Paley Festival: "Freaks and Geeks" Revenge with Judd Apatow

Mere words cannot describe just how surreal last night's Paley Festival panel, celebrating the career of comedy genius Judd Apatow, ended up being.

Perhaps it was the unexpected assemblage of boldfaced names like Garry Shandling, Paul Rudd, Paul Feig, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, Busy Phillips, Jonah Hill, Tom Arnold, and Andy Dick (?!?!?), all of whom came together to express their shared love for Apatow. The first half of the evening was Apatow chatting with former mentor Shandling about the good old days, when he wrote material for Shandling's emcee speeches (like at the Grammy Awards) and on series like The Larry Sanders Show. (Huzzah!) It was truly thrilling--not to mention hilarious--to see these two neurotic comedians on stage together, ribbing one another and trading embarrassing and pointed stories about days long gone by and Apatow's belief that a decade-old botched joke (involving Hank and a baby leash) would have worked on Sanders.

For many (like the former stars of Freaks and Geeks, Undeclared, and Superbad), it was an opportunity to thank the guy who gave them their starts and who pushed many of them towards writing. Busy Phillips recalled just how miserable she was working on Dawson's Creek (which she termed "drivel") after the pleasure of being in Freaks and Geeks and how guest starring for two episodes on Undeclared made her cry because that was how television was meant to be. And the gang talked about how my all-time favorite episode of Freaks and Geeks ("Kim Kelly is My Friend") was axed by NBC for being too "violent." (Seriously, NBC?)

For others, it was a chance for the audience to see just how Apatow got his start... and that explained Tom Arnold's appearance on the panel. Over the course of the next few hours, Arnold shared several, er, heartwarming stories about his troubled marriage to Roseanne ("she stabbed me!") and seemed to be taking potshots at comedy legend Gary Shandling for some unknown reason.

I was impressed with Apatow inviting Arnold to join this public forum but it belied Apatow's belief in comedy being truth. The truth is that Arnold and Roseanne gave Apatow his start way back when, hiring him for $800 a week as a writer, his first paying gig as a wordsmith. So why wouldn't Arnold be there with him, warts and all? Still, it led to some excruciatingly awkward moments on stage but I am sure the writer/director of such films as The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up doesn't mind such tawdry reality.

Andy Dick, who had worked with Apatow on The Ben Stiller Show, fortunately kept his clothes on and only joined the stage towards the end, thrusting his embittered personality into the spotlight for a fortunately brief period while seatmate Paul Rudd, somehow stuck between Arnold and Dick, shifted uncomfortably. (Paul, I felt for you, man.)

The most random part of the evening came when Apatow deliberately set out to humiliate Jason Segel by showing his entire full-frontal nude scene from his upcoming film, Forgetting Sarah Marshall. Hysterical in its own right, it was even funnier to see Segel squirm under the gaze of several hundred people all watching him watch himself in the film. (What followed was a definitely R-rated conversation about the, er, flaccidity of his member in the scene.)

I can't even articulate how much fun I had during this bizarre and hysterical panel nor how much my face hurt afterwards from laughing. Apatow has left an indelible effect on both film and television comedy and I cannot thank him (and creator Paul Feig) enough for the genius that was Freaks and Geeks. As for Apatow himself, I can't wait to see just what he cooks up next... and in the meantime we have two Apatow-produced films--Pineapple Express and Forgetting Sarah Marshall--to tide us over until his next oeuvre.

Paley Festival: "Pushing Daisies" Panel

I've been going to the Paley Festival for a few years now, ever since I moved out here from New York about, oh, six years ago now. (Good god, has it really been that long?) Even when the panels aren't that, well, exciting, they still manage to entertain and provide a behind-the-scenes glimpse at some of your favorite series.

I needn't have worried about Saturday evening's Pushing Daisies panel being dull, especially with the uber-talented Bryan Fuller and nearly the entire cast--save narrator Jim Dale and Swoozie Kurtz (sadly at her ailing mother's bedside)--assembled at the historic Cinerama Dome at the Arclight in Hollywood. I cannot explain how magical it was to see Fuller, writer Peter Ocko, Lee Pace, Anna Friel, Chi McBride, Kristin Chenoweth, Ellen Green, and executive producers Dan Jinks and Bruce Cohen all up on stage together as their series is about to begin its second season. (Take that, cancellation mongers!)

Instead of screening an entire episode (like the series' beautifully filmed pilot, directed by Barry Sonnenfeld) as these events typically do, the team assembled a clip package that offered some plot points from the first nine episodes and some character-specific clips. While it seemed a little like an EPK to me, it was great to see some of the scenes and memorable moments from Season One play out on the Cinerama's screen. (And the clip package was preceded by a fantastic Lee Pace scene from Fuller's Wonderfalls. )

Overall, I did feel that moderator Kristin Dos Santos (of E!'s Watch with Kristin) was perhaps a tad too chummy with her subjects (recounting several times her dinner with Fuller before he pitched Pushing Daisies to ABC) but she was head and shoulders above some of the other moderators who have taken the stage at this events. (I won't name names but longtime readers know of whom I speak.)

The good news: the writing staff is back at work on Pushing Daisies' second season (kicking off this fall on ABC) after the strike and Fuller admitted that the downtime helped them reevaluate the plot and tone of the second season and take a step back to see what worked and what didn't during the series' freshman year. "We got to look back over the first season to see what worked and what didn't work," said Fuller. "The [Season One] arc was more of a soft romance, and we want to do something harder--a more aggressive style of storytelling--in the second season. I think we learned a lot of lessons."

As for what to expect during Pushing Daisies' second season (which starts shooting June 17th), Fuller and co-producer/writing partner Peter Ocko (who created CBS' short-lived 3 Lbs.) were notoriously tight-lipped. But they did say that Chuck will definitely find out that Aunt Lily is her birth mother (the audience found this out in the "Corpiscle" episode that will now function as Daisies' first season cliffhanger).

While the reveal of Chuck's parentage was originally intended to be a minor storyline, its prominence at the end of the truncated first season has now thrust it into the spotlight and Fuller and Co. have reconfigured the second season to play up this reveal. "It's going to be interesting to see how she reacts to that information and how the Pie Maker tries to control her trajectory and how that will complicate their relationship," said Fuller. "There are going to be some nice surprises."

Chuck may also learn that her resurrection has some unintended side-effects, like never growing old, alluded to by fellow alive-again Digby's youthful visage. Also on deck for Season Two: Emerson's tantalizing sub-plot, which involves his missing daughter: the very reason he became a private detective in the first place. And we'll finally learn that, yes, Ned does not eat meat. Fuller intended this to be explicitly stated in a scene which had appeared in numerous episode scripts this past season but always ended up getting cut. "Yes, he is a vegetarian," said Fuller, "because whatever he ate would crawl right back out..." (Ick.)

Meanwhile, for those of you hoping to hold the first season DVD in your greedy little hands, you'll have to wait a little while; Fuller announced that a release is planned for September in the US. (Brits, you're a little luckier: Pushing Daisies' DVD release for Blighty is slated for June.) And, oh, a soundtrack--which would definitely feature the musical stylings of Kristin Chenoweth and Ellen Greene--is said to be in the works as well.

The oft-repeated question of where the inspiration for Pushing Daisies came from was asked: "Dead Like Me was about a girl who died and became the grim reaper and took lives," Fuller recounted. "It was only natural to consider the inverse of that, where a guy who touches lives can bring them back."

While that character was planned for Dead Like Me, Fuller kept the idea in his pocket when he departed the Showtime series and held onto it for several years. And, wouldn't you know it, just happened to pitch Daisies to ABC just when the network was looking for a television series in the vein of Amelie, one of his favorite films.

To keep things interesting while writing the pilot episode, Fuller inserted all of his quirky, whimsical likes into the script, including making Ned a piemaker. "I was just putting as many things that would make me happy as I could in the pilot: dogs, bees, honey and pies," recounted Fuller. "I shoehorned them all in." (Ahem, and monkeys, as Fuller had recounted to me.) Fuller also listened to the soundtrack for Barry Sonnenfeld's The Addams Family continually on a loop while writing the pilot script.

What else did we learn?

-That Ellen Greene laughs like a donkey and said that most people had thought she "was dead." The stage fright-prone actress (best known for her role as Audrey in the original Broadway production and subsequent film of Little Shop of Horrors) was absolutely articulate, touching, and lyrical about the nature of acting, why characters burst into song ("when they can't speak, they sing and when they can't sing, they dance"), and how producers Bruce Cohen and Dan Jinks promised her she could sing for sweeps. (And sing she did, memorably singing "Birdhouse in Your Soul" with Chenoweth in the episode "Pigeon.")

-That Percocet is a miracle drug. This fact courtesy of Chenoweth, who recounted the painkiller's magical effects, which she experienced first-hand after she broke a rib and then had to shoot the Olive-centric episode "Girth" early on in Season One. She and McBride have a hilarious, teasing relationship. Chenoweth joked that she could tell when he needed to trim his nose hairs; he fired back that he could eat crackers off the top of her head. (Yes, they are funny and adorable.)

Chenoweth also joked that she wanted to do some scenes with Young Ned and Chuck--Field Cate and Sammi Hanratty, both in attendance--as they were all the same height. Chenoweth currently has blonde hair extensions (put in for her role as Reese Witherspoon's sister in the upcoming film Four Christmases) and joked that the hair came from a Russian girl named Svetlana and recounted that she once set her hair on fire after the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade during a bout of tummy upset. But don't get too attached to her shoulder-length tresses; it hasn't yet been decided whether she'll keep them for Pushing Daisies' second season.

-That Lee Pace and Anna Friel do accidentally touch while filming scenes together. Friel is supposedly the bigger offender ("I always do it," she admits); Fuller joked that she was a fraterist and always rubbing people. Pace said that he uses the constraint to inform his movements in the scene and often sits on his hands for fear of accidentally ruining a shot by brushing against Friel.

-That Chi McBride is absolutely hysterical (which I discovered when I interviewed him last year), especially when he's poking fun at himself and the rest of the cast. One of the many highlights of the evening: McBride's ongoing joke about none of the cast looking to do television until Pushing Daisies came around. (McBride said he needs someone to pay for his kid's future tuition at Dartmouth... or he'll end up going to DeVry.)

After Anna Friel's British accent elicited gasps from some audience member who assumed she was American, McBride quickly tried to clear up any confusion about Friel's Blighty heritage: "Anna is from Long Beach and she's rich," deadpanned McBride. "Those are real diamonds she's wearing!" Friel's reaction? She shimmied the rhinestone-laden white dress she had poured herself into earlier that evening. Really, the woman is absolutely gorgeous.

-SPOILER ALERT! For fans of The Nine ("the first network show named after the audience," joked McBride), McBride revealed one pivotal plot point that had puzzled the series' relatively small coterie of fans. "I did it!" he proclaimed. "[Malcolm] had too many bills." That's one mystery solved.

-That Pace's favorite moment of the series so far is in the pilot episode, when Ned holds his own hand and pretends it belongs to Chuck, unaware that Chuck is doing the same thing. "I just remember kind of doing it and looking at Anna and going, 'God, I hope this goes!'" said Pace. Aw!

-That Fuller's wish list for guest stars includes Carol Burnett, whom I would absolutely love to see drop in at The Pie Hole. (Fingers crossed that Fuller can make this one happen!)

All in all, a fantastic evening revolving around one of my favorite new series on television today (or, hell, any day). While it's going to be quite a few more months until we can see new episodes of Pushing Daisies, I for one am already giddy with anticipation about catching up again with Ned, Chuck, Emerson, Olive, Aunt Lily and Vivian, and all the rest. Even if it means waiting until this fall...

What's On Tonight

8 pm: How I Met Your Mother/How I Met Your Mother (CBS); My Dad Is Better Than Your Dad (NBC); Gossip Girl (CW); Dancing With the Stars (ABC; 8-9:30 pm); Canterbury's Law (FOX)

9 pm: Two and a Half Men/New Adventures of Old Christine (CBS); Deal or No Deal (NBC); Pussycat Dolls Present: Girlicious (CW); The Bachelor: London Calling (ABC; 9:30-11 pm); New Amsterdam (FOX)

10 pm: CSI Miami (CBS); Medium (NBC)

What I'll Be Watching

8 pm: Gossip Girl.

It's another chance to catch up on the teen soap. On tonight's repeat episode ("Seventeen Candles"): Blair tries to conceal tensions with Nate as her 17th birthday approaches, Dan brings Vanessa to the party so that she can Serena can spend some time together.

9:30 pm: Old Christine.

On tonight's episode ("Burning Down the House"), Christine tries to prove to Barb that she has a wild side.

PaleyFest: Who's In?

As we near the kick-off of this year's William S. Paley Television Festival (or, as it's known affectionately, PaleyFest), I'm curious to know who among us is planning on attending this year, the festival's 25th anniversary edition.

I was lucky enough to snag tickets to tomorrow night's Pushing Daisies event, as well as to panels for Chuck (moderated by Lost's Damon Lindelof, no less!), Judd Apatow and Friends (and invites to the after-party), the Buffy the Vampire Slayer reunion, and Damages. (I'll be the one in the Cinerama Dome scribbling away furiously as usual.)

Speaking of the Buffy reunion, the Paley Festival website lists the following updated panelists:

Amber Benson, "Tara Maclay"
Nicholas Brendon, "Xander Harris"
Charisma Carpenter, "Cordelia Chase"
Emma Caulfield, "Anya"
Eliza Dushku, "Faith"
Sarah Michelle Gellar, "Buffy Summers"
Seth Green, "Oz"
David Greenwalt, Exec. Prod.
Alyson Hannigan, "Willow Rosenberg"
James Marsters, "Spike"
Marti Noxon, Executive Producer
Michelle Trachtenberg, "Dawn Summers"
Joss Whedon, Creator

(So Aly is now participating but still no sign of David Boreanaz?)

But enough about Buffy. (When was the last time you heard me say that?) I am curious: which events are you guys attending? Which ones did you fight tooth and nail to get tickets for and which ones are you disappointed about getting shut out of?

For those of you who will be attending, I'll see you at the Arclight over the next few weeks. Stay tuned!

PaleyWatch: SMG Confirmed for "Buffy" Reunion, Tickets

The big news yesterday was, of course, that Sarah Michelle Gellar would join creator Joss Whedon and the cast for a Buffy the Vampire Slayer reunion at this year's William S. Paley Festival, to be held at the Cinerama Dome at the Arclight in Hollywood.

I'm hoping that Gellar's presence on the guest list spurs hold-outs Anthony Head and Alyson Hannigan to join up with the rest of the crew, which currently includes Amber Benson, Nicholas Brendan, Emma Caulfield, Eliza Dushku, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Seth Green, James Marsters, and Michelle Trachtenberg. (I'm also hoping they lure former writers Jane Espenson, David Fury, and Doug Petry to the event.)

As for me, I've already gotten my tickets so I'll be there (as well as at a bunch of other panels) with bells on. Great big, vampire-repellent bells on. Let's just hope they do something fun and make the pre-panel screening interesting and intriguing: the pilot perhaps? Or "Once More with Feeling"?

But I am curious: who among you is planning to go? Who has tickets already and who is planning to do whatever it takes in order to make it to this landmark event? Discuss.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: CBS News Coverage of Primaries (CBS; 8-10 pm); Biggest Loser (NBC; 8-10 pm); Reaper (CW); Super Tuesday--Showdown: Coast to Coast (ABC; 8-10 pm); American Idol (FOX)

9 pm: One Tree Hill (CW); House (FOX)

10 pm: NCIS (CBS); NBC News--Super Tuesday Special (NBC); Election Coverage (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

10 pm: Doctor Who on BBC America.

Missed Season Three of Brit import Doctor Who or itching for another go-around with the Doctor and new companion Martha Jones? You're in luck as BBC America is airing the series' third season. Tonight's episode: "The Shakespeare Code," in which the Doctor and his new traveling companion, Martha Jones, are the victims of some witches' spell and end up face to face with the Bard himself.

PaleyWatch: Details About the 2008 Lineup Emerge

The PR machine is in overdrive for the 2008 William S. Paley Television Festival, the fest's 25th anniversary installment, which moves its location this year from its cramped quarters at the DGA to the Cinerama Dome at the Arclight. (Wahoo!)

While the festival's organizers are being pretty coy about the full lineup and schedule this year, what with teasing us about a Buffy the Vampire Slayer reunion, they have quietly nailed down some dates for some of the panels:

March 14th: Elvis '68 Comeback Special (Opening Night Selection)

March 15th: Pushing Daisies

March 17th: The Comedy World of Judd Apatow & Friends

March 18th: Chuck

March 20th: Buffy the Vampire Slayer Reunion

March 21st: Dancing with the Stars

March 25th: Dirty Sexy Money

March 27th: Mad Men (Closing Night Selection)

The full lineup and schedule, including the date for the previously announced panel for Gossip Girl, is slated to be revealed on February 4th.

Individual tickets for members of the Paley Center for Media go on sale on February 7th, while Joe Public can buy tickets beginning on February 10th.

Me, I'm already trying to figure out how much a hit my wallet can take in order to determine just how many of these events I can attend.

What's On Tonight*

*Note: The State of the Union Address will wreak havoc with tonight's lineup. Check local listings.


8 pm: How I Met Your Mother/Two and a Half Men (CBS); Gossip Girl Revealed (CW; 8-9:30 pm); Dance War: Bruno vs. Carrie Ann (ABC); Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles (FOX)

9 pm: Rules of Engagement/CBS Special Report: CES (CBS); The Office/30 Rock (NBC); Aliens in America (CW; 9:30-10 pm); Samantha Who (ABC; 9:30-10 pm)

10 pm: American Gladiators (NBC)

What I'll Be Watching

8-9:30 pm: Gossip Girl Revealed.

It's yet another chance to catch the pilot episode of the teen soap, this time with added features including interviews, commentary, deleted scenes, and character profiles.

10 pm: No Reservations with Anthony Bourdain on Travel Channel.

It's a brand new season of No Reservations on the Travel Channel; follow enfant terrible chef Anthony Bourdain as he travels the world in search of good food. In tonight's installment, Tony heads to the Greek Islands, where he swings by Crete and Ithaca and tries to determine whether or not the Greek really do have the world's healthiest fare.

PaleyWatch: "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" Reunion

It pays to be a member... of the Paley Center, that is.

As with most years since I moved out to Los Angeles (five years ago, for those keeping score), I'm planning on attending as many William S. Paley Television Festival events as I can (and as many as my wallet will allow).

The festival's organizers--from the Paley Center for Media--have been particularly canny this year, teasing the audience with little glimpses into this year's lineup (March 14-27 at the Arclight, in the Cinerama Dome, no less), which so far includes panels for Pushing Daisies and Gossip Girl and a special evening with Judd Apatow.

If that wasn't enough, they then made me drool with sweet, sweet anticipation with their latest tantalizing unveiling of the schedule, which features panels for Chuck, Dirty Sexy Money, Dancing with the Stars, and Mad Men.

And, oh, a reunion of the cast from a little show called Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

Yes, that's right, ladies and gents, the cast of the cult show that spawned a creative genius, a television franchise, comic books, and more ancillary items that you can shake a stick at will come together for one night only.

I plan to be there for this momentous occasion.

In the meantime, the full lineup for the event--the festival's 25th--will be announced on February 4th. Mark your calendars and sharpen your stakes.