Get ready for a slo-mo run down the beach: Baywatch is back. Fox is officially rebooting the lifeguard drama, with the production company Fremantle tasked with bringing it back to life.
Occasionally, a TV show will change its premise, but not always because it is long in the tooth. Sometimes, these changes happen due to casting shakeups or an original premise not landing. Speaking of premises that didn’t land, let’s start there with this list.
There are television shows, past and present, that we as viewers can't stop watching, even if it means being ridiculed by family and friends. Still, such shows — or guilty pleasures — offer a break from reality, and often times, prove that our lives aren't as bad as we think.
Here are the 25 most iconic film and TV vehicles, ranked in order of their first appearances.
Good evening, and what can we tell you? "Saturday Night Live" has changed a lot throughout the years, but one constant has been Weekend Update, the fake newscast that sits in the middle of the show.
We are in the third decade of celebrity roasts on Comedy Central. The TV event kicked off with a roast of Drew Carey at the legendary New York Friars Club in 1998 and has continued with targets ranging from athletes to musicians to actors to future Presidents of the United States.
When a franchise hits it big, you can be sure that it won't be long before imitators come out of the woodwork. Since George Lucas brought us the original "Star Wars" in 1977, scores of copycats have tried to make their own space operas but have found middling success.
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