercial Break
This week tracked a new colorful villain and the Penguin’s rise in the Gotham underworld.
Johnny Weir and Tara Lipinski, whose analysis drew praise during the Winter Olympics in Sochi, have earned an expected promotion to the lead team for the sport on the NBC Sports Group.
The hidden-camera shows “Freak Out” on ABC Family and “Deal With It” on TBS go all out on Halloween.
The actor who played the inventor on “Fraggle Rock” was born in Dublin and had lived in Canada since the 1950s.
In a bid to expand its own audience, the social media and blogging site is reaching out to fans of certain shows through deals with the shows’ creators.
The Saturday-morning CBS series “Pee-wee’s Playhouse,” now in a Shout! Factory collection, was a riot of invention that alternated between the sweet and the risqué.
An old-fashioned sitcom is poised to make her TV’s new working-class comedian.
Kaitlyn Dever talks about new films, “Men, Women & Children” and “Laggies.”
The Oscar-winning actress Frances McDormand, who set the HBO mini-series “Olive Kitteridge” in motion and stars in it, chafes at Hollywood’s conventions and defies its norms.
In “Tony Bennett & Lady Gaga: Cheek to Cheek Live!,” Friday night on PBS, this musical odd couple takes on the Great American Songbook.
In the dystopian parables filling television and movie screens, the dividing line seems to be class conflict.
David Caspe, the creator of “Marry Me,” told executives in pitch meetings that he planned to propose to Casey Wilson to help sell the show.
The Cinema Arts Center on Long Island isn’t saying which episodes Norman Lear has chosen for his “three of my favorites” appearance.
The Lincoln Futura, a concept car of the mid-1950s, would find new life a decade later, when it was transformed for a television show.
The mistake raises questions about the company’s increasingly criticized system for measuring TV audiences.
“Jane the Virgin” on CW and ‘Cristela” on ABC illustrate how much the setting and format matter when vibrant new talent is introduced on TV.
The hosts of “Ghost Stalkers” aren’t just looking for spirits; they’re looking for “wormholes,” or portals into the everyday world from the supernatural one.
“Somebody’s Gotta Do It” more than doubled the usual CNN audience at 9 p.m. among a younger demographic.
How to wade through the crush of culture coming your way this season? Here’s a guide to 100 events that have us especially excited, in order of appearance.