Oct 31,2009
Music for 4.03 In the Skin of the Lion
Posted by Kaitlin with No Comments
I’ll Be in the Sky by Bob
Million Bucks by Maino (featuring Swizz Beatz)
Oct 31,2009
I’ll Be in the Sky by Bob
Million Bucks by Maino (featuring Swizz Beatz)
Oct 31,2009
Game three of the World Series will play a big part in standing up to cancer.
During the game, set to air on Halloween on FOX, a 30-second commercial spot for Mastercard’s “Priceless” campaign will be a PSA for the charity Stand Up to Cancer. The spot will feature the live crowd at the game in Philadelphia, and will cut live to the ballpark at the end where actors Minka Kelly and Terrence Howard will encourage viewers to Stand Up to Cancer, as part of this year’s World Series dedication to community service.
To read the rest of this article click the source below.
SOURCE: ETOnline.com
Oct 31,2009
Myriad Pictures has announced that Amanda Crew and Adrianne Palicki are set to co-star in Jamie Babbit’s upcoming thriller Breaking The Girl. Production is scheduled to start in Canada in 2010.
Mark Distefano and Guinevere Turner wrote the screenplay about a naive college student who falls in with a manipulative classmate who implicates her in a murder. Myriad Pictures president and CEO Kirk D’Amico said, “Amanda and Adrianne are perfectly cast as the two students who become almost more than friends before the truth about Alex is revealed. It’s sexy and scary, and we expect it to fall into the same genre category as films like Prom Night and Wild Things.“
SOURCE: DreadCentral.com
Oct 30,2009
JeremySumpterWeb.com is interview D.W. Moffett (Joe McCoy) and wants your questions! Check out the details below:
Any and all questions submitted will be reviewed before given to D.W.. Please keep questions related to D.W., his career, working with Jeremy Sumpter on FNL, and general FNL questions.We will submit the submitted approved questions to D.W. this weekend.
Oct 29,2009
We posted about this interview on our Twitter stream the other day. @JustinMR25 gave us the heads up the TV station there got to interview Kyle Chandler and Taylor Kitsch. Check out the station’s web site.
Oct 29,2009
Slammin Sammy: The sky is high, the fields are dry, and this town has been divided.
Coach Taylor: I want you all to go home and think long and hard about whether you want this. If you don’t want this that’s fine, I don’t want you to waste your time or mine.
Vince: I’m Vince.
Coach Taylor: I’m Coach Taylor…you play any football?
Vince: Yeah, all the time.
Coach Taylor: What do you play?
Vince: Madden.
Coach: 6am sharp means quarter till 6.
Devin: So pretty rough over at East Dillon?
Landry: It’s rough to say the least. I’m constantly, like, ready. I’ve got a piece on me at all times.
Devin: My mom said she’d die before she’d send me there.
Landry: Literally like end her life?
Devin: Hunger strike probably.
Tim: Billy, if I would throw up on this wall you wouldn’t even know it because this color is puke.
Billy: It’s mustard!
JD: Hey, weren’t these supposed to have cinnamon sticks?
Landry: I’m always going to be a Panther in my heart.
Matt: Landry, who cared, the Panthers are just a bunch of idiots this year.
Landry: But they’re talented, fast idiots and we’re just a bunch of sucky idiots.
Grandma Saracen: Landry. Stop throwing the ball, you look like a girl.
Landry: Just one more.
Grandma Saracen: No. You’re just a funny looking creature.
Landry: She seems to be doing well.
Landry: Aren’t you supposed to rise above that? Aren’t you supposed to turn the other cheek in your typical Matt Saracen kind of way? Take the high road?
Matt: Right. Yeah, that’s what Matt always does.
Landry: Behind me, Satan.
Becky’s mom: Dog?
Tim: Brother.
Coach: You don’t fight on my field. Y’all wanna fight? Go ahead and fight but not on my field and not in my colors.
Becky: Aren’t you Tim Riggins? Panthers’ Tim Riggins? I know you hear me talking.
Tim: Yep.
Becky: I wonder if my mom knows she slept with you.
Becky: Whatever you did to her, way to go 33, but I need a ride to school.
Becky: So what’s it like being the guy who used to be Tim Riggins?
Tim: Still Tim Riggins.
Becky: Good luck, Tim Riggins, I hope you find what you’re looking for.
Coach Taylor: I wish you’d learn to filter your thoughts a little better, that’d be really helpful.
Coach Taylor: Stop repeating everything I say. It’s freaking me out.
Coach Taylor: A few of you have been here. A few of you have not. One thing we all have to do tonight, we’ve got to focus. The game plan, the fundamentals, gentlemen, moving the sticks what we’re going to be doing out there. And listen, fellas, there’s a joy to this game, is there not? There’s a passion, there’s a reason why we’re all out here. Other than the fact the pride that it gives us and the respect that it demands we love to play the game so let’s go out there and have fun tonight. Do you understand? Because tomorrow, if you give 100% of yourself tonight people are going to look at you differently. People are going to think of you differently. And I promise you you’re going look and think differently about yourself. Clear eyes. Full Hearts.
Landry: Can’t Lose.
Ref: What are you going to call?
Tami: Tails
Ref: Tails it is.
Tami: We will take the ball. Offense. Y’all have a great game.
Oct 29,2009
All in all, a rip-roaring start to a new season of a consistently brilliant show, one that feels both familiar and completely new. Building a school (and a football team) from scratch is a bold play for the series, but it seems like the right move, assuming they’ve cast all the new characters as well as they have Vince (we’re looking at YOU Santiago, from the Season That Shall Not Be Named). And while it’s strange to see the familiar Dillon Panther blue look as menacing as it does here (and it’s even MORE strange to see Coach decked out in not-all-that-flattering East Dillon red), it makes sense: For all the hardship this show has documented, the Dillon Panthers always had it pretty good: making the playoffs, getting a jumbotron, Lyla in a cheerleader outfit. Switching our allegiance to the underdog works dramatically and it just might allow the show to grow and survive past its current two-season renewal.
Read the full recap and review at Friday Night Lights Season Premiere: Home-Field Disadvantage — Vulture.
Oct 29,2009
In the fifth episode, Kaitlin and Amy review the Season 4 premiere East of Dillon. Please subscribe in iTunes! Thanks to those that have subscribed already and left their rating!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Oct 28,2009
A new season of “Friday Night Lights” has begun, and, like last year, I’m going to review each episode as it airs on DirecTV, then repost these reviews whenever NBC gets around to showing each episode. Spoilers for the season premiere coming up just as soon as I embark upon my hero’s journey…
“You think you’re gonna waltz back in here, and everything’s gonna be okay?” -Billy
I wrote in generalities about how much I like the new East/West Dillon set-up in today’s column, so once you’re done reading that (you do all read my columns, right?), I’ll get to some specifics on “East of Dillon.”
While characters like Eric, Tim and Landry are all struggling to walk into situations they think are familiar, but really aren’t, “East of Dillon” felt very familiar in a good way. The colors of the uniforms have changed, as have some of the faces, but this is still the show we know and love so well.
The gerrymandering subplot from last season’s “A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall” (done back when Eric had no idea he wouldn’t be coaching the Panthers anymore) helped cover most of the potential plot holes. Buddy, Joe McCoy and company made sure that any kid with even a vague amount of football experience would be placed on the “west” side of town, which leaves Eric with nothing but scrubs like Landry or untrained athletes like Vince. And so the understandably desperate composition of the East Dillon Lions led to that stunning, typically “Friday Night Lights” spin-tingling, sequence in the locker room at halftime, with the Lions looking like they’d just stormed the beaches at Normandy, and Eric walking from casualty to casualty, trying to comfort each wounded, shell-shocked boy, and slowly recognizing that the only thing he could do for them was to spare them another 30 minutes of beating.
Read the rest Friday Night Lights, “East of Dillon”: Reviewing the season premiere | New Jersey Entertainment – TV & Film – - NJ.com.