Sugar Editorial Picks
Jul 10, 2008 -
The centerpiece of Wednesday's presentations at the TCA press tour was the panel discussion with the cast and creator of Mad Men. More than a few critics who were in the room called the session a total lovefest, and it's easy to understand why. Creator Matthew Weiner is legendarily tight-lipped with details about plot twists, but he and his actors did let a few tidbits slip in the session:
- Season two, which starts later this month, will pick up in February 1962, 14 months after the season one finale.
- As the show goes on, we can get used to those kinds of time jumps: Weiner has "a five-year plan" for covering the '60s, ending up in roughly 1968 by season five (though Weiner insists there's no plan set in stone for the series and its storylines).
- In the season's second episode, Pete Campbell will suffer a major tragedy, and the script will be about how someone reacts to bad news versus how they should react.
- The cast still only rarely gets recognized on the street, but one of the biggest tragedies for the female cast members is that they can't wear their own favorite vintage clothes anymore lest someone think they're in costume.
- The interaction that seems to best sum up Weiner's attitude about spoilers:
Question: What would you say to the viewers who will tune into the premiere and will want to know immediately what happened with Peggy and the baby?
- 5 Comments
Apr 05, 2007 -
Now that "The Black Donnellys" is officially canned, we'll get two hours of "Thank God You're Here," NBC's new improv show in which celebrities walk into a set-up scene and have to ad-lib their way through. The show debuts this coming Monday, April 9, but you don't have to wait to see it — the premiere episode is available online now.
My snap judgment: TV isn't the best showcase for improv, but this show isn't as bad as I'd feared.
- 6 Comments