10 reasons to love 'Mad Men'
"That's life. One minute you're on top of the world, next minute some secretary's running you over with a lawnmower."
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"That's life. One minute you're on top of the world, next minute some secretary's running you over with a lawnmower."
"The 10 Best TV Shows Right Now!"
Now that he's a big Emmy-winning TV star, you'd think Bryan Cranston would indulge himself a little. Not so. He still repairs things around the house, watches his money and thinks he's the star of AMC's "Breaking Bad" because of luck.
"Kirstie Alley's Big Life," her new reality show on A&E, is a sad postscript to her 2005 Showtime comedy, "Fat Actress," an amusing scripted series that allowed her to make fun of herself and also mock Hollywood.
Raylan Givens, U.S. marshal, is one lean, lone, ornery hombre.
You know you're watching an intense war film when being machine-gunned is an act of mercy. That's the predicament for many Japanese soldiers in "The Pacific," a 10-part World War II miniseries that begins Sunday on HBO at 8 p.m.
Fans of "The Cove," the environmentally themed film that won the feature documentary Oscar Sunday night, will be happy to know there's more where that came from.
"Undercover Boss," CBS's new docu-reality show, has a simple but fertile premise: Chief executives for major American corporations covertly take on entry-level jobs in their own companies.
When the chips are down, you can always count on family.
Had "The Good Wife" not succeeded in its first season on CBS, creators Robert and Michelle King would have been happy to let the final scene of their 13th episode stand as the series finale.
Sensible shoes or stilettos? Lifetime is still trying to figure out which fits best.
Actor Peter Krause has played a reluctant funeral director in "Six Feet Under," a newscaster in "Sports Night," a lawyer from "Dirty Sexy Money" and now the earnest dad in NBC's new "Parenthood," which premieres next Tuesday.
Reaching 100 episodes is a milestone for a television series because it means the show has attracted enough viewers to last at least five seasons.
The battle lines have been drawn for the 20th edition of CBS's bug-eating, back-stabbing, millionaire-making "Survivor." Twenty former contestants are back and divided into two camps: heroes and villains.
Trouble and Charlie Sheen have never been strangers, but now the star's felony rap could cause major headaches for his TV bosses.
It was the morning after President Obama's first State of the Union, which typically wouldn't mean much for daytime television shows and their menu of celebrity interviews, cooking tips and fashion segments.
Thank Bernie Madoff.
HOH RAIN FOREST, Olympic National Park — Diamond drips of moisture cling to the tips of branches, and a soft drizzle eases from a thick quilt of clouds overhead.
A two-hour episode of "Lost" tonight will launch the show's keenly anticipated sixth and final season.
NEW YORK — A big crowd lined up inside the NBC Experience Store in Rockefeller Center one recent morning to get autographs from and have their pictures taken with Zachary Levi, the star of "Chuck."