Last week's Fringe episode, "Welcome to Westfield," one of those episodes that left your mind reeling by the time it was over, with strange things happening all over the town of Westfield ... and beyond.
Below, staff writers Nick McHatton and Sean McPherson are joined by emphatic Fringe analyzer Nick Shere to discuss all the little things you have been dying to know about the episode:
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Favorite quote or scene?
Nick: I loved the ending with Olivia and Peter. I'm hoping my theory of our timeline bleeding through becoming more and more is becoming a reality.
Sean: I loved the final moment where Olivia kissed Peter. For a moment I was thinking that it had to be a dream because there's no way that Olivia would do that. It feels like everything is coming together and maybe Peter never left his timeline after all.
Nick S: Walter in the diner with the homicidal pieman.
Below, staff writers Nick McHatton and Sean McPherson are joined by emphatic Fringe analyzer Nick Shere to discuss all the little things you have been dying to know about the episode:
-----------------------------
Favorite quote or scene?
Nick: I loved the ending with Olivia and Peter. I'm hoping my theory of our timeline bleeding through becoming more and more is becoming a reality.
Sean: I loved the final moment where Olivia kissed Peter. For a moment I was thinking that it had to be a dream because there's no way that Olivia would do that. It feels like everything is coming together and maybe Peter never left his timeline after all.
Nick S: Walter in the diner with the homicidal pieman.
- 2/16/2012
- by matt@tvfanatic.com (TV Fanatic Staff)
- TVfanatic
"Making Angels" showcased the first time the two Astrids met, while also highlighting the new dynamic between the universes.
Below, Staff writers Nick McHatton, Sean McPherson and Carissa Pavlica are joined by emphatic Fringe analyzer Nick Shere to discuss all the little things you have been dying to know about the episode...
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Did the Observers verify that Peter was home? Elaborate.
Nick: The great thing about Fringe is we get to speculate in to the wee hours of the morning, and I don't believe the Observers gave a firm confirmation that Peter is "home." September didn't do his job and delete Peter or his attempts to break back in to the timeline back in the beginning of the season. September disobeyed those instructions.
Sean: I'm not sure on that. I know that they verified that he is back, but they didn't say when or where. It would be very interesting...
Below, Staff writers Nick McHatton, Sean McPherson and Carissa Pavlica are joined by emphatic Fringe analyzer Nick Shere to discuss all the little things you have been dying to know about the episode...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Did the Observers verify that Peter was home? Elaborate.
Nick: The great thing about Fringe is we get to speculate in to the wee hours of the morning, and I don't believe the Observers gave a firm confirmation that Peter is "home." September didn't do his job and delete Peter or his attempts to break back in to the timeline back in the beginning of the season. September disobeyed those instructions.
Sean: I'm not sure on that. I know that they verified that he is back, but they didn't say when or where. It would be very interesting...
- 2/9/2012
- by carissa@tvfanatic.com (Carissa Pavlica)
- TVfanatic
By Roger Friedman
HollywoodNews.com: Jackson Browne, on tour, stopped at the Oceana event in Watermill on Saturday night and played a full acoustic set on guitar and keyboards, by himself. The songs included “Running on Empty,” “The Pretender,” “Before the Deluge,” and “Rock Me On the Water.” At the end, he said he no longer cared what people thought about the fact that he’d written the Eagles’ most famous song, “Take It Easy,” and played it.
Oceana is the brainchild of Lois Robbins and Susan Rockefeller, with Keith Addis, designed to raise money for ocean conservancy. Could anything be more timely? Caroline Hirsch, of Caroline’s Comedy Club., is also very involved, as are Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen. I ran into Charlie Walk, Kathy Schenker, Jane Rose, Fred Davis, John Howard, Jill Brooke, and Jackson’s girlfriend, Dianna Cohen, an artist from L.A. who created a...
HollywoodNews.com: Jackson Browne, on tour, stopped at the Oceana event in Watermill on Saturday night and played a full acoustic set on guitar and keyboards, by himself. The songs included “Running on Empty,” “The Pretender,” “Before the Deluge,” and “Rock Me On the Water.” At the end, he said he no longer cared what people thought about the fact that he’d written the Eagles’ most famous song, “Take It Easy,” and played it.
Oceana is the brainchild of Lois Robbins and Susan Rockefeller, with Keith Addis, designed to raise money for ocean conservancy. Could anything be more timely? Caroline Hirsch, of Caroline’s Comedy Club., is also very involved, as are Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen. I ran into Charlie Walk, Kathy Schenker, Jane Rose, Fred Davis, John Howard, Jill Brooke, and Jackson’s girlfriend, Dianna Cohen, an artist from L.A. who created a...
- 7/12/2010
- by Roger Friedman
- Hollywoodnews.com
When writer-producer David Landsberg invited friends to join distributors, sales agents and exhibitors for Thursday's screening of the low-budget, high-concept comedy "Sex Tax," his pitch wasn't just come to see the film but also to celebrate his life and the launch of his indie production company.
"What I told everybody is, 'Don't come to my funeral. Don't come see me when I'm dead,' " Landsberg said. " 'Come when I'm alive, when I'm doing something, not when I'm a little box of ashes.' "
It was pure Landsberg. After 35 years in Hollywood as a commercials and TV actor before moving behind the camera as producer and writer on "Herman's Head," "The Cosby Show," "Love Boat" and other series, Landsberg had suffered through several heart attacks -- an experience that changed his views about himself and the world.
"As a writer, I had been Tony Thomas' voice, Aaron Spelling's voice,...
"What I told everybody is, 'Don't come to my funeral. Don't come see me when I'm dead,' " Landsberg said. " 'Come when I'm alive, when I'm doing something, not when I'm a little box of ashes.' "
It was pure Landsberg. After 35 years in Hollywood as a commercials and TV actor before moving behind the camera as producer and writer on "Herman's Head," "The Cosby Show," "Love Boat" and other series, Landsberg had suffered through several heart attacks -- an experience that changed his views about himself and the world.
"As a writer, I had been Tony Thomas' voice, Aaron Spelling's voice,...
- 4/13/2010
- by By Alex Ben Block
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
No surprise there. It goes without saying that James Cameron's sci-fi spectacle Avatar has the potential to clean house at the 8th Annual Ves Awards for its breath taking visuals by the acclaimed Weta Digital. Cameron will also be picking up a well-deserved Lifetime Achievement Award. In the outstanding animated feature category, the nominees include Up, 9, Coraline, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs.
The official press release is as followed:
3-D Films Dominate With Most Noms as Avatar grabs 11, Coraline 4, and Visual Effects Company Weta Digital Snags Most Company Noms with 9
Los Angeles, January 19, 2010 - The Visual Effects Society (Ves) today announced the nominees for the 8th Annual Ves Awards ceremony recognizing outstanding visual effects artistry in over twenty categories of film, animation, television, commercials and video games. Nominees were chosen Saturday, January 16, 2010, by numerous blue ribbon panels of Ves members who...
The official press release is as followed:
3-D Films Dominate With Most Noms as Avatar grabs 11, Coraline 4, and Visual Effects Company Weta Digital Snags Most Company Noms with 9
Los Angeles, January 19, 2010 - The Visual Effects Society (Ves) today announced the nominees for the 8th Annual Ves Awards ceremony recognizing outstanding visual effects artistry in over twenty categories of film, animation, television, commercials and video games. Nominees were chosen Saturday, January 16, 2010, by numerous blue ribbon panels of Ves members who...
- 1/22/2010
- Screen Anarchy
James Cameron's "Avatar" led the list of nominations announced Monday by the Visual Effects Society, scooping up 11.
The animated "Coraline," another movie released in 3D, followed with four nominations.
New Zealand-based Weta Digital, which worked on "Avatar," led the company noms with nine.
For visual effects in an effects-driven motion picture feature, the nominees are "2012," "Avatar," "District 9," "Star Trek" and "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen."
Noms for supporting visual effects in a movie went to "Angels & Demons," "The Box," "Invictus," "The Road" and "Sherlock Holmes."
"9," "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs," "Coraline," "Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs" and "Up" were nominated for outstanding animation in an animated feature.
Ves noms in 20 categories, covering film, animation, TV, commercials and video games were chosen Saturday by blue-ribbon panels of Ves members, meeting in Burbank, San Francisco and London.
The eighth annual Ves Awards will be handed out on Feb.
The animated "Coraline," another movie released in 3D, followed with four nominations.
New Zealand-based Weta Digital, which worked on "Avatar," led the company noms with nine.
For visual effects in an effects-driven motion picture feature, the nominees are "2012," "Avatar," "District 9," "Star Trek" and "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen."
Noms for supporting visual effects in a movie went to "Angels & Demons," "The Box," "Invictus," "The Road" and "Sherlock Holmes."
"9," "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs," "Coraline," "Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs" and "Up" were nominated for outstanding animation in an animated feature.
Ves noms in 20 categories, covering film, animation, TV, commercials and video games were chosen Saturday by blue-ribbon panels of Ves members, meeting in Burbank, San Francisco and London.
The eighth annual Ves Awards will be handed out on Feb.
- 1/18/2010
- by By Gregg Kilday
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Waverly Inn is caught in the middle of a nasty real estate war with screaming, sign-carrying protesters trying to convince celebrity patrons that two of Graydon Carter's business partners in the Greenwich Village eatery are vile slumlords.
On Wednesday night, longtime residents of the nearby Jane Street Hotel - a single-room-occupancy joint being turned into a luxury inn by Eric Goode and Sean McPherson - surrounded the Waverly, chanting "Slumlords!" and "Rats!"
The demonstrators stopped Hugh Jackman, Barry Diller and Diane von Furstenberg...
On Wednesday night, longtime residents of the nearby Jane Street Hotel - a single-room-occupancy joint being turned into a luxury inn by Eric Goode and Sean McPherson - surrounded the Waverly, chanting "Slumlords!" and "Rats!"
The demonstrators stopped Hugh Jackman, Barry Diller and Diane von Furstenberg...
- 12/19/2008
- NYPost.com
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