We have a winner for our Oscar contest and recipient of all nine DVD titles. Congratulations to Gianna Grabowski for correctly predicting 23 out of 24 categories, missing only Best Actress. The runners-up,...
- 2/25/2013
- by Sasha Stone
- AwardsDaily.com
Eastman Kodak will receive the Philo T. Farnsworth Award at the 64th Primetime Emmy Engineering Awards, which will be held October 24 at the Loews Hollywood Hotel. Olivia Munn is hosting the ceremony, which will present eight Emmys to the likes of Netflix, Dolby and Sony as well as an engineering plaque to Adobe Systems. Cable Television Laboratories founder and CEO Richard Green will receive the Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award. Here’s the TV Academy’s breakdown of the winners: The Philo T. Farnsworth Award The Philo T. Farnsworth Award honors an agency, company or institution whose contributions over time have significantly impacted television technology and engineering. Eastman Kodak Company is this year’s recipient of the Philo. T. Farnsworth Award for its long history of contributions to the television industry, among which are innovation and leadership in image capture, processing and manipulation. Known as “the filmmaker’s film maker,...
- 10/8/2012
- by THE DEADLINE TEAM
- Deadline TV
Las Vegas -- Muffled rather than manic, business-like if not actually busy --- those descriptions best capture the first full day of activity at the 47th annual Natpe confab, which unspooled Monday.
While a few syndicators duly obliged by announcing clearances for various off-net or off-cable shows during the past couple of days, the recession has clearly taken its toll on what used to be the center of the syndie biz -- the bustling, glad-handing Natpe convention floor.
No longer.
"There's more carpet laid down here than there are people," is how one longtime attendee put it, noting how all the booths had been downsized and all signs of ostentation removed. The Mandalay Bay floor itself is mercifully smaller than in the past few sessions, making at least for more efficient foot traffic. There is, however, no glitz and no new first-run hopefuls for national exposure other than CBS TV...
While a few syndicators duly obliged by announcing clearances for various off-net or off-cable shows during the past couple of days, the recession has clearly taken its toll on what used to be the center of the syndie biz -- the bustling, glad-handing Natpe convention floor.
No longer.
"There's more carpet laid down here than there are people," is how one longtime attendee put it, noting how all the booths had been downsized and all signs of ostentation removed. The Mandalay Bay floor itself is mercifully smaller than in the past few sessions, making at least for more efficient foot traffic. There is, however, no glitz and no new first-run hopefuls for national exposure other than CBS TV...
- 1/25/2010
- by By Elizabeth Guider
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The first that I heard of Frank Henenlotter was on a perfectly awful cable tv show that aired on Manhattan's Public Access channel in the 1970s.
"The Nikki Haskell Show" was a self-indulgent half-hour cable show hosted by Haskell, a wealthy socialite-divorcee and former stockbroker who now claims that her show marked the invention of "reality television." About a year ago, after her diet pill company got in trouble with the NFL over a "secret ingredient" that should have been labeled, Haskell signed up for an account at YouTube and started posting clips from the 30-year-old program, but she seems to have lost interest after posting just ten of them.
The main reason I'd tune in Haskell's silly show was the programming that followed it, "adults only" programming like Screw magazine publisher Al Goldstein's "Midnight Blue," porn performer Robin Bird's "Hot Legs" show featuring New York's leading "dance talent" and,...
"The Nikki Haskell Show" was a self-indulgent half-hour cable show hosted by Haskell, a wealthy socialite-divorcee and former stockbroker who now claims that her show marked the invention of "reality television." About a year ago, after her diet pill company got in trouble with the NFL over a "secret ingredient" that should have been labeled, Haskell signed up for an account at YouTube and started posting clips from the 30-year-old program, but she seems to have lost interest after posting just ten of them.
The main reason I'd tune in Haskell's silly show was the programming that followed it, "adults only" programming like Screw magazine publisher Al Goldstein's "Midnight Blue," porn performer Robin Bird's "Hot Legs" show featuring New York's leading "dance talent" and,...
- 11/17/2009
- by unclebob
- DreadCentral.com
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