Saturday, August 30, 2008

Steven Bocho is Back with RAISING THE BAR


STEVEN BOCHO, CREATOR OF LA LAW, HILL STREET BLUES, AND NYPD BLUE is back on TV with a new legal drama, Raising The Bar



With a balanced scale in her hand and a cloth covering her eyes, Lady Justice represents the principles of fairness and blind objectivity. Nowhere is this symbol more relevant – and more challenged – than in the courtroom battle between district attorney and public defender.
This is the compelling foundation of TNT’s RAISING THE BAR, a powerful new legal drama from Emmy® winning producer Steven Bochco. The gripping series stars Mark-Paul Gosselaar (NYPD Blue), Gloria Reuben (ER) and Jane Kaczmarek (Malcolm in the Middle) and follows the lives of young lawyers who work on opposite sides – the public defender’s office and the district attorney’s office – as well as those who sit in judgment on their cases. The series, which was created by Bochco and lawyer/writer David Feige (author of Indefensible), is set to premiere Monday, Sept. 1, at 10 p.m. (ET/PT).
RAISING THE BAR not only looks at courtroom battles but also the relationships among people on different sides. “The primary characters are a group of young public defenders and prosecutors who go up against each other during the day, but they’re friends and hang out with each other at night,” Bochco says. “They argue and negotiate with each other. They are dedicated players within what we feel is a broken criminal justice system.”
Bochco points out that the series strives to provide a balanced view of the system and those who work within it. “RAISING THE BAR is not geared specifically toward the public defenders or the prosecutors,” he says. “We try to give equal time to both points of view, with an eye toward revealing the extent to which the system doesn’t work very well. It certainly doesn’t have all that much to do with justice. It has more to do with keeping the conveyor belt turning, the idea that if every case in the system goes to trial, the system grinds to a halt.”
In RAISING THE BAR, Gosselaar plays Jerry Kellerman, an idealistic public defender who will stop at nothing to help those who cannot help themselves. Reuben plays Rosalind Whitman, Jerry’s passionate and protective boss. Teddy Sears (Ugly Betty) is Richard Patrick Woolsley, who foregoes a cushy job in his father’s firm to work for the public defender’s office. [b]Natalia Cigliuti (All My Children) is Roberta “Bobbi” Gilardi, a new member of the team who quickly proves she can hold her own against even the toughest courtroom opponent.[/b]
On the opposite side, Melissa Sagemiller (Sleeper Cell) plays Michelle Ernhardt, an attorney in the DA’s office who struggles with balancing the need to win cases with the desire to see justice done. She works for assistant DA Nick Balco, played by Currie Graham (Boston Legal), whose razor-sharp knowledge of the law is countered by his easy manipulation of it. They are joined by J. August Richards (Conviction) as Marcus McGrath, who is relentless in putting criminals behind bars.
The courtroom arena where they face off belongs to Judge Trudy Kessler, played by Kaczmarek. She is imperious, treating the courtroom as her own private fiefdom as she prepares to make a political run to become the next district attorney. Working for her is law clerk Charlie Sagansky, played by Jonathan Scarfe (Into the West), a man with a wealth of secrets.
(source: TNT.tv)

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

J.J. ABRAMS TALKS ABOUT FRINGE


(Pictured:J.J. Abrams, creator of Fringe)
Lost's J.J. Abrams is returning to TV with the fall's most-buzzed about new show, FRINGE (premieres Tuesday, Sep. 9 at 9 pm/ET, Fox).


Coming off successful shows as Felicity, Alias and Lost, Abrams is understandably nervous.

As Abrams said in an interview with TV Guide: "I feel the pressure every time. I felt it on Felicity, on Alias, on Lost, and I feel it on Fringe. It goes with the territory. But I'm far more excited about people seeing it than I am nervous that they may not like it."


The show revolves around a female FBI agent who investigates bizarre cases with the help of a formerly institutionalized scientist and his equally brilliant but estranged son.


When assked if the FRINGE will have an ongoing story line be ongoing, like Lost's?


Abrams says, "For the most part, you'll be able to tune in whenever you want and get it. You'll have a beginning, middle and an end. But if you want to track the big bad guy and the big overarching story, you can do that, too."


Abrams shows have featured some strong female characters, most noteably Alias' Sydney Bristow, and now FRINGE'S Olivia. "It's funny because I don't consciously write strong women. I just hopefully write strong characters who may happen to be women. If Olivia were a guy, I don't know that you'd be saying, 'Oh, it's a strong male.' But what I love about Olivia is she's got a lot going on that's just barely alluded to in the pilot. And Anna [Torv] is so good because she's clearly the prettiest person in the room, but she's not inaccessible. She's not phony pretty. When I saw her audition, I had the same undeniable feeling I had when I saw Jennifer Garner or Evangeline Lilly", says Abrams.


Though Abrams' last few years have been focused on film having directed Mission Impossible and the upcoming Star Trek movie, he says that whenever he gets to do telievision, he feels like "the luckiest person in the world."


Source: TV Guide: To watch clips of Fringe: Online Video Guide.

Susan Lucci, Lance Bass, Kim Kardashian on New Season Of Dancing With The Stars


The Cast of seventh season on Dancing With The Stars were announced on Good Morning America this morning. Dancing this season are:
• Susan Lucci, Emmy-award winning soap opera actress, 61, and Tony Dovolani

• Toni Braxton, singer, 40, and season one DWTS champ Alec Mazo

• Lance Bass, singer, 29, and Lacey Schwimmer

• Ted McGinley, actor, 50, and Inna Brayer

• Cloris Leachman, actress, 82, and Corky Ballas

• Warren Sapp, former NFL star, 35, and Kym Johnson

• Rocco DiSpirito, chef, 31, and Karina Smirnoff

• Kim Kardashian, TV personality, 27, and reigning DWTS champ Mark Ballas

• Maurice Green, Olympic gold medalist track and field star, 34, and two-time DWTS champ Cheryl Burke

• Misty May-Treanor, Olympic gold medalist beach volleyball player, 31, and Maksim Chmerkovskiy


• Jeffrey Ross, 42, comedian, and Edyta Sliwinska• Cody Linley, 18, actor, and two-time DWTS champ Julianne Hough

• Brooke Burke, 36, TV personality, and Derek Hough
Kardashian, best known for starring in her family's reality show, "Keeping Up With The Kardashian's had a minor injury when she cut her foot in her hotel room on the eve of the announcement. "I'll definately be able to dance", when show host Tom Bergeron asked her about her injury.
Daytime Diva, Susan Lucci said the although she had been asked to compete on the show in prior season but made the decision after talking to All My Children co-star Cameron Mathison who competed for the know famous Mirror Ball Trophy last season.
Dancing The Stars seventh season begins on Monday September 22 on ABC.

Monday, August 25, 2008

American Idol Adds Fourth Judge..


Move over Paula. There's another guest at the table for Fox's American Idol.
Fox announced this morning that the show's eighth season will feature a fourth judge. It's Kara DioGuardi, a songwriter/producer who's worked with past Idol champs Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood, and Taylor Hicks (as well as working with Davids Cook and Archuleta, Clay Aiken, Bo Bice, and Katharine McPhee), not to mention Avril Lavigne, Pink, Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Miley Cyrus, the Jonas Brothers, Natasha Bedingfield, Jewel, Marc Anthony, and a host of others. Plus, she has some contest-judging experience, from MTV's short-lived Idol-esque show The One. Her own attempt at singing stardom, in the duo Platinum Weird with Eurythmic Dave Stewart, didn't really take off, but her credentials as a hitmaker for others are solid, at least.
(photo: Getty Images)