You won't have Larry King's suspenders to kick around anymore: he announced yesterday that he's ending his show in the fall. His chosen replacement: Ryan Seacrest. Well, heaven knows that guy could use the work.
This is a very sensible take on why it's so goofy to sit around at this stage talking about the possibility (or impossibility) of Sex And The City 3. After all, it's not like they're going to end it because everyone doesn't want to beat it to death.
I am 100 percent in support of this piece in Cinematical, pointing out that Tom Hanks does an awful lot of serious movies these days, and funny Tom Hanks was also a pretty good guy to have in movies (and television).
Let's see: you're a library. You have groups of teenagers hanging around. Hanging around the library, that is — on the sidewalk, where they are legally entitled to be, since it's public property. I can't help thinking there might be something better to do with that situation than shoo them away with the horrors of classical music, but that's what's happening in London, Ontario.
Among the sources of news currently taking a beating: broadcast network nightly newscasts, all of which lost ground in the last year.
As you may have been reading, Steve Carell is making pretty emphatic noises about leaving The Office at the end of his contract (which would be after next season). The obvious question is whether you continue the show without him, and on the assumption that NBC will choose to do so, Alan Sepinwall is considering who might come in as the new boss.



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