Review: 'Step Brothers' full of funny stuff

By Tom Charity
Special to CNN

(CNN) -- Stop me if you've heard this one before, but producer Judd Apatow has another hit comedy on his hands. This time it's "Step Brothers," an astute no-brainer that's also Will Ferrell's funniest effort since "Talladega Nights."

Step Brothers

Will Ferrell, left, and John C. Reilly, right, play in-laws who find themselves at odds.

It's no coincidence that Ferrell is back with the "Talladega" team: "Anchorman" director Adam McKay and co-star John C. Reilly. All three share a story credit, while Ferrell and McKay are listed as co-writers.

In "Step Brothers," Ferrell is Brennan Huff, a 40-year-old virgin (probably) who still lives with his mom, Nancy (Mary Steenburgen). Reilly is Dale ("Call me Dragon"), the equally immature son of Dr. Robert Doback (Richard Jenkins). When Nancy and Robert get married, the new siblings make no effort to conceal their hostility.

These aren't middle-aged sad-sacks so much as overgrown teenagers -- Wayne and Garth with curlier hair. They wear Yoda T-shirts, dream of rock stardom and get their jollies over back issues of "Good Housekeeping." When Robert really has to get tough -- much too late, obviously -- he bans them from watching TV.

Review: Hard to believe in 'X-Files'

By Christy Lemire
Associated Press

(AP) -- The makers of the new "X-Files" movie have done themselves a disservice in coming up with the elongated title, "The X-Files: I Want to Believe." Really, it just invites a whole bunch of bad jokes which, unfortunately, are justified.

X-Files

David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson return as Mulder and Scully in "The X-Files: I Want to Believe."

It's easy to imagine how they might go: I want to believe another "X-Files" movie is necessary, 10 years after the first one came out and six years after the pioneering sci-fi series went off the air. I want to believe it's worth my time and money, even if I wasn't a fervent devotee of the TV show. And I want to believe that Mulder and Scully still have the same chemistry they once did -- a big reason the series developed a cult fan base.

Well, David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson do slip comfortably back into the roles that made them superstars in the 1990s, but the movie itself from director and "X-Files" series creator Chris Carter never feels like anything more than an extended episode. It lacks the complexity and scope required to rise to a theatrical level; it doesn't challenge us in any new or exciting ways. The big mystery? Just a rehashed urban legend.

In deference to the show's many secrets and twists, we won't give anything away here. We'll just say the plot involves a missing persons case, severed body parts and some creepy hunts and chases through the snow.

In writing the script, Carter and longtime collaborator Frank Spotnitz have come up with a stand-alone story, one that doesn't require expertise in "X-Files" minutiae to follow, although they've also left some nuggets for loyal fans along the way. The title itself is one of them, sorta: It's the phrase on a poster that hung in Fox Mulder's office.

Departure of Ebert, Roeper 'end of an era'

CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- Richard Roeper, fresh off announcing that he was leaving the balcony of "At the Movies with Ebert & Roeper," may have put it best.

Roeper, Ebert

Earlier this week, Richard Roeper and Roger Ebert announced they were leaving "At the Movies."

Hours after word of his departure, he posted on his Twitter feed: "With all the old footage and the person-on-the-street interviews, it's like watching your own obit."

Or maybe an obituary for influential, well-informed film criticism on TV.

This week, Roeper and Roger Ebert both left the show, whose format has survived since its beginning on public television in 1975 to its latest incarnation through Disney-ABC Domestic Television, with Roeper hosting with a rotating partner in Ebert's health-related absence.

Fellow "At the Movies" founder Gene Siskel died of a brain tumor in 1999 and Roeper was selected as his permanent replacement in 2000. In recent years, Ebert has battled cancer and was left unable to speak -- even as he continues to churn out reviews.

Ebert's competitive fire and stalwart nature likely have something to do with that. The show started, after all, as a meeting of rivals: Ebert, the subtly pugnacious Chicago Sun-Times critic; and Siskel, his good-naturedly aloof crosstown counterpart at the Chicago Tribune.

"Two scrappy guys who made the criticism of the art a battle," said Dann Gire, president of the Chicago Film Critics Association and movie critic for The Daily Herald newspaper in Arlington Heights. "They were passionate, intelligent, knowledgeable people who tackled the art form as if it were a sports game. That is never going to be recaptured."

But ratings slowly eroded following the "Siskel & Ebert" heyday, falling by about 1.4 million viewers between 1992 and the Roeper-led "At the Movies" of 2008. The show drew 3.8 million viewers in 1992, 2.8 million in 2002 and 2.4 million viewers in 2008, according to data provided by Nielsen.

Spears child custody deal agreed


US singer Britney Spears and her former husband Kevin Federline have agreed their child custody settlement.

Ms Spears will increase payments to Mr Federline from $15,000 to $20,000 a month, according to the deal approved by a Los Angeles court commissioner.

The agreement also includes a one-off $250,000 payment by Ms Spears to Mr Federline's legal team.

Last week Ms Spears won a ruling allowing her more visits from her two sons, who are in Mr Federline's care.

For now, Mr Federline, 30, retains full custody, but Ms Spears may get expanded rights by the end of the year, her lawyer said earlier.

The singer will now have three visits a week from Sean Preston, 2, and Jayden James, 1, with at least two overnight visits.

Kevin Federline, March 2008
Nr Federline was awarded custody of his two sons in January

Ms Spears lost custody last year in October, and lost visiting rights in January when Mr Federline was given full custody.

The couple were married in 2004 and finalised their divorce last July.

The singer's father, Jamie Spears, was granted control of his daughter's assets in February after she was admitted to a psychiatric ward.

A hearing on Mr Spears' authority over his daughter's affairs is scheduled for 31 July.

BY-BBC NEWS

Ritchie says marriage is 'fine'


Film director Guy Ritchie has brushed off speculation about his marriage to Madonna in a US magazine interview.

The 39-year-old Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels director told People: "My marriage is fine as far as I'm aware of."

The singer and her spokesperson have repeatedly denied reports that the couple were planning a divorce.

London-born Ritchie told the magazine his marriage to Madonna had enabled him to look at the capital with fresh eyes.

"I was born there and I've seen it change and I know a great deal about it, I'm invested," he told People.

"I live vicariously through my wife, so I was once a spy and now I've become a tourist, and it's much more fun to live in London as a tourist than it is as a spy."

Ritchie was talking to People at a convention in San Diego, California, to promote his new film, London gangster picture RocknRolla, which is due for release in the UK in September and the US in October.

His two most recent films, Swept Away - starring Madonna - and Revolver, were panned by critics.

Meanwhile, Madonna, 49, is in New York rehearsing for her forthcoming world tour, which begins in August.

Ritchie's next film is a version of Sherlock Holmes, starring Robert Downey Jr as the English detective.
BY-BBC NEWS

Stones ditching EMI for Universal


The Rolling Stones have signed an "exclusive, long-term, worldwide" record deal with music giant Universal, the record company has announced.

The contract covers future albums by the veteran rockers as well as their extensive back catalogue.

Their previous deal with EMI ended in March after 31 years together.

The Stones, fronted by Mick Jagger, had already released a live CD in March - recorded in New York in 2006 - with Universal in a one-album deal.

That album accompanied Martin Scorsese's documentary Shine a Light, which featured footage of two shows played in New York in 2006 as well as behind-the-scenes and archive material.

New recordings will be released through Universal's Polydor label.

BY-BBC NEWS

Hollywood's digital graduation

Click's editor Richard Taylor investigates how Hollywood is beginning to change the way it distributes and allows people to watch its films.

Clapperboard
Film studios are beginning to embrace digital delivery
Two years ago Click reported on Hollywood's struggle to beat illegal downloaders.

At the time its primary impulse was to aggressively pursue the offenders inhabiting the so-called "darknet", the internet underground.

But the studios' will to sell and distribute its content digitally over the internet appeared to be half-hearted at best.

There were a few American-based sites offering poor-value packages which restricted how you could transfer the content, but that was about it.

BY-BBC NEWS

Franz go 'disco' on third record


Franz Ferdinand have told Newsbeat their third album, out next January, will be "wilder" and more "disco driven" than their previous records.

Frontman Alex Kapranos says the band are putting the finishing touches to the follow-up to You Could Have It So Much Better in their Glasgow studio.

There's no title yet but Alex said the record was "inspired by whatever was round about me".

The band have already road tested some tracks during a series of club shows.

Despite early indications that the album took an afro-beat direction following their recent Africa Exprez gig with Damon Albarn, the band denied they would be adopting that sound.

Some of the songs are kicking about on bootlegs and YouTube which is really cool
Alex Kapranos
Franz Ferdinand
"The album has more of a disco dance floor sort of tempo," said Kapranos. "While the music is not necessarily disco music, it is around about that tempo and it makes you move in that kind of a way.

"There's definitely a different feel. I've been noticing the audiences moving in a different kind of way to the way they might have moved to the older songs."

He went on: "I think the African thing got a little exaggerated because we did the Africa Exprez gig a wee while ago and I think drummer Paul (Thomson) and I mentioned we'd been listening to some Ethiopian bands.

"Suddenly everybody thought we were making an afro-beat album. But we're not really. I think we're incapable of making an afro-beat album. It's always going to sound like a Franz Ferdinand album."

BY-BBC NEWS

Oscars ticket poster to be sued


Oscars organisers have been given the identity of someone who tried to sell two tickets for this year's ceremony without permission for $5,000 (£2,516).

A judge in Los Angeles ordered website Craigslist, where the tickets were offered, to reveal the vendor's name.

The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences said that person would join other individuals and companies it was suing for selling or brokering tickets.

It said invitees were forbidden from selling these for security reasons.

Lawyer David Quinto, for the Academy, said: "If you don't know who's inside the theatre, it's very difficult to provide security."

'Trespasser'

The poster identified themselves on Craigslist only as Daniel.

In March, the Academy announced it was suing a number of parties over the sale of tickets. Some of these cases have now been thrown out.

Those attending February's ceremony were explicitly told they could not give away or sell their tickets, court documents stated.

Mr Quinto said the Academy was keen to find out who had bought the tickets.

It considers anyone who uses someone else's ticket to be a trespasser at the event in Los Angeles.

BY-BBC NEWS

50 Cent suing US fast food chain


Rapper 50 Cent is suing Taco Bell claiming the US fast food chain has used his name and image without permission in an advertising campaign.

New York court papers say the advert features the star, real name Curtis Jackson, being encouraged to change his name to 79 Cent, 89 Cent or 99 Cent.

The rapper is accusing the chain of "diluting the value of his good name".

The advertisement is part of Taco Bell's "Why Pay More?" campaign, which promotes items for under a dollar.

50 Cent also accuses Taco Bell of employing a guerrilla advertising campaign to fool consumers into thinking he had endorsed the chain.

The lawsuit says the Mexican-themed chain sent a letter to media organisations encouraging the rapper to change his name for one day to promote its advertising campaign.

The letter said that, if the star agreed, Taco Bell would donate $10,000 (£5,000) to the charity of his choice.

BY-BBC NEWS

Wogan still top morning radio DJ


BBC Radio 2's Wake up to Wogan remains the most popular breakfast radio show in the country, according to the latest figures from radio industry body Rajar.

The show had 7.75m listeners tuning in each week, which was down slightly from last quarter's record 8.1m.

Radio 2 also remains the UK's most popular station, with 13m listeners.

Rajar also revealed radio listening via mobile phone among people aged 15 and over continued to rise to 12.2% from 8.9% this time last year.

The figures, covering the period from 24 March to 22 June 2008, showed Radio 3 attracted more listeners for longer with 1.91m people tuning in every week, up from 1.8m last quarter.

AUDIENCE FIGURES JAN-MAR 2008
Radio 1 - 10.68m (10.87m)
Radio 2 - 13m (13.1m)
Radio 3 - 1.91m (1.78m)
Radio 4 - 9.53m (9.49m)
5 Live - 6m (5.89m)
6 Music - 551,000 (471,000)
Source: Rajar
Figures in brackets are for the same period in 2007

"It is encouraging to see that listeners are staying with us for longer, giving us our highest average weekly listening for a couple of years," said Roger Wright, controller of Radio 3.

BBC 6 Music also posted its fourth consecutive record reach, with 551,000 listeners.

Radio 1 attracted 10.68m listeners per week in the quarter, down from 10.87m last year and 11.07m last quarter.

The Chris Moyles Show also saw a drop in its figures with 7.21m listeners - down from 7.26m last year and a record 7.72m last quarter.

BY-BBC NEWS

Why is John Barrowman gay?


Torchwood star John Barrowman has known he was gay since he was nine. But was he born that way or did his upbringing have something to do with it? Here, he explains why he set out to try to solve this mystery, for the BBC One show The Making of Me.

I was in the closet for three hours once in 1972. It was dark, uncomfortable, and really cramped. Plus, I was convinced I wasn't alone (a crumpled jacket lurking in the corner looked pretty dangerous). I was five and my brother, Andrew, then 10, and my sister, Carole, 13, had shoved me into the coat closet because, well, really for absolutely no good reason. I mean what baby brother has ever annoyed his siblings to the point of needing to be locked up or tied down?

This story still gets a laugh from my nieces and nephews. Depending on who's doing the telling, Uncle John was either locked up for 30 fleeting minutes or for three long, tortuous, oxygen-starved hours. As simple as the story is I think it's an apt metaphor for the way I've chosen to live my life - openly, honestly, with no regrets. And, whenever I can, I try to confront the monsters in the dark. As my favourite Jerry Herman song proclaims: "There's no return and no deposit. One life. So open up your closet."

BY-BBC NEWS

Talking Shop: Rupert Penry-Jones

Spooks star Rupert Penry-Jones talks about his latest BBC drama Burn Up, a two-part thriller centred around climate change.

Rupert Penry-Jones in Burn Up
Penry-Jones plays oil executive Tom McConnell in the BBC's Burn Up

Fans of BBC One's spy drama Spooks are used to seeing Rupert Penry-Jones risking life and limb for queen and country.

But in two-part thriller Burn Up the 37-year-old actor takes on a more cerebral role as an oil executive caught up in a global conspiracy.

Written by Simon Beaufoy, who was Oscar-nominated for his work on hit comedy The Full Monty, the drama takes a topical look at the dangers of climate change.

The son of To the Manor Born star Angela Thorne, Penry-Jones - who has two young children with actress wife Dervla Kirwan - will also be seen soon in ITV crime drama Whitechapel.

BY-BBC NEWS

'Mad Men' remains a show full of secrets

NEW YORK (AP) -- Let's twist again like we did last summer!

Mad Men

Jon Hamm stars as ad exec Don Draper in "Mad Men."

"Mad Men" fans remember how things were really hummin' last summer, the first for that glorious drama series set in the Manhattan advertising world of 1960. There were lots of twists at the Sterling Cooper agency: Peggy's unsuspected pregnancy, Roger's heart attack, the double life of the man we thought we knew as Don Draper.

"Mad Men" returns Sunday on cable's AMC. Now it's February 1962, and as the season premiere gets going, Chubby Checker proclaims "twistin' time is here."

Here's an interesting twist: "Mad Men" is being welcomed back with a whirlwind of attention, accelerating what had been a steady build. Critics' raves and the small but ecstatic audience a year ago were followed by a pair of Golden Globes and then a Peabody.

In recent weeks the show scored cover stories in Entertainment Weekly and The New York Times Magazine, while popping up in GQ and Vanity Fair.

The attention was crowned last week, when the show received 16 Emmy nominations, including a nod for best drama.

It's a saga unfolding nearly a half-century ago, with a genre-busting absence of doctors, lawyers, cops or superheroes. And yet "Mad Men" -- as contemporary and relatable as anything on TV -- seems game to become a mainstream hit.

Dissatisfied actors challenge SAG president

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- More than 30 actors dissatisfied with stalled contract talks said Wednesday they have joined to campaign for seats on the Screen Actors Guild's board of directors, a move that could eventually break the stalemate with Hollywood studios.

"Private Practice" stars Kate Walsh and Amy Brenneman are part of the slate of challengers.

"Private Practice" stars Kate Walsh and Amy Brenneman are part of the slate of challengers.

The 31 actors running under the name Unite for Strength are challenging the leadership of guild president Alan Rosenberg and the faction that supports him, Membership First.

"We can no longer afford leaders who sow division," Unite for Strength leader Ned Vaughn said in a statement that singled out the gap that opened between SAG and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists during the talks.

In response, SAG said only that it planned to release the official list of candidates on August 5 after the nominating period has closed and candidate eligibility has been confirmed.

Ballots will go out to members on August 19 and are due back to the union by September 18, with results expected to be announced that evening. About a third of the board's 71 seats are at stake.

It's unlikely there will be any movement in the negotiations until after the election, said entertainment attorney Jonathan Handel, a former associate counsel for the Writers Guild of America.

If the current leaders remain in control, it could be seen as an endorsement of their position on the contract. But a ballot result favoring Unite for Strength could prove to be a game-changer.

Bale asks for privacy over 'personal matter'

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) -- Batman star Christian Bale asked for privacy Thursday in his first comments since allegations he assaulted his mother and sister at a London hotel, saying the incident was a "deeply personal matter."

Bale

Christian Bale attends the Barcelona premiere of "The Dark Knight" with his wife, Sibi.

The Welsh-born actor brushed off questions about the alleged family dispute, saying he preferred to focus on the blockbuster movie "The Dark Knight," which opened in Spain on Wednesday.

"It's a deeply personal matter," Bale told a press conference at a luxury hotel in this northern Spanish city. "I would ask you to respect my privacy in the matter."

The 34-year-old actor spent four hours talking to British police Tuesday following allegations he assaulted his mother and one of his three sisters in his suite at London's Dorchester Hotel two days earlier. He was released on bail, but not charged.

Bale has said through his lawyers that the assault allegations were false.

British media reported that Bale's mother and sister told police he assaulted them at the hotel a day before attending the European premiere of "The Dark Knight." The Sun newspaper said the complaint was filed by sister Sharon Bale and mother Jenny Bale.

Smith tops Hollywood earner list


Will Smith was the highest-paid actor in Hollywood last year, according to US business magazine Forbes.

The I Am Legend star earned $80m (£40m) - but Dodgeball star Vince Vaughn proved the best value for money, raking in $14.73 for every dollar he was paid.

Cameron Diaz led the ladies' charge by topping the highest-grossing actress table with takings of $50m (£25m).

The magazine pulled together lists of Hollywood's big earners for its special Entertainment All Stars issue.

Smith, Johnny Depp and Eddie Murphy were the best paid Hollywood actors in the past year, according to the magazine.

TOP FIVE ACTORS
Will Smith - $80m (£40m)
Johnny Depp - $72m (£36m)
Eddie Murphy - $55m (£27.5m)
Mike Myers - $55m (£27.5m)
Leonardo DiCaprio - $45m (£22.5m)

Smith, 39, made $80m (£40m) between 1 June 2007 and 1 June 2008, thanks to films like I Am Legend, Hancock and The Pursuit of Happyness, for which he was nominated for best actor in the 2007 Oscars.

Pirates of the Caribbean star Depp, 45, earned $72m (£36m) in same period.

But Smith only ranked 21st on the value-for-money list, with a gross income return of $5.64 for every dollar spent on the big-budget superstar.

BY-BBC NEWS

Review: Batman's limelight tussle

By Lizo Mzimba
Entertainment correspondent, BBC News

First things first. There has been a lot of talk about whether the late Heath Ledger's turn as the Joker in The Dark Knight deserves an Oscar.

Heath Ledger as the Joker in The Dark Knight
Ledger's exuberant performance is of the kind loved by the Academy

Well, there is an outstanding performance in the film, but it actually comes not from Ledger, but from Christian Bale.

That is not to say Ledger is not impressive. He is.

But his is a one-note performance - a pretty good note, it must be said - but one note nonetheless.

Bale's Bruce Wayne/Batman has layers of subtlety to it, and his portrayal of the superhero is so grounded in reality that you almost take it for granted, especially if you are being distracted by the sinister pyrotechnics of his nemesis.

That said, Ledger will still probably win, and Bale will not even be nominated.

Ledger's Joker is one of those performances that the Academy loves to reward, and the public loves to applaud, because it screams "look at me I'm acting".

It is a similar situation to the film Rain Man. There, everyone heaped praise on Dustin Hoffman's Raymond, while ignoring the much more subtle portrayal of his brother by Tom Cruise - the performance that grounds the film and makes it work.

The Dark Knight picks up soon after the events of Batman Begins, developing many of the themes of the first film.

There is a power struggle between the organised crime bosses of the city and the Joker.

BY-BBC NEWS

New X-Files film has its premiere


The new X-Files film has had its world premiere in Hollywood six years after the TV series finished.

The storyline surrounding I Want to Believe has been a closely guarded secret since filming finished in March.

David Duchovny, who plays Fox Mulder, says fans will find the plot familiar: "It concentrates more on Mulder and Scully's relationship."

The X-Files series ran between 1993 and 2002, with the first feature film, Fight The Future, released in 1998.

David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson filmed I Want To Believe in Vancouver, Canada, last Christmas.

A trailer for the movie shows their two characters, Fox Mulder and Dana Scully, looking for a body frozen in a lake with dozens of other FBI agents.

Duchovny, 47, says the relationship between the pair remains tense sexually.

"The relationship of the love story between Mulder and Scully is interwoven with this thriller," he said.

"It ties into the characters as part of the mythology and my character as a believer and Gillian's character as a sceptic and we butt heads in the way we always have."

BY-BBC NEWS

Batman star appeals for privacy


Batman star Christian Bale has asked for privacy after being questioned over allegations he assaulted his mother and sister in a London hotel.

Speaking for the first time on the subject, the Welsh-born actor said it was a "deeply personal matter."

He was speaking at a press conference in Barcelona, Spain, during a tour to promote Batman movie The Dark Knight.

The 34-year-old was arrested and bailed by police in London on Tuesday over the allegations which he denies.

"I would ask you to respect my privacy in the matter," he said in Thursday's press conference.

He had greeted fans at The Dark Knight's Spanish premiere on Wednesday night but had refused to comment on the assault claims.

He spent half an hour signing autographs at the gala but only spoke to the press about the film.

The actor smiled and looked relaxed before the movie was screened.

BY-BBC NEWS

State of family sitcoms is not so funny

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Bill Engvall has not yet seen the overnight ratings for "The Bill Engvall Show." It's the morning after the premiere of the sitcom's second season, and he's concerned.

Engvall

Bill Engvall (right) and "The Bill Engvall Show" are exceptions in a day with few family sitcoms.

"Last night it was hard to get excited when you're going up against the NBA finals," says Engvall, one-fourth of the popular "Blue Collar Comedy" troupe. "Not that the entire country watches (the finals), but it does take a huge audience away from you."

Basketball, however, is the least of his worries.

On television, "Engvall" has become something of an anomaly: a multicamera family sitcom played before a live audience in which the lead guy is actually married with children.

Once the staple of broadcast television, the traditional family sitcom has been relegated of late to niche cable channels like TBS, which airs "Engvall" and "Tyler Perry's House of Payne," and The Disney Channel, which has had phenomenal success with its Miley Cyrus-led comedy, "Hannah Montana."

"Engvall" -- with its current season average of 2.4 million viewers, up 8 percent over last year -- is considered a ratings success for TBS. But those numbers don't come close to past broadcast network family hits such as "Roseanne," "Grace Under Fire," "Home Improvement" or "The Cosby Show," which at its peak in the late '80s averaged 63 million viewers.

"The family comedy is like that kid in the corner of the quad who's not the coolest kid, but he's a good solid kid," says Michael Wright, senior vice president of content creation for TNT, TBS and TCM. "In this business of what we do, everybody wants to be associated with the thing that's the hippest and coolest and newest and that's not a bad thing, but it doesn't mean that this form is no longer relevant."

In recent years, the proliferation of Internet and video game usage and the overall fragmentation of the American family has undermined the traditional family comedy "in a big way," says Brian Lowry, television critic for the entertainment trade paper Daily Variety. "It's not as much about let's gather around the hearth and watch together as it is, I'm going in my room and watch what I want; you go in your room and watch what you want."

Lowry adds: "You could also blame, quite frankly, that there have been lot of really bad (family sitcoms) lately. But I don't know if even a good family sitcom could have the kind of success that we were accustomed to when they were dominant."

"I won't lie to you, it's been an uphill battle," says Engvall, commenting on the struggle to bring new audiences to his show, despite less than glowing reviews, including TV.com's appraisal: "a complete waste of time."

But Engvall is not giving up.

"At our tapings, I can't tell you the number of people who come up to me personally and go, 'Thanks for bringing family back to TV,' (or) the e-mails I get all the time from people saying, 'Thanks for doing it the way you do it,' " he says. "So we're going to ride this horse ... for better or worse we're going to ride it."

Though the half-hour family comedy hasn't been put out to pasture entirely, "there seems to be this idea that everything needs to be reinvented, that everything needs to have some clever high-concept sort of idea that draws people in," says Ali LeRoi, co-creator and executive producer of The CW family comedy "Everybody Hates Chris."

"People are fairly simple. They like good actors, they like good stories, they like good writing, they like good jokes," LeRoi continues, "and I am really under the impression, in terms of the development process, that these people have out-clevered themselves."

When you look at what qualifies as family comedy on the broadcast networks these days, it's family with an adult edge.

On CBS, for example, "Two and a Half Men" and "The New Adventures of Old Christine" are considered by the network to be family comedies, yet they seldom deal with kids' issues, even though children are part of the shows.

In the fall, the network premieres another such comedy, "Gary Unmarried," about a divorced dad with two kids who is re-entering the dating pool, and you just know it will be all about Gary.

As broadcasters become increasingly, and now almost exclusively, focused on adults 18 to 49, "they don't care if kids watch their shows," Lowry says. "They're not really trying to do 'Full House' where they have a show that plays across as many levels because they can't really monetize -- which has become the favorite word -- the kids as well as they can the adults."

"If we do a traditional family comedy," says Wendi Trilling, executive vice president of comedy development at CBS, "we have to find a show that really appeals to adults. If we can't get adults, the show isn't going to succeed. If we get kids, too, that's great, but I don't think that can be our primary focus."

At ABC, home to the once popular "TGIF" family comedy block, finding the next hit family comedy is a "huge priority" for Samie Kim Falvey, senior vice president of Comedy Development for ABC Entertainment. She recently greenlighted the animated midseason series "The Good Family," about a family of overly committed do-gooders.

"If you're a broadcaster and you're trying to bring in the largest number of viewers, doing a show that involves family will be relatable to everyone and also has a lot of value," Falvey says.

In the meantime, cable is taking full advantage of the broadcast shortfall.

"We've been lucky to work with some talented writers and producers that might not have opportunities at the (broadcast) networks who are running to Disney Channel wanting to work with us," says Disney's Adam Bonnett, senior vice president of original programming.

The network is currently in business with Peter Murrieta ("Greetings From Tucson"), executive producer of the channel's family fantasy comedy "Wizards of Waverly Place," and has worked with writers and producers from shows such as "Full House," "Friends" and "Murphy Brown."

Lifetime will premiere a new half-hour family sitcom in December called "Rita Rocks," starring Nicole Sullivan as a wife and mother of two who tries to invigorate her overworked life by starting up a garage band.

But for his part, at least, Engvall is not trying to "reinvent the wheel," he says. "It's just good family entertainment and I hope to God that TV doesn't just bail on it."

Miley Cyrus looks to 'Breakout' of Disney character

NEW YORK (AP) -- Hannah Montana may be the most potent phenomenon in Hollywood right now -- bigger than Batman, bigger than Brangelina. Yet these days, the girl who truly fascinates is not Hannah, but Miley Cyrus.

Miley Cyrus, already been a star with fans of "Hannah Montana," is hoping to take her sound mainstream.

Miley Cyrus, already been a star with fans of "Hannah Montana," is hoping to take her sound mainstream.

The 15-year-old face of the billion-dollar Disney franchise is no longer a star for just the tween set: She's intriguing people who turn the pages of Seventeen magazine, as well as Us Weekly and Vanity Fair (more on THAT later). While "Hannah" is still very much a part of Miley, it does not solely define the singer/actress.

Nowhere is that clearer than with the release of Miley's latest album, "Breakout," which comes out Tuesday. While Miley has already sold millions of albums, it's always been with the "Hannah Montana" moniker attached (2006's "Hannah Montana" and 2007's "Hannah Montana 2: Meet Miley Cyrus").

But there's no blonde wig to be found on the cover of this CD. Instead, there's a more mature sound that's already finding an older audience. The CD's first single, the rocker "7 Things," is now No. 9 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart) and marks her biggest success in translating her music beyond the Radio Disney audience.

"To be played on these radio stations is awesome, to be able to rock out to it in your car without planning it, without it being just a kids channel," says Miley, who with her deep voice and self-assured manner seems a decade older that 15.

"(I'm) making it a little more fun and edgy, and I think being able to step out of the 'Hannah Montana' thing -- not in a way where I'm forgetting her completely, but as my fans grow up, me growing up too and kind of having my own person."

The "Hannah Montana thing" is familiar to millions of kids and adults alike. A movie is due out next year, the third season of the kitschy TV show starts filming in weeks, and the DVD of the blockbuster "Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds" tour, which wrapped up earlier this year, is a lock to top the charts when it debuts later this summer.

But navigating her own celebrity path outside the confines of famous character has proven to be difficult. With former teen phenoms like Lindsay Lohan and Britney Spears providing epic examples of bad behavior, and the nude photo scandal involving Disney "High School Musical" star Vanessa Hudgens, tabloids have been eager to document a Miley implosion.

The first signs of potential concern came in the form of personal pictures that made their way onto the Internet, showing Miley dressed provocatively (though not obscenely) and setting the blogosphere abuzz.

A more serious firestorm erupted in April when Vanity Fair published a photo of Miley wrapped in a sheet, showing her bare back and shoulders. The photo caused such outrage that no less than The New York Times chronicled the controversy, and Miley and her father, country star Billy Ray Cyrus, said they regretted the result of the photo shoot. They also said she was never topless, as the photo by the esteemed Annie Leibovitz suggested.

But Miley has learned she doesn't even have to bare a shoulder to cause a fuss -- as when she revealed in an interview earlier this month that "Sex and the City" was one of her favorite shows.

"It just scared people because there was the word 'sex' in the title, you know what I mean?" says Miley, brushing off her critics.

"Just because that's what the show is about that doesn't mean I'm doing that ... you don't all the sudden become the character that you watch," she adds (though looking very Carrie Bradshaw-ish in a long flowing blue bohemian dress, her hair cascading down her shoulders, with a Chanel bag close to her side).

While allowing that she's made "mistakes," she also feels that the media has been unforgiving in their scrutiny at times -- and a bit unwilling to see that she's not a little kid anymore.

"It's kind of hard to let someone that was so young when they started kind of grow up," reasons Miley, who was 13 when she debuted in the role. "You just have to realize that people make mistakes and that makes you almost a little more relatable."

Hollywood Records A&R executive Jon Lind, who worked with Miley on the "Hannah Montana/Meet Miley Cyrus" album and her latest record, says such scrutiny is just a part of today's tabloid world.

"I don't think she's really done anything scathingly wrong, but I think there's a lot of people selling a lot of magazines following her around, making her into the next somebody, and I don't think that's fair -- she's not the next anybody as far as I can see," he says.

He adds that he's seen a significant growth in Miley in just the past year: "The difference between being a 14-year-old and a 15-year-old in any tween or teenager's life is an extraordinary amount -- it's like dog years."

Much of that growth is reflected on her new CD. While she co-wrote a majority of the songs on the "Meet Miley Cyrus" half of the last record, on "Breakout," her songs have a weightier tone, discussing the environment, breakups and relationships.

"She always reached the adult audience, because she always reached moms. It's just in a way that radio finally started to acknowledge," says Sean Ross of Edison Media Research, which tracks the radio industry. "'7 Things,' ... has a little bit of an Avril Lavigne-thing going; it sounds like an adult record."

"There are lots of people who wouldn't necessarily wanna buy or listen to a 'Hannah Montana' record because of their predisposition to the Disney television character," says Lind. "But if you listen to this record as an artist, the quality of her voice, the quality of her writing, and the quality of the production, I hope, as she does, that it will be taken seriously by (an) older music audience."

"I hope I get respected a little bit more as a writer," says Miley. "I want them to respect me and know that I have a lot to say, I have a lot for the world to know and take away from what my life experiences have been."

She'd also hoping to show more of those life experiences in her acting. She's like to do some independent films and play gritty characters: "I do wanna, like, showcase a little more of what I can do, and also some different situations ... I would like to do something that was a little more deep."

She's even hoping to add a little bit more of an edge to "Hannah" next season.

"There's some things that I want to reinvent with her look, and not make it all sparkles and butterflies, you know? Some stars, and some black rock 'n' roll stuff," she says. "I did want it to grow up a little bit."

But lest anyone fear that she's growing up a bit too much, she's quick to point out that's she hasn't grown out of "Hannah."

"I probably won't tour again as a 'Hannah Montana' tour ... I'm kind of past that stuff. But I definitely wanna keep doing my show. I love doing (it) and I wouldn't wanna give it up quite yet."

Omarosa: Wendy Williams is 'a fake and a phony'

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Omarosa is not sorry for sparring with Wendy Williams.

Omarosa, Wendy Williams

Omarosa and Wendy Williams had a contentious conversation on Monday's "Wendy Williams Show."

"I stand by everything I said," Omarosa told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The reality star -- whose full name is Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth -- appeared Monday on "The Wendy Williams Show" to promote her upcoming book but instead spent more time trading insults with radio personality-turned-talk show host Wendy Williams, who infamously engaged Whitney Houston during an interview on her radio show in 2003.

"When you're not honest with the American people, they do not respond well to you," said Omarosa, who became famous after appearing on the first season of NBC's "The Apprentice." "She should just go ask Star Jones about that. Honesty needs to be there. She's a phony. As long as she continues to be a fake and a phony, she won't be successful."

Omarosa told the AP that the show's promos and introductions for her appearance are what originally ruffled her feathers and prompted her to tell Williams that she would not be disrespected. Things got uglier when Williams grabbed Omarosa's book cover to hold it up to the camera, and Omarosa yanked it back out of Williams' hand.

"She snatched it out of my hand," Omarosa told the AP. "She didn't say, 'Can I see it?' "

The tussle gave way to Omarosa attacking Williams' appearance, asking her whether she had had a nose job and suggesting she shouldn't wear wigs. During the heated exchange, Williams called Omarosa a "typical angry black woman" and advised Omarosa that cosmetic injections could fix her wrinkles.

Following Omarosa's appearance, Williams told the AP she thought the unprovoked aggression was a publicity stunt and called Omarosa "a delusional, D-list, pathetic woman." Williams also said that Omarosa would not be invited back on "The Wendy Williams Show," which airs on Fox-owned stations in Los Angeles, Detroit, Dallas and New York.

Omarosa was a contestant on the first season of "The Apprentice" starring Donald Trump in 2004. Her domineering personality quickly earned her enemies among fellow contestants and TV viewers. She later appeared on VH1's "The Surreal Life" and "The Celebrity Apprentice."

Golden Girls pay tribute to Getty

The stars of US sitcom The Golden Girls have paid tribute to actress Estelle Getty, who has died at the age of 84.

Bea Arthur, who played her on-screen daughter Dorothy Zbornak, called their partnership "one of the greatest comic duos", adding: "I will miss her."

Rue McClanahan, Blanche in the series, said: "She'll always be with us in her crowning achievement, Sophia Petrillo."

Getty, whose role as the sarcastic pensioner won her an Emmy award, had been suffering from advanced dementia.

Her son, Carl Gettleman, said she was "one of the most talented comedic actresses who ever lived".

Apart from the Golden Girls, Getty's credits included films like Mannequin and Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot.

According to her official website, the actress was born Estelle Scher in the Lower East Side of New York City after her parents emigrated to the US from Poland.

The cast of The Golden Girls
Getty (middle front) played the oldest Golden Girl, but was younger than two of her co-stars

But the actress faced a long struggle for success, working in poorly-paid office jobs to help support her family while she tried to make her big break.

"I knew I could be seduced by success in another field, so I'd say, 'don't promote me, please,"' she later recalled.

After trying her hand at stand-up comedy - later calling it "her biggest mistake" - she began to land a smattering of films and TV roles, including parts in Tootsie and Deadly Force.

But it was The Golden Girls which made her a household name and saw her nominated for an Emmy seven times.

Indomitable

The sitcom, which focused on the lives of four older women living in a shared home in Miami, Florida, was developed by US TV network NBC after its programming chief Brandon Tartikoff decided that older viewers were being ignored.

Getty was the last actress to be cast for the series - having failed two auditions because producers thought she did not look old enough to play an 80-year-old.

Estelle Getty
The actress was just three days short of her 85th birthday
But the wisecracking Sophia Petrillo proved so popular that she was brought back for two spin-off shows - Empty Nest and The Golden Palace - in the 1990s.

Audiences particularly loved the verbal zingers Getty would hurl at her co-stars.

When Rue McClanahan's libidinous character Blanche once complained that her life was an open book, Sophia shot back: "Your life's an open blouse."

Nonetheless, Getty said she was only "a teensy-weensy bit" like her most famous creation.

"I think people have me mixed up with my character," she said, while admitting: "I would like to be as sure and magnanimous and feisty and strong and indomitable as she is."

She married Arthur Gettleman at the age of 23, from whom she adapted her stage name.

People have me mixed up with my character
Estelle Getty

After The Golden Girls, Getty secured several memorable film roles - in particular her grotesque comic turn as Sylvester Stallone's mother in Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot - and launched a successful exercise video for older women.

But she was unable to join a Golden Girls reunion in 2004 due to her failing health.

The star's husband passed away that same year.

Getty died at her home three days short of her 85th birthday and is survived by her two sons, Carl and Barry.

"She was loved throughout the world in six continents," said Carl in a statement, "and if they loved sitcoms in Antarctica she would have been loved on seven continents."

BY-BBC NEWS

Winehouse parents reveal waxwork

A waxwork model of Amy Winehouse has been unveiled at Madame Tussauds.

The singer's parents, Mitch and Janis, revealed the model, “complete with trademark beehive and sailor tattoos", at the London attraction.

Mr Winehouse said the waxwork of his 24-year-old daughter was an "absolutely incredible" likeness.

He added that the Rehab singer was getting over her drug addiction. He said: "She's on a drug replacement programme and she's doing really well."

New album

The model of the Grammy Award-winning singer is dressed in the same outfit that her real-life inspiration wore to the Brit awards - a thigh-skimming mini dress teamed with black high heels and huge red hooped earrings.

Mitch Winehouse with the waxwork model of his daughter
Mr Winehouse said he was 'stunned' at the likeness
When he saw the waxwork for the first time, Mr Winehouse said: "It captures her totally... but she's not that skinny anymore.

"I can't get over the tattoos. They are perfect."

Mr Winehouse also confirmed his daughter was about to start work on a new album.

"She has two or three more live gigs then she will be working on her new album. She's got quite a few songs already."

The Back To Black singer has rarely been out of the headlines in recent months. In June she was told she had "traces" of the lung disease emphysema, but went on to perform at the Nelson Mandela concert in London, and the Glastonbury Festival.

If Blake comes out of prison and proves to be a positive influence on Amy, then they will have a fantastic life
Mitch Winehouse

Earlier this week, her husband, Blake Fielder-Civil, was jailed for 27 months for attacking a pub landlord and perverting the course of justice.

The 26-year-old admitted assaulting James King, 36, at the Macbeths pub in Hoxton, east London, in June 2006. He has already spent nine months on remand.

Mr Winehouse said he hoped Fielder-Civil could turn his life around.

"If Blake comes out of prison and proves to be a positive influence on Amy, then they will have a fantastic life, and he will make his parents very proud.

"The other option is just not tenable.

"I don't know if the extra five or six months he has to spend in prison will make a difference, I just don't know."

He added: "Amy wants to have children, probably with Blake, and they will become her drug of choice because she is mad about kids."

BY-BBC NEWS

Rapper Rock sentenced for brawl


Rapper Kid Rock has been sentenced to a year on probation and fined $1,000 (£501) for his part in a fight in an Atlanta waffle restaurant in 2007.

The 37-year-old, whose real name is Robert J Ritchie, also received 80 hours community service and six hours of anger management counselling.

Ritchie pleaded no contest to one count of battery. Four other assault charges were dropped.

The incident took place last October at a branch of the Waffle House chain.

Ritchie and his entourage had been performing at a gig in Atlanta and before stopping off in their tour bus in the early hours of the morning.

The fight took place when an argument broke out with another customer at the restaurant.

The rapper and five of his crew were arrested at the time.

Number one

All five appeared with Ritchie in court but the charges against three of them were dropped.

Two others pleaded no contest and were also sentenced to community service and probation.

At the time of the fight, Ritchie had just scored his first number one album in the US charts with Rock N Roll Jesus.

The rapper was previously married to Baywatch star Pamela Anderson, but the actress filed for divorce after four months of marriage in 2006.

Ritchie is originally from Detroit and has sold more than 20 million albums.

He is currently number three in the UK singles chart with the Lynyrd Skynyrd-sampling All Summer Long. Rock N Roll Jesus is released in the UK next week.

BY-BBC NEWS

Miley Cyrus splits from her 'Hannah Montana' TV personality

Tuesday, July 22nd 2008, 4:00 AM

MILEY CYRUS. "Breakout" (Hollywood Records)

Miley Cyrus commits a capital crime on her new CD: She murders her own TV character, Hannah Montana, so she can finally, fully become herself.

Anyone who is not a girl between the ages of 6 and 9 - or who doesn't live in a house with one - will need a little bit of an explanation here. Functioning as the most schizophrenic teen idol since Patty Duke played two roles on her '60s TV show, Ms. Cyrus appears as both herself and as her secret "rock star" persona, Hannah Montana, on the like-named Disney Channel smash.

In a marketing scheme as shrewdly planned as a military campaign, Disney first had Cyrus record a CD entirely under the "Hannah" character name in '06. Then they put out a two-album transitional work, with one disk yapped by "Hannah," the other by Miley.

Now for the new CD, titled "Breakout" (get it?), it's all Miley all the time. More, they've released it not on the namby-pamby Disney wing of the company but on their more grown-up Hollywood Records imprint.

At least that's the stated plan.

Anyone expecting the new CD to offer something more adult - like, say, a sonic corollary to Cyrus' controversial semi-incestuous/kinda nude shot in Vanity Fair with her dad, Billy Ray Cyrus - will be sorely disappointed. "Breakout" sounds amazingly like any other "Hannah/Miley" project, rife with scrappy little faux-rockers that suggest Avril Lavigne for the juice-box set. If the album means to age Cyrus' core audience, it's likely to nudge it only from 9 to 12, tops.

Then again, there may be nuances I'm not getting here. An adult would need the sonic equivalent to the world's most powerful electron microscope to tell the difference between the Hannah and Miley songs to begin with.

Let's see: Hannah is a cheeky scamp who sings sneery little rockers in a blond wig. Miley is a cheeky scamp who sings sneery little rockers while sporting her own auburn hair. The only difference detectable this time is that the old Miley/Hannah hybrid actually sounded slightly edgier than full-tilt Miley. Blurrier production, and added echo, numbs even more of the impact.

To be fair, Ms. Cyrus owns a serviceably energetic voice, and the songs penned for her are passably catchy. No doubt they'll inspire screeches throughout the nation's entire elementary school system. There's even a bit of social commentary this time, via a pro-ecology song ("Wake Up America"), though for some reason Miley sings it like it's just another answer-back song.

Either way, there's no getting around the fact that Miley has historical value. She's the first moderately defiant rocker ever marketed to a demo this pink. More than girl power, this is brat power, in the process incubating an entire generation of potential Courtney Loves. You decide if that's progress.

jfarber@nydailynews.com