7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Bill Tush for President!
Author:
Chip_douglas from Rijswijk, ZH, Netherlands
20 November 2004
Back in the dark ages before IMDb, this CNN show provided a daily dose
of entertainment news. Over the years several duo's presented it from
the east and west coasts simultaneously. The eternally cheerful pair
that held out the longest were Laurin Sidney from L.A. and Jim Moret in
N.Y. A team of regular reporters made the rounds at every press junket
in town, reporting on (in this order) film, TV, music, the stage and
games. Most prominent amongst these contributors was Dennis Michael,
mainly because he made William Shatner sound normal by putting an
accent on every other syllable. Not surprisingly, Dennis always made
sure he got all the SF and fantasy assignments, as well as the Tech
Guide. On the other side of the spectrum was Gloria Hillard, who had
such a masculine voice she only got to do the token novelty items shown
during the last two minutes (later dubbed Hillard's Hollywood). She
usually had important assignments like visiting the used
clothes-worn-by-famous-people shop or interviewing the old lady who
provided Snow White's voice.
Every Monday, 'Movie Analyst' Marty (wobble head) Grove would analyze
the weekends box office. His reasoning being that a movie is good as
long as it makes money. Marty would always make really strange
comparisons and come up with records like 'most successful opening for
an animated move not distributed by Disney' or 'highest grossing
non-sequel released during a holiday weekend'. He would also use really
lame-o puns and got giddy like a school boy when showing off the latest
promotional kits he got in the mail. At that point Laurin would have to
cut him off (but Marty never learned). They used to have a boring guy
doing the same for the Nielsen ratings on Tuesday, but they quickly got
rid of him.
One late addition was 'He said, She said'. Each Friday, magazine movie
critics Peter Travers and Dana Kennedy would argue about a new release,
using the male and female perspective as a starting point. These two
never agreed on anything. Even on the rare occasion when he would
actually like a chick flick, she would turn around and hate it. After a
while Dana was suddenly replaced by Lisa Schwarzbaum, who seemed to
feel the same as Peter about every film, thus ruining the entire
concept. Maybe Peter and Dana really despised each other. She never
even got to say goodbye. Needles to say, the segment immediately lost
it's punch.
Senior reporter and Ted Turner's pal Bill Tush did a bit of all of the
above, often filling in as host and trading big star interviews for
novelty duties. He also made set visits, attended conventions, holiday
parks and toy fairs, which became the frame work for his weekend
compilation (Showbiz This Week). Often pre-emptied to make way for
breaking news, Showbiz Today got cut down from a half hour to just a
couple of headlines between other, more important CNN shows (like
sports and fashion) and became increasingly hard to find. After 9-11
the show disappeared completely and it's reporters reassigned, only to
come out occasionally during award season.
8 out of 10
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