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Wednesday
Jun272012

No Touching: 'Arrested Development' Gets Its Own Art Show

(Via LAist)

The past year has been good to fans of Arrested Development. Though the cult-hit TV show met an untimely death in 2006, its creators announced official plans to revive the show for Netflix and the big screen.

We have even more good news for fans of the show’s notorious but lovable Bluth family: Gallery 1988 in Los Angeles will be hosting an art exhibit based on the show called "There’s Always Money In The Banana Stand." (It’s a joke that only requires viewing of the first two episodes of the first season to understand). It’s fitting that the show will take place in L.A. since much of the show was filmed in areas around Culver City and Marina Del Rey.

Gallery 1988, known for showing pop culture-based art, announced that the show will have an opening reception on June 29 from 7 until 10 p.m. The exhibition will run through July 21 (Editor's note: an earlier version of this post incorrectly stated that the exhibition was one night only). 1988 curator Jensen Karp said:

"We always saw Arrested Development as art. In a sense that it's not expected that everyone is going get it, and you had to have some context and knowledge of its history to fully understand it. It became famous and well-regarded after its demise (like every master artist), and now, in 2012, it's influence is seen everywhere. We're just as excited as everyone else that it's coming back to Netflix, but we also want to celebrate the cult that is Arrested Development by showing just what type of art it was."


The exhibit will gather the paintings, prints, sculptures and plush dolls of more than 80 artists to celebrate the Bluths in all their multi-layered comedic glory.

We don’t know for sure, but we assume there will be "No touching."

Gallery 1988 is located at 7020 Melrose Ave in Los Angeles.

 

By Lenika Cruz

Thursday
Jun212012

Tim Heidecker of 'Tim and Eric' to guest on 'Workaholics'

(Via Entertainment Weekly)

Tim Heidecker is about to find strength in God: The star of the Adult Swim cult favorite Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! will pop up on an upcoming episode of Comedy Central’s Workaholics as the leader of “The Lord’s Force,” EW has learned.

What exactly is “The Lord’s Force,” you ask? Series star Adam DeVine describes it to us as “a religious group of weight lifters that use the power of the Lord to break baseball bats over their knees.”

When Adam (DeVine), Ders (Anders Holm) and Blake (Blake Anderson) welcome a few members of this unusual faith-based strong man group into their home, all hell (heaven?) breaks loose.

The episode airs July 10 as part of the show’s third season, which has also featured The Black Keys and Rumer Willis.

Wednesday
Jun202012

'Futurama' Goes Live Action: Season 7 Premieres Tonight!

(Via Screencrush.com)

'Futurama' Season 7 is finally coming after the months of anticipation. So what better way to prepare the general public for one of the most entertaining animated shows out there than by putting out an ad that’ll really catch everyone’s eyes.

To promote ‘Futurama’ Season 7, they created live-action opening credits now appearing on Comedy Central. No, you won’t be seeing anybody dressed up as Fry or Bender, but it’s a very cute model replica of what the world of Futurama looks like if it were all made out of cardboard and other art supplies you’d find at Michaels. It’s a very creative way to show off the widely loved series.

‘Futurama’ is created by Matt Groening, the same kooky mastermind behind ‘The Simpsons.’ It’s great to see that this show still has enough of a fan base to warrant another season. It wasn’t looking too good there for awhile but many of us are happy to see Fry and the rest of the Planet Express crew on cable.

 

 Check out the live-action opening credits below along with a behind-the-scenes video that shows off how they made the cool set. ‘Futurama’ season seven will air on Comedy Central this Wednesday at 10 PM, kicking off the season with a two-hour special.

 

Friday
Jun152012

Celebrate Half Christmas June 25th with 'Workaholics'

(Via Press Relase)

NEW YORK, June 14, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Break out the eggnog and gather up your friends, it's the "Workaholics'" special time of year again...Half-Christmas! Co-workers and roommates "Adam," "Blake" and "Ders" are celebrating their favorite holiday on-air and online in the days leading up to Monday, June 25.

COMEDY CENTRAL is enlisting the fans of "Workaholics" to help spread the half-holiday cheer! Fans can visit the official

"Workaholics" Tumblr (workaholics.tumblr.com) for a "6 Days of Half-Xmas" party prep guide, complete with holiday drink and food recipes, decorating and craft ideas, ideas on what to wear, tips on how to celebrate in the workplace, and more. As the holiday nears, fans can use the "invitation generator" on the show's Web site to send a "Workaholics"-themed Half-Xmas party invite to their friends. And on June 25, Half-Christmas Day, show fans can share in the larger celebration by posting their party photos to Instagram and tagging them #halfxmas. A custom area of the "Workaholics" Facebook page will pull together all Instagrammed photos in one place for all to see. Viewers can also participate in the on-air "Find the Hash" stunt where fans must search for hidden hashtags inside the "The Strike" episode and tweet for a chance to win Half-Xmas presents.

COMEDY CENTRAL has programmed a day full of holiday shows to honor the festive occasion! Snuggle up by the fire and watch some of your holiday favorites on Monday, June 25:

10:00 A.M. - "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation"12:00 P.M. - "Bad Santa"2:00 P.M. - "Jeff Dunham's Very Special Christmas Special"3:00 P.M. - "Crank Yankers" 3:30 P.M. - "Futurama" "X-mas Story" and "A Tale of Two Santas"4:30 P.M. - "Tosh.0"5:00 P.M. - "South Park" "Mr. Hankey The Christmas Poo" and "A Very Crappy Christmas"6:00 P.M. - "Futurama" "The Futurama Holiday Spectacular"6:30 P.M. - "South Park" "Christmas in Canada?"7:00 P.M. - "The Colbert Report"7:30 P.M. - "The Daily Show"8:00 P.M. - "Jeff Dunham's Very Special Christmas Special"9:00 P.M. - "Workaholics" "The Strike"

Thursday
Jun072012

'Parks and Recreation' Among Top Contenders for Critics Choice TV Awards

(Via GoldDerby)

The Broadcast Television Journalist Assn. announced nominations for the second annual Critics' Choice TV Awards Tuesday. Leading with six bids is "Community," which has been snubbed by the Emmy Awards for its first two seasons.

With five nods apiece are "Parks and Recreation" (another NBC laffer that has yet to win a top Emmy) and "Mad Men," a four-time Emmy winner for Best Drama Series. 

The organization emphasized the "broadcast" part of its name with over-the-air nets leading the nominations. NBC may be in fourth place in the ratings but came first with 14 bids while ABC has 13 and Fox 12 (CBS has nine). Cablecaster HBO, which has reaped the most Emmy nominations for years, was cited a dozen times while AMC and FX each have 11 noms. 

"Community" and "Parks and Recreation" contend for Best Comedy Series against last year's champ "Modern Family" and freshman series "Girls" and "New Girl," all of which reaped five bids as well as "The Big Bang Theory" (2 noms).

"Mad Men" defends its Best Drama Series title against "Breaking Bad" (4 noms), "Downton Abbey" (2), "Game of Thrones" (2), "The Good Wife" (4) and "Homeland" (3). 

The BTJA is an offshoot of the group that gives out the Critics' Choice Movie Awards. However, unlike those prizes which include many of the Oscar categories, these do not include any recognition of the directors and writers responsible for television's finest programming.

Last year, the BTJA did not acknowledge the TV movie and mini-series genres but remedied that this time around. Indeed, they preview what the Emmys will look like next year by combining the lead and supporting categories for this genre. 

Last year, the top comedy and drama races included 10 series each. This year, those fields, as well as all others, are restricted to six nominees, echoing the Emmy races. 

 

Friday
Jun012012

In Season Premiere, 'Workaholics' Does What it Does Best

(Via Huffington Post)

I'm not going to give you a number, but I'm pretty sure I fall just outside the older end of Workaholics' target demographic. So I shouldn't be surprised that most recent comedy series aimed at the dorm room set -- Adult Swim's Loiter Squad and Workaholics' schedule-mate Tosh.0 (a show I consider borderline evil) spring to mind -- leave me more than a little cold. The real shock is that Workaholics (which debuted its double-sized third season on Comedy Central Tuesday) doesn't. Creator/stars Adam DeVine, Anders Holm and Blake Anderson (along with director and recurring player Kyle Newacheck) have found a way to transcend the current state of slacker comedy by offering a sharp authorial vision, great ensemble timing, incredibly specific pop culture references and even a satirical agenda (albeit a razor-thin one).

The three leads play friends, roommates and coworkers at a fairly soulless telemarketing company, bringing to light an experience fairly common among recent college graduates: the seemingly endless limbo of working a job for which you have very little interest just so you can afford to party as hard (or harder) than you did in college. The series indulges the young adult fantasy (like a lot of other series in the same vein), but allows itself room for a mild critique of the unsustainability of this kind of lifestyle. It rarely hands out any kind of sustained victory, making the misadventures of Blake, Anders and Adam perversely endearing. Sure, these guys are self-indulgent fools for the time being, but they go to work on time, do an adequate job, have defined ambitions and one day may actually figure the whole thing out.

Not that we'll ever see that resolution; for now it's fun to watch these guys spin in circles. In the season premiere "The Business Trip," the three plan an elaborate evening at home with some LSD (as Blake notes, "The house is acid-proof. But the world is not acid-proof."). Spoiling the party is Anders, the most driven of the group, who opts for a sales conference with their boss, Alice, instead. So Adam and Blake (along with their drug dealer, Karl, played by Newacheck) relocate to the conference hotel to carry out the original plan. When it's revealed that a potential big client (Kiersten Warren) typically gives her business to whomever can get her the most inebriated, well, you can kind of fill in the rest (it's a blur of black light posters, exotic dancers, indoor fireworks, and kiddie pools filled with ice).

The episode indulges in Workaholics' typically crude humor -- some running commentary on hotel porno, Adam fantasizing about a female deity's "big ol' god titties," a hallucinating Blake mistaking a certain part of a male stripper's anatomy for an attacking dragon. But there's a certain art to a well-told dick joke, and Workaholics has come pretty close to mastering it. That's in large part due to strong performances that work equally well in revealing subtle character details as in wildly broad comedic set pieces. And the three leads have managed to effectively differentiate their characters from one another (even without revealing much back story or developing ongoing story arcs) while still demonstrating why their individual forms of arrested development drew them together to begin with.

It might seem odd to praise a show like Workaholics for its ambition, but it's clearly aimed as more than a tossed-off trifle. Perhaps the higher compliment is to say that it's confident in its own skin and seldom over-reaches. "The Business Trip" actually suffers a bit from its overuse of special effects to sell the group's acid hallucinations. While a few of these pieces were solid (Alice's picking apart of a desk made of Jello made for an interesting visual), more often they felt like stereotypical and well-trod bits of artificial craziness. But these kinds of missteps are rare; the show usually sticks to what it does best. Judging by the relatively broad range of stories DeVine, Anderson and Holm have been able to tell with these characters (I mean, it's kind of a shock that it took more than two seasons for the guys to drop acid), Workaholics may be able to maintain a refined (though raunchy) comedic sensibility for a long time to come.

"The Business Trip" is a confident, funny season-opener for a show that has a very strong sense of what it does well. While it lacks the emotional resonance of the best current sitcoms (like Parks and Recreation or even Community), Workaholics knows well enough not to go for those beats. And on a pure laughs-per-minute level, it's certainly in the same ballpark. Speaking as someone who's a bit out of their demo, I'm hoping these guys can stay this sharp. They've built a solid foundation of humor that's crude, earnest, and yes, even smart.

Mark Lashley