Television
For some of us, it’s TV’s new prime time.
Jan. 30, 1993
Entertainment & Arts
The revised system for rating television programs will have no effect on their content, CBS stressed Tuesday, while saying that one of its new shows--the Steven Bochco police drama “Brooklyn South”--may be the first prime-time series to be labeled for mature audiences.
July 16, 1997
To people who haven’t been paying attention, the spotlight now shining on Court TV due to its bid to televise the federal trial of terrorism suspect Zacarias Moussaoui may seem like the channel’s brightest moment since O.J.
Jan. 8, 2002
What’s especially striking about the current issue of Vanity Fair is not how closely Ralph Fiennes resembles a demented, bare-chested, hair-teased Jesus on the cover.
Oct. 20, 1995
The woman on the train said she didn’t hate Deborah Norville. She just felt bad for Jane.
Nov. 5, 1989
World & Nation
Denmark will investigate claims that the CIA secretly used an airport on the Nordic country’s remote Arctic territory of Greenland to transport prisoners in the Bush administration’s war on terrorism, the Danish prime minister said Thursday.
Feb. 1, 2008
Reality program Undefeated “The Amazing Race” has zoomed past all nominees in this Emmy race four years in a row, leaving the No. 1-rated TV show, “American Idol,” in the dust.
Sept. 12, 2007
Show Tracker
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May 15, 2011
The new fall season is under way on British television and, as usual, the standard fare of cop dramas, sitcoms, silly game shows and mind-numbing hours of snooker are competing with equal doses of quirky and alternative programming.
Oct. 27, 1992
As he was preparing last May to exchange his job heading the NBC Entertainment Group for the chairmanship of Paramount Pictures, Brandon Tartikoff mentioned that he had been watching a lot of television while recovering from injuries suffered in an auto crash.
July 29, 1991