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PostPosted: Wed Nov 15, 2006 8:44 pm 
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Vixsin wrote:
Donde esta el bano??

.....No charge. :D



Si, tienes suerte, en tu casa.

That'll be 50 cents. LMAO

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 15, 2006 8:46 pm 
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Miles
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You sound like my mom. LOL.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 15, 2006 8:54 pm 
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karldonitz wrote:
You sound like my mom. LOL.



Is she looking for the bathroom too?

LMAO

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If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy - James Madison

For those who believe no proof is neccesary; for those who don't believe no proof is possible - Stuart Chase

"Frankly I don't like political jokes. Too many of them are getting elected" - Bob Hope


http://www.savesurface.com/


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 15, 2006 8:56 pm 
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Miles
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Any when she gets to her place. LOL. But she says that she charges for spell. She does not, but she does quote a money ammount for spelling. LOL.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 16, 2006 6:08 am 
o.O; :arrow: B2T


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 6:49 am 
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Breaking News
Reilly Aims To Keep 30 Rock Rolling
By Ben Grossman -- Broadcasting & Cable, 3/19/2007 12:02:00 AM


Tina Fey got a prime indication late last week that NBC is expected to bring back 30 Rock for a second season: a vote of confidence from network Entertainment President Kevin Reilly.

"I literally just got off the phone with [Reilly], and he still tells me he will do everything in his power and feels strongly about it," says Fey, the show’s star and creator. "We really are lucky to be one of the handful of shows he feels personally responsible for—us and Friday Night Lights."

Reilly’s decision to bring back the well-regarded but low-rated shows would put some teeth into his stated desire to return the "quality" to NBC.

Before the decisions are finalized, 30 Rock will get a tryout at 9 p.m. ET on Thursday, a half-hour earlier than its current slot.


"I think it will be very telling as to whether we really had a tough time slot or whether people just aren’t interested in the show," Fey says in her signature deadpan tone.

The serious answer—unfortunate though it may be for one of the season’s best newcomers—could be both.

Despite heavy critical acclaim, 30 Rock is averaging a modest 2.7 rating/6 share this season at 9:30, although it does retain a quite respectable 81% average out of lead-in Scrubs. It is doing so in an absolutely brutal time period, against heavyweights Grey’s Anatomy on ABC and CSI on CBS and, most recently, the surprising Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader? out of the massive American Idol lead-in on Fox.

Although 30 Rock will still battle Grey’s and CSI in its new home at 9, it will get some relief as Fifth Grader shifts to 8.

Even given the show’s numbers, Fey says, network executives have not been too hands-on with the creative. Outside of encouraging her not to make 30 Rock "too snobby or too New York," they have just let her make her show. "They haven’t made us try and cast Miss USA, thankfully."

While beauty-pageant winners are kept at bay, a slew of stars have made "appearances" in name only, and are frequently cast in a less than flattering light.

One ongoing character is Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who in the world of the show is an often ridiculed ex-love interest of Jack Donaghy, the bombastic General Electric executive played by Alec Baldwin. Fey says these mentions have yet to ruffle too many feathers.

"Thankfully, we haven’t had trouble yet," she says. "I don’t expect to run into Condi anytime soon, so I think I’ll be okay there."

Ratings aside, the move to a sitcom for the long-time Saturday Night Live veteran has been a big adjustment. "I miss the people and the camaraderie," she says of SNL.

"But," she adds, "I would much rather shoot a scene in my show about sketch-comedy writers staying up all night than actually be back staying up all night writing sketches again. That I don’t miss."

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 8:13 am 
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Miles
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30 Rock? Never heard of it. But then after NBC got rid of Surface, I stopped watching NBC.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 5:07 pm 
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I've heard of it, but never watched it. I didn't think it sounded very interesting. I'd rather watch reruns of Dirty Jobs or Mythbusters.

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PostPosted: Sat May 19, 2007 3:53 pm 
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Today in the New York Times:

"But the entrance whimper and the exit whimper were different.

The first [whimper], at NBC’s presentation Monday, was one of pain. It came through on the projection screen behind Kevin Reilly, the network’s entertainment president.
“Big fat disappointment,” the screen read, the acknowledgment saving Mr. Reilly from prolonged public penance by subtitling his subconscious. It had indeed been a horrible year for NBC, which, having long ago lost its first-place status, needed a brilliant one."

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/19/arts/ ... ref=slogin


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 06, 2007 1:03 pm 
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Miles
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Hey, thought I would check out iTunes tv shows, and see what NBC still has, and made a discovery. Surface is still on iTunes. Just posted a review. You can buy the entire series via iTunes, or you can by the series via DVD box set. Eitherway, a must have.


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 Post subject: Re: Hey NBC is really struggling
PostPosted: Fri May 14, 2010 1:15 pm 
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The No Brains Channel is at it again...


http://apnews.myway.com/article/20100514/D9FMOMC00.html


'Law & Order' is canceled by NBC


NEW YORK (AP) - The venerable police-courtroom drama "Law & Order" has been axed.

NBC announced Friday that the show would end its historic 20-year run on May 24.

The show starred an ensemble cast of S. Epatha Merkerson, Jeremy Sisto, Anthony Anderson, Linus Roache, Alana De La Garza and Sam Waterston.

Even as it canceled the original "Law & Order," NBC announced a new drama in the "Law & Order" franchise called "LOLA" ("Law & Order: Los Angeles"). It will also renew "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" for a 12th season.

NBC's full 2010-11 schedule will be officially released Sunday.

The abrupt end of "Law & Order" could be explained by sagging ratings and creative fatigue, but a renewal had been widely expected nonetheless. Then, on Thursday, a flurry of reports declared the series to be doomed. NBC refused to confirm the reports. Negotiations were said to be continuing.

Jeff Gaspin, chairman of NBC Universal Television, said the legacy of "Law & Order" creator-producer Dick Wolf "will continue to make an impact like no other series before."

But the cancellation denies Wolf his long-held dream of surpassing "Gunsmoke" as TV's longest-running drama.

"Never complain, never explain," he said in a statement.

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If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy - James Madison

For those who believe no proof is neccesary; for those who don't believe no proof is possible - Stuart Chase

"Frankly I don't like political jokes. Too many of them are getting elected" - Bob Hope


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 Post subject: Re: Hey NBC is really struggling
PostPosted: Sun May 16, 2010 12:36 am 
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Funny, but I have never seen an episode of Law and Order. Not one. LOLOLOL

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20100516/D9FNN8880.html

New York's faces: `Law & Order' showed 'em all

Since television was born, TV shows have been set in New York City. From "The Honeymooners" all the way to "30 Rock," generations of New Yorkers have grown up seeing their hometown used as a backdrop, or even a central character, in everything from sitcoms and cartoons to edgy dramas.

Some shows depict a New York that simply doesn't exist (try and find two struggling Manhattan twentysomethings with a "Friends"-sized apartment). Others offer a window into a single corner of New York life: Fashion-obsessed women really do sip cocktails in trendy bars, just like on "Sex and the City."

But most TV fare offers up a mere sliver of New York City. For two decades, until it was canceled Friday, NBC's "Law & Order" did something different. It showed the world not just one New York but hundreds.

We saw wealthy criminals who could afford to get away with their felonies. We saw immigrant communities, middle-class families and people of all stripes struggling, sometimes stumbling through their day. We saw Manhattan and the far boroughs. We saw New Yorkers who didn't care enough to report crimes and people who risked their lives to save strangers.

Made in New York by people who lived there, "Law & Order" never trafficked in Gotham cliches.

"A New York City institution," mayor Michael Bloomberg called the show Friday. He praised producer Dick Wolf for "helping showcase the city's depth and versatility."

Many New Yorkers would agree. They made room for "Law & Order" in their lives. And the show's unique structure, partnering gritty police drama with high-stakes legal scheming, made room for the entire city in return - and employed a whole lot of its people.

If your neighbor or cousin or favorite bartender was an actor, chances are at some point they turned up on "Law & Order." The show hired actors for as many as 700 speaking roles each season; that's 14,000 roles over its tenure.

Lorraine Rodriguez, a theater actress and native New Yorker, grew up watching the show. She earned her Screen Actors Guild card appearing on "The Sopranos," but "Law & Order" was always her goal. She auditioned four times for "day player" roles on the show but had yet to land one when she heard it had been canceled.

"The first thing my dad said when I started acting was, 'When are you gonna be on Law & Order?'" Rodriguez says. "It's a big deal when they call you in."

"Other shows aren't like that," she says. "They brought in the 'The Good Wife' to shoot here, but that's set in Chicago. ... You audition and they say Do you have a Chicago accent?' But with Law & Order, you felt like you can be you if you're from New York."

Wolf's long-running procedural, of course, wasn't the first show to feature the NYPD and the lawyers who help them put bad guys behind bars.

Across genres, and with varying degrees of authenticity, the territory was staked out by "Naked City,""Car 54, Where Are You?,""Kojak,""Barney Miller,""Cagney & Lacey" and "Life on Mars." And along with "NYPD Blue,""New York Undercover,""Third Watch,""CSI:NY" and spinoffs "Law & Order: SVU" and "Law & Order: Criminal Intent," there will be plenty more to come.

But this one belonged to New York like no other.

When New Yorkers stumble across a film shoot in progress, it often brings more inconvenience than excitement. Sure, you may see a famous face or two. But odds are the sidewalks will be cordoned off, the film crew will have taken all the parking spaces and harried production assistants will bark at you to keep your distance.

Not so "Law & Order." For two decades, an epoch in television time, the show quietly and seamlessly shot scene after scene on the streets of the city. A mutual respect developed: They didn't close your block, and you didn't stare at the camera or the actors as you walked through a shot on your way home.

With so many scenes shot outdoors, details of New Yorkers' lives, from the breakfast bagel cart to the subway station, were forever popping up on the show. That's part of what gave it street cred for actors - and for agents and casting people, who saw it as a crucial stepping stone.

"It's always been a barometer to find out if you were going to have some sort of credibility as an actor in New York," says Henry Ravelo, an acting teacher and theatrical manager. "At a certain point, casting directors and agents and managers look at your resume and see if you have a 'Law & Order' on your resume. If an actor doesn't, then they've got to ask themselves, 'What am I doing in New York?"

In production for much of the year, the show also employed a steady flow of extras and stand-ins for every episode. For fledgling SAG members, that meant a few hundred dollars toward the rent and a chance to get familiar with life the set of a major network series.

With "Law & Order" closing up shop, its new spinoff being shot in Los Angeles and soap operas folding or leaving town, young New York City actors are wondering where the breaks will come.

"All My Children," produced in New York for nearly 40 years, moved to LA in December, shortly after "Guiding Light" bit the dust. Even Woody Allen has left town, preferring London as a backdrop over his native New York in recent years. That gives the departure of "Law & Order" all the more sting.

"A show like this was a gift," says Marc Isaacmann, who founded a service called "One on One" that introduces actors to the city's casting directors. "'Law & Order' launched so many careers. ... We were spoiled."

Murray Pomerance, writing in the preface to "City that Never Sleeps: New York and the Filmic Imagination," says typical New Yorkers stick to their block and their neighborhood. "For the tourist, each moment in New York is, at least potentially, a sparkling treasure, an immensity of experience; for the New Yorker, there is a comforting mundanity to everyday life, a predictability and a delicious smallness."

It was that "delicious smallness," in the context of epic stories of good and evil, that "Law & Order" did so well.

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If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy - James Madison

For those who believe no proof is neccesary; for those who don't believe no proof is possible - Stuart Chase

"Frankly I don't like political jokes. Too many of them are getting elected" - Bob Hope


http://www.savesurface.com/


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