Pete Berg knows men.
TV
On Jan. 22, between 7:30 and 8 p.m., at least a half dozen local television stations will air a short documentary that features children and young adults who’ve been the victims of human trafficking.
The actor who portrays Austin “Chumlee” Russell of “Pawn Stars” sounds like he was born for the role.
It seemed ludicrous when HBO kicked off 2012 with the Dustin Hoffman-led “Luck.”
NBC’s comic institution “Saturday Night Live,” criticized recently for a lack of diversity, said on Monday that it hired Sasheer Zamata — a 27-year-old black woman from Indianapolis — for its repertory cast when new episodes start again later this month.
A TV reporter passes out during a live interview, then has the presence of mind to finish the interview when she came to.
It was the most publicized showrunner change in TV history.
When it comes to TV, the whole out-with-the-old, in-with-the-new thing couldn’t come soon enough. That’s because calling the networks’ fall season underwhelming is like saying Kanye West has a somewhat favorable opinion of himself.
James Avery, the bulky character actor who laid down the law as the Honorable Philip Banks in “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,” has died.
Got your noisemakers? Party hats? Champagne? How about your TV remote? You’ll need it to keep up with Ryan Seacrest this New Year’s Eve.
Original, buzzworthy scripted dramas turned up in some of the most unexpected places in 2013.
The owner of a TV network that covers Western and cowboy lifestyles is baffled by the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association’s decision to pick CBS Sports Network over his network to broadcast the Las Vegas-based National Finals Rodeo.
“Duck Dynasty” patriarch Phil Robertson will return to work on A&E’s reality show despite his comments about gay immorality, the channel said Friday, reversing its decision to suspend him after facing a backlash and threatened boycott.
Nearly six decades after it first aired, an “I Love Lucy” Christmas special was last week’s most-watched holiday program, according to ratings released Tuesday.
“Faith. Family. Ducks.” It’s the unofficial motto for the family featured in the TV reality show Duck Dynasty and that homespun philosophy permeates nearly everything in this small north Louisiana town.