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Will rookies dominate the Emmys? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Christopher Lisotta   
Monday, 16 August 2010 13:35

If the first time is a charm, then 2010 could be shaping up as a downright charming year for a host of rookie Emmy nominees.

As voting wraps up Tuesday, buzz is building behind freshmen series "The Good Wife," "Glee" and "Modern Family," any of which could wrest key wins from veteran series like "30 Rock" and "Mad Men," which have become the shows to beat.
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Don't be too surprised to see fresh actor faces on stage at the Nokia Theatre on Aug. 29. While the Emmys have a reputation for rewarding favorites ("The Amazing Race," anyone?), the reality is that debut performances often catch the eye of voters.

The TV Academy has had no problem giving away Emmy statuettes to first-time actor nominees, especially "if there is a nice momentum" for their series or their performances, says Wesley Hyatt, a TV historian and the author of "Emmy Award Winning Nighttime Television Shows 1948-2004."

In 1971, Jean Stapleton won the lead actress in a comedy Emmy for CBS' new hit "All in the Family," while fellow rookie sitcom "Mary Tyler Moore" nabbed a supporting actor Emmy for Ed Asner and a supporting actress statuette for Valerie Harper. Besides writing and directing nods that year, "All in the Family" also went on to win a category where most debuting shows come up short: outstanding series.

"MTM" didn't win a comedy series Emmy for five seasons, while seminal genre-definers "M*A*S*H," "Seinfeld," "Everybody Loves Raymond," "The Sopranos" and "ER" failed to make the series win their first season out as well (it took the slower-to-catch-on "Seinfeld" and "Raymond" a couple seasons to even get nominated).

"It's typical to have to wait and win in this category," Hyatt says.

But Hyatt can't deny the current enthusiasm surrounding "Glee" and its genre-bending use of music, wit and drama, and "Modern Family," which he calls a "fresh twist on the family sitcom." He hesitates to handicap both series' chances, particularly in the acting categories, where both shows have multiple nominations. Because actors submit individual episodes of their own choosing for Emmy consideration, Hyatt argues that prognosticating a winner is impossible.

Still, nominees as diverse as January Jones (lead actress drama, "Mad Men") and Kyle Chandler (lead actor drama, "Friday Night Lights") have a real shot to win for their first nom in the category.

The unpredictability of the comedy supporting actress race has been lost on "Modern Family" co-star Julie Bowen, who is shooting a feature in Nova Scotia.

"I haven't exactly been in the party swirl," Bowen says. "I was offered free haddock, but I'm not sure if it's Emmy related."

Despite five acting nominations for "Family," "There hasn't been a big group hug," she explains, because everyone has been on hiatus. Bowen's biggest dilemma will come from her own voting, where she must make a hard choice in the supporting actor category between colleagues Ty Burrell, Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Eric Stonestreet.

"The only thing that sucks is that I have to vote for ONE guy," she says. "My TV husband? My TV brother? My TV kind of brother-in-law? That's just mean."

Of course, another choice for Bowen is to vote for the other newcomer in the category, "Glee" co-star Chris Colfer, who is having to share the spotlight with the six other nominated actors from his show.

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Fox host Bill O'Reilly slams Jennifer Aniston for saying women don't need men to raise children PDF Print E-mail
Written by Meena Hartenstein   
Thursday, 12 August 2010 03:31

Here's a celebrity feud you didn't see coming -- Fox News Anchor Bill O'Reilly has lashed out at Jennifer Aniston, calling the actress "destructive to our society."

O'Reilly railed at Aniston on his show Wednesday for comments she made about single motherhood.

"Women are realizing more and more that you don't have to settle, they don't have to fiddle with a man to have that child," Aniston said recently while promoting her new film "The Switch," a comedy about artificial insemination.

"They are realizing if it's that time in their life and they want this part, they can do it with or without that," she said.

Conservative talk show host O'Reilly hosted a round table discussion on Wednesday to address the actress' comments.

"She's throwing a message out to 12-year-olds and 13-year-olds that hey, you don't need a guy, you don't need a dad," he said. "That's destructive to our society."

O'Reilly went on to argue that remarks like Aniston's are hurtful to fathers, saying, "She's diminishing the role of the dad."

Questions about Aniston's potential future as a single mother have swirled since her split with Brad Pitt, and the actress has said repeatedly that she still wants to be a mom someday.

"I have said it years before and I still say it today," she said during her film's press conference.

But unlike the character she plays in "The Switch," Aniston won't be heading to the sperm bank: "I don't have plans on that, no."

O'Reilly did defend Aniston against Fox & Friends Anchor Gretchen Carlson, who said the former "Friends" star made the remarks in relation to her own personal life.

"In her private life she's a 41-year old single woman who's never been married, and probably has not ruled out the chance of having a baby," Carlson said.

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Teresa Giudice of the 'Real Housewives of New Jersey' auctions off stuff, hopes it's worth $11M PDF Print E-mail
Written by Daily News Staff   
Saturday, 07 August 2010 15:44

She's known for flipping tables, and now she's selling them - along with her other high-priced belongings.

Hot-tempered Teresa Giudice of the "Real Housewives of New Jersey" is auctioning off her opulent chandeliers, luxurious bedroom set and other over-the-top home furnishings in a bid to get out of debt.

The bankrupt Giudice, who infamously tried to flip a table during last year's season finale, is auctioning off several of her own on Aug. 22, as well as a grand piano, pool table and two flat-screen TVs.

"All I can do is rise above it, keep my head high and know that at the end of the day, I have my family, my health and I'm in God's hands," Giudice wrote of her $11 million debt on her Bravo blog. "Nothing else matters - certainly not a lamp."

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