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February 10, 2012
 
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Set Visit: 'King' Breaks the Cop Show Mold

by Bryan Cairns, posted Apr 15th 2011 3:05PM

Canada's new cop drama 'King' should be serious business. Following the exploits of Toronto's Major Crimes Task Force, the series focuses on police officer Jessica King ('24's Amy Price-Francis) who, due to a public meltdown by Detective Derek Spears ('The Tudors'' Alan Van Sprang), has been promoted to head investigator of the group.

With cases involving the mafia and pedophiles, the hard-hitting 'King' is by no means a comedy in any sense of the word, but you wouldn't know it from behind the scenes. On location in Toronto, lead actors Price-Francis and Van Sprang couldn't resist continually busting each other's chops -- and co-star Gabriel Hogan ('Heartland') helps out, too.

"He's so generous with setting me straight, just telling me I shouldn't do it that way," jokes Price-Francis about her scenes.

"When I first got the job, they said 'Listen, you have to be number one on the show!' cracks Van Sprang. "I said 'Absolutely not! I don't want an exclusive driver or to be number one.' I think it has helped Amy and given her a lot more confidence."

"He's a giver!" she laughs.

Naturally, keeping a straight face during the interview was the real challenge, yet somehow, AOL TV managed to wrangle eight things you need to know about 'King' out of them.

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CBS says yes to Sonnenfeld's Kingdom

by Adam Finley, posted Jul 18th 2007 12:41PM

barry sonnenfeldDirector Barry Sonnenfeld's (Men in Black, Get Shorty) is helming Kingdom, a new pilot for CBS that takes place in medieval times. The series will focus on four friends, one of which learns he's the heir to the throne. However, he'd rather get drunk and chase damsels than act like a king.

Sonnenfeld is also executive producing Pushing Daisies, a pilot for ABC from Bryan Fuller (Heroes) about a man who can bring people to life by touching them. Sonnenfeld was also a producer for the short-lived, live-action version of The Tick. Pushing Daisies also stars Chi McBride, Kristin Chenoweth and Lee Pace.

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Not all TV is classic TV

by Paul Goebel, posted Apr 10th 2007 11:58AM

Mike, Davy, Peter & MickyI have often said that all television falls into two categories, good and bad. However, I have recently discovered that television can also be categorized as classic and non-classic. But there's a catch.

When I was growing up, there wasn't a lot of good TV due to the fact that there were only three networks (four if you count PBS, which I certainly didn't). Consequently, local affiliates had no choice but to fill their daytime schedules with reruns of popular sitcoms like The Brady Bunch, Gilligan's Island and The Monkees. These shows and shows like them have become classics almost by default. Bottom line: when an entire generation can sing the theme song of a show, it's a classic.

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The Tudors - an early look

by Julia Ward, posted Mar 16th 2007 11:05AM
Jonathan Rhys Meyers Henry VIII
So, it turns out Henry VIII isn't just that portly guy at the Renaissance Faire with a gigantic turkey leg greasing up his maw. He was an athletic would-be humanist with an over-the-top appetite for sex and a body hard enough to qualify him for gay porn, or at least, that's how Showtime's The Tudors, the latest in bodice-ripping historical dramas, portrays him.

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The Tudors online preview

by Julia Ward, posted Mar 14th 2007 10:09AM
Tudors Rhys MeyersHoly history porn. If you dig Rome, and Deadwood does it for your fictive nonfiction-loving self, then Showtime's The Tudors may be right up your alley. It's a journey through Henry VIII's kingship and many, many marriages with more tits, ass, intrigue and bloody violence than you can shake a royal stick at.

Showtime is offering a VIP preview of The Tudors' first two episodes online. (The password is "king.") The series, starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers, premieres on Sunday, April 1st at 10PM. The series focuses primarily on the king's affair with Anne Boleyn, his obsession with producing a male heir and the political intrigue of the court. And, did I mention that it's essentially softcore for the Anglophile set?

[Via Pop Candy]

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