LOS ANGELES — As Jay Leno lobs potshots at ratings-challenged NBC in his “Tonight” monologues, speculation is swirling the network is taking steps to replace the host with Jimmy Fallon next year and move the show from Burbank to New York.
TV
It stars 58-year-old Dennis Quaid. It’s set in 1961. And it’s on CBS.
NEW YORK — The producers of the cable TV miniseries on the Bible say Internet chatter that their Satan character resembles President Barack Obama is “utter nonsense.”
Louie Anderson was disoriented.
Hopelessly devoted. Holding hands during intimate moments. Barely able to take their eyes off each other.
Take away the infectious giggling and Elle McLemore sounds less like an actress on the rise than one in the twilight of a long, distinguished career.
Reality TV has done more to boost local tourism than a dozen Prince Harry visits.
Take two Tiger Beat cover-worthy actors, put them in a 1967 Impala, let simmer for seven years and you’ve got The Salute to “Supernatural” Convention.
Ken Marino is the best thing to happen to the Internet since porn.
Veteran ABC newswoman Barbara Walters has fallen at an inauguration party at an ambassador’s home in Washington and has been hospitalized.
Las Vegas has been pretty good to Don Cheadle over the years. Now, the city is serving as the backdrop to a season-long story arc on “House of Lies” (10 p.m. Sundays, Showtime), the dark comedy that follows a team of unscrupulous management consultants led by the slicker-than-an-oil-spill Marty Kaan.