Hey, "Blue Bloods" fans. We hope you guys enjoyed tonight's episode 18. Now that it's official aired and in the books, it is time to direct our focus to what the next, new episode 19 will feature. CBS recently released their press release for episode 19. So, that's what we'll be using for this spoiler session. To get things started , CBS' press release revealed that the production team decided to title episode 19, "Common Enemies." Episode 19 certainly sounds like it will have a lot of intense things going on, especially when it comes to Luis. Apparently, his freaking wife gets murdered! Frank meets Eddie's mother. Jamie and Erin start clashing and more! We'll go ahead and start off this spoiler session with the terrible Luis situation. It turns out that someone will break into his home and straight up kill his wife Linda! This will set up a situation where he teams up with...
- 4/5/2019
- by Andre Braddox
- OnTheFlix
A '90s favorite is making its way back to the airwaves. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Nickelodeon is developing a Clarissa Explains It All revival.The original sitcom starred Melissa Joan Hart as Clarissa Darling, a teenager trying to survive her aggressively suburban life. The cast also included Jason Zimbler, Sean O'Neal, Elizabeth Hess, and Joe O'Connor. The show ran for five seasons on Nickelodeon before ending in 1994.Read More…...
- 3/17/2018
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Clarissa Explains It All premiered in March 1991, meaning that this month it celebrates its 25th anniversary. Yep, if Clarissa Darling were around today (and had been aging in real-world time since the show first debuted), she'd be 38 years old, maybe even with a 13-year-old Clarissa of her own.
It's not just that the Melissa Joan Hart sitcom was a popular show for pre-teen girls or even pre-teens in general; it's that it helped established a network identity for the channel it was on, a still-young Nickelodeon, and helped shape a lot of similarly focused shows that aired throughout the rest of the '90s.
It's not just that the Melissa Joan Hart sitcom was a popular show for pre-teen girls or even pre-teens in general; it's that it helped established a network identity for the channel it was on, a still-young Nickelodeon, and helped shape a lot of similarly focused shows that aired throughout the rest of the '90s.
- 3/1/2016
- by Drew Mackie, @drewgmackie
- People.com - TV Watch
Clarissa Explains It All premiered in March 1991, meaning that this month it celebrates its 25th anniversary. Yep, if Clarissa Darling were around today (and had been aging in real-world time since the show first debuted), she'd be 38 years old, maybe even with a 13-year-old Clarissa of her own. It's not just that the Melissa Joan Hart sitcom was a popular show for pre-teen girls or even pre-teens in general; it's that it helped established a network identity for the channel it was on, a still-young Nickelodeon, and helped shape a lot of similarly focused shows that aired throughout the rest of the '90s.
- 3/1/2016
- by Drew Mackie, @drewgmackie
- PEOPLE.com
Clarissa Explains It All premiered in March 1991, meaning that this month it celebrates its 25th anniversary. Yep, if Clarissa Darling were around today (and had been aging in real-world time since the show first debuted), she'd be 38 years old, maybe even with a 13-year-old Clarissa of her own. It's not just that the Melissa Joan Hart sitcom was a popular show for pre-teen girls or even pre-teens in general; it's that it helped established a network identity for the channel it was on, a still-young Nickelodeon, and helped shape a lot of similarly focused shows that aired throughout the rest of the '90s.
- 3/1/2016
- by Drew Mackie, @drewgmackie
- PEOPLE.com
After last week's "Mad Men" stumbled a bit by grappling with a major historical event, "For Immediate Release" rebounded in high style to deliver the season's most thrilling, entertaining and finest hour yet.
Opening with the possibility of Scdp going public and ending with a merger between Scdp and Ted Chaough's Cgc -- yes, folks, Peggy and Don are co-workers again -- this was a hour packed with bombshells (Pete catches his stepfather at a whorehouse!), explosions (Joan's fury over Don dumping the Jaguar account) and killer one-liners (did we mention Julia Ormond's return as Megan's mother?).
There was so much hot-blooded ad agency action, Don didn't even have time to reflect on how miserable he is ... on the inside.
[Note: In the spirit of showrunner Matthew Weiner declaring that this season is about Dr. Arnold Rosen telling Don, "People will do anything to alleviate their anxiety," we're tracking the happiness of key characters week by week.]
The "Mad Men" happiness index, week five:
1) Don (last week, #8): From the very start, "Mad Men" has been a show driven by Don Draper's unhappiness, but if there's...
Opening with the possibility of Scdp going public and ending with a merger between Scdp and Ted Chaough's Cgc -- yes, folks, Peggy and Don are co-workers again -- this was a hour packed with bombshells (Pete catches his stepfather at a whorehouse!), explosions (Joan's fury over Don dumping the Jaguar account) and killer one-liners (did we mention Julia Ormond's return as Megan's mother?).
There was so much hot-blooded ad agency action, Don didn't even have time to reflect on how miserable he is ... on the inside.
[Note: In the spirit of showrunner Matthew Weiner declaring that this season is about Dr. Arnold Rosen telling Don, "People will do anything to alleviate their anxiety," we're tracking the happiness of key characters week by week.]
The "Mad Men" happiness index, week five:
1) Don (last week, #8): From the very start, "Mad Men" has been a show driven by Don Draper's unhappiness, but if there's...
- 5/6/2013
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Twice now, in back-to-back episodes, a female on "Mad Men" has hurled an object through the air at a male employer out of rage -- a beautiful, boiling rage brought on by a lifetime of inequality. Joan heaved a box of roses at Lane last week (in a misunderstanding, not to say he didn't deserve it), and in this week's "The Rejected," poor Allison, Don's used and forgotten secretary, sent a paperweight flying toward her boss' head at Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce. She missed, and shattered picture frames instead, but both she and Joan got their alcohol-addled superior's attention in the first of what will be many confrontations to come regarding their rights. I can't help but wonder, and hope, that creator Matthew Weiner took us through almost three seasons of wealthy straight white men having their way with life just for the pleasure of watching them fall spectacularly now.
- 8/17/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
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