“Breaking Bad,” the brutal saga of an everyman’s ambition turned evil, captured its first best drama Emmy Award on Sunday, while “Modern Family” won its fourth consecutive trophy for top comedy series.
TV
The late Johnny Carson is coming back to NBC. The network said Thursday that it is developing a miniseries based on the life of the talk show host, who ruled late-night television as host of the “Tonight” show from 1962 to 1992.
It’s still bloody. It’s still good. But it hasn’t been bloody good for a while now.
Emmy Awards crystal-ball gazing was so much easier in the old days, circa the last few years: ABC’s “Modern Family” would be honored as best comedy series and a cable show, “Homeland” or “Mad Men” or such, would win best drama.
AMC is keeping “Mad Men” around an extra year, expanding the final season of this acclaimed drama series to 14 episodes and portioning them equally in 2014 and 2015.
Brady Williams has five wives, 24 children but no organized religion. The newest polygamous family from Utah on reality TV considers itself progressive and independent.
Arsenio Hall is back in late night, partying like it’s 1989.
Sure, they helped save the world in “The Avengers.” But can they save the fall TV season?
AMC is calling Saul Goodman for a spinoff of the network’s drama series “Breaking Bad.”
He makes a better leading man than a second banana.
DuShaunt “Fik-Shun” Stegall, an 18-year-old dancer on the Strip — as in the sidewalks in front of the casinos — will draw bigger crowds now as the winner of “So You Think You Can Dance.”
The “Boardwalk Empire” (9 p.m. Sunday, HBO) roster has always been overstuffed.
Busy cancer patient Valerie Harper leads a class of 12 amateur hoofers in the upcoming 17th season of “Dancing With the Stars.”
Yolanda McClary was the basis for a longtime TV crime solver.
It’s one thing for a business dispute to knock out CBS programming in some three million homes during rerun season. Football season is another matter entirely, and there’s little immediate cause for optimism.
A recent Wall Street Journal poll of leading economists put the probability of the United States going into recession over the next 12 months at 63 percent. Conventional wisdom is that the Federal Reserve Bank will continue raising interest rates to combat stubborn high inflation, thereby slowing the economy and causing gross domestic product to […]
Stand-up Nate Bargatze scored unexpectedly with an immediately iconic portrayal of George Washington in a skit dubbed “Washington’s Dream.”
Andy Walmsley won an Emmy for “American Idol,” and his latest idol is a puppet named Artie.
The new shop marks the chef and TV personality’s sixth restaurant in Las Vegas, and the fourth with Caesars Entertainment.
The restaurant draws inspiration from hit Netflix titles and continues the launching of experiences by the streaming service.