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EdwardKnoxII

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Everything posted by EdwardKnoxII

  1. I'm sure I'm not the only one when I say this but, PLEASE don't let this lead to a Sable/Torrie feud at WM. They had one feud over Playboy and that was enough.
  2. EdwardKnoxII

    ID checks for video games

    http://money.cnn.com/2003/12/09/commentary...aming/index.htm
  3. EdwardKnoxII

    Today is Big Show's two-month anniversary winning

    Yeah no kidding and alot of people thought that Eddie losing the belt was going to lead to better things for Eddie. Like a feud with Brock for the WWE belt. HAHAHAHA
  4. EdwardKnoxII

    Today is Big Show's two-month anniversary winning

    So, that's why it seems like shit whenever Orton comes out. Or is that just him?
  5. EdwardKnoxII

    Today is Big Show's two-month anniversary winning

    One day Big Show was VERY hungry and there was no food so he ate the US belt. Sad but, true.
  6. EdwardKnoxII

    McDonald's resume

    Well this was my first time seeing it.
  7. EdwardKnoxII

    WWE Considering Bringing Back Hall Of Fame

    I think Andre was the 1st wrestler to be inducted.
  8. EdwardKnoxII

    Latest Hollywood Buzz On Triple H, Foley, Goldberg

    Yeah but, knowing our luck during interviews HHH will always be throwing out shoot comments to Rock about how he's a better actor then Rock.
  9. Good. Maybe this will shut Benzino up. But, I doubt it.
  10. Escape the rules... The theme of the huge ad campaign for RAW that WWE is launching will be "escape the rules." The thinking behind it is that RAW is a two hour escape where you can watch people do stuff that you could never do in real life. The ads will run on TNT, TBS, Sports Illustrated, Entertainment Weekly, and other AOL properties. The $2 million dollar ad campaign is again part of WWE's deal with AOL dating back to the WCW buyout. WWE agreed to buy millions worth of advertising on AOL properties. Credit: Wrestling Observer Newsletter
  11. EdwardKnoxII

    Judge Blocks The Source From Releasing Racist

    Cause they're trying to make a name for themselves and end up looking shit afterwards.
  12. EdwardKnoxII

    Actors dying

    Also at the time Welles was doing the voice of Robin Masters on Magnum PI. After he died they decided not the recast the voice of Masters.
  13. EdwardKnoxII

    Goldberg Unhappy.....Again

    I've thought that if Goldberg was given a good regin with it he could have made it important. Cause he was about the only one that hasn't really been buried by HHH yet.
  14. EdwardKnoxII

    Facing the music: Legal hurdles can keep TV shows

    http://www.thesunlink.com/redesign/2003-12...ss/345768.shtml LEGAL TROUBLE IN TV LAND Many of your favorite TV shows likely will never make it to DVD. Here's why: Randy A. Salas Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune December 11, 2003 More people are tuning in to TV shows on DVD than ever before. This year alone will see a projected $1.5 billion in sales in the genre, up 66 percent, with more than 450 TV titles added to the 750 or so already out. But fans expecting the imminent release of oft-requested series such as "Beverly Hills 90210" or "WKRP in Cincinnati" might as well get comfy on their couches, because it'll be a long wait. The reason? The amount of popular music featured in those series. The expense of securing legal rights to these songs is "the single biggest obstacle" to releasing TV shows on DVD, said Peter Staddon, senior marketing vice president at Fox Home Entertainment, the leading seller of DVD TV series. If you want to release a show on DVD, "count up the songs and open your checkbook," producer Paul Brownstein advised industry insiders at the recent TV DVD Conference in West Hollywood, Calif. The problem of "clearing" music rights predates the advent of DVD and even of home video in many cases. Back then, shows that used popular music paid for broadcast rights, and that was it. TV producers never dreamed the shows would have an afterlife on home video, where shows can be watched unedited, commercial-free and often with inviting supplemental material on DVD. "When they were creating these shows, they didn't pay for stuff they weren't going to use," said Gord Lacey, who runs a Web site devoted to TV on DVD (http://www.tvshowsondvd.com. "Now it's coming back to bite them." It can affect shows from the '60s to the '90s, from sitcoms to dramas. "Even shows as recent as five years ago wouldn't have necessarily cleared any of the music for anything other than the initial broadcast," Staddon said. Fox, which acquired "WKRP" as part of a bigger deal six years ago, gets many requests to release that 1978-82 sitcom hit on DVD, Staddon said. Trouble is, the series was set in a radio station, to a soundtrack filled with pop music. Rights to those songs could cost "a couple of million dollars," Staddon said. "When you amortize a couple of million dollars over, say, a couple of hundred thousand units you'd sell, (it would add) $10 per set. It makes things prohibitively expensive." An obvious answer is to charge an extra $10 for each set. But that can create a vicious circle, he said: The higher price might reduce sales to only 150,000 units, which means the price would have to be raised more, which means fewer units sold, and so on. Another option is to replace the music. That has happened with DVDs of "Felicity," "Dawson's Creek" and MTV's "The Real World," Lacey said. But while that lowers production costs, it can diminish the show's appeal and alienate fans, Staddon said. In the '80s show "Wiseguy," starring Ken Wahl, a multi-episode storyline famously concludes with an emotional scene set to "Nights in White Satin," by the Moody Blues. But when the four-disc set was released on DVD in August, the classic rock song was replaced by a generic tune and orchestral music. "No one was more disappointed than I," Wahl told fans on his Web site, blaming "prohibitively excessive prices" to clear the music rights. It was that, he added, or not release the DVD at all. Lacey, who was involved in an upcoming DVD release of "The Kids in the Hall," suggested a compromise. "I think the happy medium with the music is that you try to determine what the key songs are, license them and then use replacement music for the rest," he said. That's exactly what Fox is doing with the fan favorite "Roswell," a 1999-2002 teen drama coming to DVD in February. Instead of replacing music arbitrarily, Staddon said Fox "went back to the original show's producer, and said, 'Look, we're having a problem with some of the music clearance. Can you help us with this?' "He actually rescored some of the show with new music. Then he's going to go on the DVD and say, 'We did this. I think it's a better product as a result of it. The alternative was not having it out on DVD.' " Even current shows can be problematic. Last year, Fox released a three-disc set of the first season of "Malcolm in the Middle," a show that debuted in 2000. The set sold well enough to merit a second-season release, but higher costs to clear the music have so far scuttled the project, Staddon said. Brownstein, who is producing the DVD release of "The Dick Van Dyke Show," said he didn't have any music-rights problems with the '60s series, which generally used a few old standards at most. But some of his TV properties are worse off, especially variety shows. One episode of the '70s variety show "Cher" had 30 songs in it, and a Van Dyke special used 60, some just in medleys and snippets, he said. So what are the fates of these shows? It's uncertain, Staddon said, noting that TV producers do a much better job today of clearing music not just for broadcast but also for home video. "There isn't a blanket deal that we can put in place," he said. "Going back to something like 'WKRP' -- which is at a radio station, so it features lots of songs and lots of artists -- each one of those songs is a separate negotiation. You could get 95 percent of the music cleared, and if one person is still holding out for something outrageous, then you're back to square one." ••• Five cases of music playing mayhem with a DVD release Here are the top five TV shows whose heavy use of music poses a major obstacle to their release on DVD, according to Gord Lacey of the Web site TV Shows on DVD, according to www.tvshowsondvd.com: 1. "Beverly Hills 90210" -- The '90s show was built around top-40 songs. Airing on the show often boosted their chart positions. 2. "Miami Vice" -- The '80s show's heavy use of popular songs and even musicians as guest stars gave birth to the term "MTV drama." 3. "WKRP in Cincinnati" -- Because the 1978-82 sitcom was set in a radio station, loads of pop songs -- most just snippets -- were heard in every episode. 4. "Saturday Night Live" -- A musical guest appears in every episode, so full-season sets would be expensive to clear. Music costs were a major hurdle for a recent "SNL" music collection on DVD. 5. "Freaks & Geeks" -- The 1999 cult favorite is finally in the works after delays over music costs. "The music is clearing," creator Judd Apatow said in a recent online update for fans. "Hopefully, it will clear fast enough for a March release." -- Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune
  15. Facing the music: Legal hurdles can keep TV shows from coming out on DVD Randy A. Salas, Star Tribune Published November 30, 2003 More people are tuning in to TV shows on DVD than ever before. This year alone will see a projected $1.5 billion in sales in the genre, up 66 percent, with more than 450 TV titles added to the 750 or so already out. But fans expecting the imminent release of oft-requested series such as "Beverly Hills 90210" or "WKRP in Cincinnati" might as well get comfy on their couches, because it'll be a long wait. The reason? The amount of popular music featured in those series. The expense of securing legal rights to these songs is "the single biggest obstacle" to releasing TV shows on DVD, said Peter Staddon, senior marketing vice president at Fox Home Entertainment, the leading seller of DVD TV series. If you want to release a show on DVD, "count up the songs and open your checkbook," producer Paul Brownstein advised industry insiders at the recent TV DVD Conference in West Hollywood, Calif. The problem of "clearing" music rights predates the advent of DVD and even of home video in many cases. Back then, shows that used popular music paid for broadcast rights, and that was it. TV producers never dreamed the shows would have an afterlife on home video, where shows can be watched unedited, commercial-free and often with inviting supplemental material on DVD. "When they were creating these shows, they didn't pay for stuff they weren't going to use," said Gord Lacey, who runs a Web site devoted to TV on DVD (http://www.tvshowsondvd.com). "Now it's coming back to bite them." It can affect shows from the '60s to the '90s, from sitcoms to dramas. "Even shows as recent as five years ago wouldn't have necessarily cleared any of the music for anything other than the initial broadcast," Staddon said. Fox, which acquired "WKRP" as part of a bigger deal six years ago, gets many requests to release that 1978-82 sitcom hit on DVD, Staddon said. Trouble is, the series was set in a radio station, to a soundtrack filled with pop music. Rights to those songs could cost "a couple of million dollars," Staddon said. "When you amortize a couple of million dollars over, say, a couple of hundred thousand units you'd sell, [it would add] $10 per set. It makes things prohibitively expensive." An obvious answer is to charge an extra $10 for each set. But that can create a vicious circle, he said: The higher price might reduce sales to only 150,000 units, which means the price would have to be raised more, which means fewer units sold, and so on. Substitute players Another option is to replace the music. That has happened with DVDs of "Felicity," "Dawson's Creek" and MTV's "The Real World," Lacey said. But while that lowers production costs, it can diminish the show's appeal and alienate fans, Staddon said. In the '80s show "Wiseguy," starring Ken Wahl, a multi-episode storyline famously concludes with an emotional scene set to "Nights in White Satin," by the Moody Blues. But when the four-disc set was released on DVD in August, the classic rock song was replaced by a generic tune and orchestral music. "It is such a painful omission that it hurts," one fan of the series wrote in a Web review. "No one was more disappointed than I," Wahl told fans on his Web site, blaming "prohibitively excessive prices" to clear the music rights. It was that, he added, or not release the DVD at all. Lacey, who was involved in an upcoming DVD release of "The Kids in the Hall," suggested a compromise. "I think the happy medium with the music is that you try to determine what the key songs are, license them and then use replacement music for the rest," he said. That's exactly what Fox is doing with the fan favorite "Roswell," a 1999-2002 teen drama coming to DVD in February. Instead of replacing music arbitrarily, Staddon said Fox "went back to the original show's producer, and said, 'Look, we're having a problem with some of the music clearance. Can you help us with this?' "He actually rescored some of the show with new music. Then he's going to go on the DVD and say, 'We did this. I think it's a better product as a result of it. The alternative was not having it out on DVD.' " 'Malcolm' in a muddle even current shows can be problematic. Last year, Fox released a three-disc set of the first season of "Malcolm in the Middle," a show that debuted in 2000. The set sold well enough to merit a second-season release, but higher costs to clear the music have so far scuttled the project, Staddon said. Brownstein, who is producing the DVD release of "The Dick Van Dyke Show," said he didn't have any music-rights problems with the '60s series, which generally used a few old standards at most. But some of his TV properties are worse off, especially variety shows. One episode of the '70s variety show "Cher" had 30 songs in it, and a Van Dyke special used 60, some just in medleys and snippets, he said. "You add that all up, and it becomes impossible to release," Brownstein said. So what are the fates of these shows? It's uncertain, Staddon said, noting that TV producers do a much better job today of clearing music not just for broadcast but also for home video. Every show has to be treated on a case-by-case basis. "There isn't a blanket deal that we can put in place," he said. "Going back to something like 'WKRP' -- which is at a radio station, so it features lots of songs and lots of artists -- each one of those songs is a separate negotiation. You could get 95 percent of the music cleared, and if one person is still holding out for something outrageous, then you're back to square one."
  16. EdwardKnoxII

    Bingham Glad to Host 'Lingerie Bowl'

    http://channels.netscape.com/ns/celebrity/...943.htm&sc=1310
  17. EdwardKnoxII

    Latest On Trish, Torrie, Lita, Stacy, & Sable

    Here's a question for you guys at the site were I got the Trish pic in the Stephanie McMahon section of pics they had this pic of "her" but, to me it doesn't look like her AT ALL.
  18. EdwardKnoxII

    Wynonna's License Revoked

    http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,13120,00.html
  19. EdwardKnoxII

    How J-Lo Hurt Ben's Career

    http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,13091,00.html
  20. EdwardKnoxII

    How J-Lo Hurt Ben's Career

    http://channels.netscape.com/ns/celebrity/....jsp?current=22 http://channels.netscape.com/ns/celebrity/....jsp?current=13
  21. EdwardKnoxII

    Another Legal Stink For J-Lo

    http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,13123,00.html
  22. EdwardKnoxII

    Feds File Complaint Against 'Girls Gone Wild'

    Ok, yeah now I remember I was watching it in passing. Thanks.
  23. EdwardKnoxII

    Strom Thurmond = Thomas Jefferson?

    Here's a smaller one. http://www.cnn.com/2003/US/12/17/thurmond....nity/index.html
  24. EdwardKnoxII

    Feds File Complaint Against 'Girls Gone Wild'

    This reminds me of the SNL bit where this girl was home from college and she was watching TV with her folks and at least 3 different Girls Gone Wild ads played were the girl was in them. And her grandfolks, friends, etc would call the house after the ad.
  25. EdwardKnoxII

    Latest On Trish, Torrie, Lita, Stacy, & Sable

    ^DUH. Yeah I've seen that pic quite a few times before Trish signed with the WWF.
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