On Gear Live: Samsung S95C: The OLED TV You Can’t Afford (to Ignore!)

TV on DVD: May 6, 2008

Here are some of the options available this Tuesday.

The 4400, Season Four

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TV on DVD: April 8, 2008

Here are some of the options available today.

The Cosby Show

  • Ben 10: Race Against Time
  • Corner Gas (Seasons 1 and 2)
  • The Cosby Show (Seasons 7 and 8)
  • Deadliest Catch (Season 3)
  • Def Poetry (Season 6)
  • Hell’s Kitchen (Season 1)
  • The Last Detective (Series 4)
  • Living with Ed (Season 1)
  • Matlock (Season 1)
  • Meerkat Manor (Season 2)
  • Mythbusters (Collection 3)
  • Nanny 911 (Season 1)
  • Perry Mason (50th Anniversary Edition)
  • Rock of Love (Season 1)
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Season 6)
  • Three Sheets (Season 2)
  • UFC: Ultimate Fighter (Season 6)

 


Alternatives For Late Night TV

Posted by K.C. Morgan Categories: Late Night, Reality, Talk Shows, Cable, FX, MTV, Editorial,

Television RemoteIt’s only been a full work week since Hollywood’s writers went on strike, and already it seems the days of great late night talk programs are long gone. The last time the writer’s guild went on strike, it lasted an agonizingly long 22 weeks. Without Colbert, Stewart, Letterman and , how is American supposed to get its satirical, tongue-in-cheek twists on current events?

With a shortage of new scripts and a hiatus of many major shows, more Americans are now channel-surfing to find an entertainment fix. What they’ll find is a mishmash of reality TV - those wonderfully unscripted programs that are always there in the event of a script shortage. Channels like Travel, Discovery, Animal Planet and the Food Network are largely unaffected by the strike, though how MTV (and channels like it) will continue with their staged reality programs is anyone’s guess.

Instead of watching repeats on network TV, turn to these channels as the midnight hour approaches. , the , , , , and are among those still offering brand-new episodes. It’s better than re-runs.

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MSNBC


‘Man vs. Wild’ Returns in November

Bear GryllsLooks like that little snafu with Man vs. Wild’s had little fallout. If you’ve never seen the show on the , Grylls, a survivor expert, challenges various “wild” situations with only his skill to help him survive. Well, that and a helpful crew, it seems. He was found out a few months back when it was discovered that he was getting a little help on the survival series and that the scenarios he presented on the show were somewhat different in reality. Some reports said he stayed overnight in a motel when he was supposed to be braving the wild; another report said the folks on the show constructed a raft for him to use. Discovery continued to air the series, but edited it and offered a disclaimer that some of the show’s elements were staged. And now, he’s back for a second season of the reality series on November 9th at 9:00 p.m. He’ll also appear on a special called Bear’s Mission Everest at 10:00 p.m., where he’ll (attempt to) fly a paraglider in the Himalayas. In the upcoming season, he’ll visit the Sahara Desert, Panama and Patagonia. Discovery Channel president Jane Root commented, “We continue to seek out new exciting and daring adventures for Bear, and he continues to do what he does best. From an expedition documentary to hands-on demonstrations of life-saving tips for viewers, Bear Grylls brings out the adventurer in all of us.” This go-around, there will be no question about when the crew helps out… so Grylls should avoid any further media and fan criticism. See? He is a survival expert.

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Reality TV World


Discovery to air recut Man vs. Wild episodes

Posted by K.C. Morgan Categories: Reality, Cable, Gossip,

Discovery logoIt’s a long-running argument…discussion…whatever. Where did the first roots of reality TV really get placed? MTV gets credited for The Real World, but some say CBS revolutionized the genre with shows like Survivor. Reality TV is very loosely defined as “unscripted,” and that means reality really extends back way before cable even existed. News broadcasts, even game shows can be called reality. And in the very earliest days of game shows, when on-screen competition was born, scandal marred the public view of television. The quiz shows were fixed, and the way the public looked at television was for ever changed. Today, most of us accept that not all reality TV is really real. Still…it comes as a surprise when we find that some shows are truly not at all what they seem. And now, the Discovery Channel is getting ready to eat crow. Or maybe ratings.

Click to continue reading Discovery to air recut Man vs. Wild episodes

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