NationalFootballLeague
Idol's Ellen DeGeneres decision sounds eerily similar to MNF's Dennis Miller manuever
Now regular Squad hoppers know I'm no drooling American Idol watcher, so maybe you think my opinions on this show are worth less than the U.S. dollar injected with swine flu. But this move to bring in Ellen DeGeneres, a talk show host, actress and comedian, screams of another move in the world of TV commentating. A move that seemed well reasoned enough but went down in a glorious ball of blue and orange flames on live television.
Comedian and long time TV fixture Dennis Miller's very short stint as the color commentator for ABC's Monday Night Football screams of similarities louder than that guy in the Edvard Munch painting watching the Orson Welles sex tape. Great, Miller's voice is back in my head again. Thanks cha cha, I mean, Ellen.
The power of the NFL forces the Emmys to move to September 13
Oh my god, now I'm going to have to rearrange my entire schedule. I wanted to make sure and tell you all as soon as possible so you could do the same. Because of a football double-header on Sunday, September 20, CBS is bumping the Emmy's up a week to September 13. I know, madness! I wrote it on my calendar in permanent ink! But I guess in the NFL's world, you shouldn't think of anything as permanent. Look at what they do to the prime-time schedule already.Hell, the fall edition of The Amazing Race traditionally runs 20 to 40 minutes late every week because of football. There's no DVR adjustments possible for this. They really should schedule a flexible news program in 60 Minutes slot that can be truncated as needed so the rest of the lineup can start on time. And now, out of fear that football will run long, they're bumping the entire Emmy ceremony with only three month's notice. Celebrity desingers are panicking as we speak, and those poor accountants are going to have to count a week faster. It's absolute chaos!
ESPN takes on NBC Sunday Night Football
For nearly 20 years, NFL football fans could feast on Sunday games and then flip on ESPN for a complete wrap up on NFL Prime Time hosted primarily by Chris "Boomer" Berman and Tom Jackson. It was a staple. Then in 2005, ESPN dropped the show. Now, it's coming back (sort of) and in addition to Boomer and Jackson, John Saunders will be rejoining them, re-creating the original troika from 1987. The essence of NFL Prime Time will be found in the 7 p.m. ET edition of SportsCenter each Sunday during football season. Essentially, they'll be doing what they did on NFL Prime Time, and in doing so, they'll be taking aim at NBC's Football Night in America, that network's lead in show for the Sunday Night Football game.
This should be really interesting because the NBC pre-game show is like Thanksgiving dinner -- loaded with stuffing. They have stars galore, including the recently added, former ESPN stalwart, Dan Patrick.
Everyone gets to watch Patriots try for history after all
The move by the NFL to exclusively air this weekend's game between the New England Patriots and New York Giants on their own NFL network, which reaches only 40% of US households, was met with much criticism and frustration. With a win this weekend, the Patriots would become the first team to go undefeated in a 16-game season (the Dolphins did it in the 14-game '72 season).
Now it looks like pressure from Washington has changed their mind and suddenly the game is airing on NFL Network and both NBC and CBS. Of course, several local affiliates to the two teams had already negotiated exclusive rights to the game and sold ads at inflated rates, so they can't be too happy about having to share the game now with CBS and NBC.
NFL asks that their televised copyright notice be removed from YouTube
And now, this breaking news just in from our redundancy is redundant department:
You've heard it hundreds, if not thousands, of times during a broadcast of one sporting event or another . . . the announcement that any rebroadcast or retransmission of the program is illegal without the exclusive written consent of one professional sports league or another. However, did you know that the airing of that copyright notice is actually protected under copyright as well? I didn't, and neither did law professor Wendy Seltzer. She posted a sample of the NFL's copyright notice on YouTube to show her students how far these notices go in exaggerating their rights.
TV Squad Hot Topics
Most Popular Articles
From Our Partners
- Project Runway All-Stars Recap: Seasonal Subjective Disorder
- Good Wife Exclusive: Michael J. Fox, Jill Flint, Elizabeth Reaser Returning this Spring
- The TVLine-Up: TV Worth Watching This Friday
- Amy Acker Previews Her Angel Reunion on Grimm, Teases 'Very Pink' Once Upon a Time Gig
- American Idol Recap: The Day the Music Died
- More From TVLine
