Channel Surfing: Showtime Passes on "L Word" Spin-off, Peter Gallagher to Raise Eyebrows on "Californication," Anna Torv Talks "Fringe," and More

Welcome to your Friday morning television briefing.

Showtime has apparently passed on The L Word spin-off entitled The Farm, starring Leisha Hailey, and the Matthew Perry-led comedy The End of Steve. Neither pilot will be picked up to series, though the pay cabler has indicated that it is currently weighing fellow pilots Possible Side Effects, about a family-run pharmaceutical company from writer/executive producer Tim Robbins, and comedy Ronna and Beverly, from Jessica Chaffin, Jamie Denbo, and Jenji Kohan (Weeds). It's worth noting that Showtime has a whole slew of returning series including Californication, Dexter, The Tudors, Tracey Ullman's State of the Union, United States of Tara, Weeds, and Secret Diary of a Call, the latter two of which have already been renewed for two additional seasons, and is about to launch Edie Falco comedy Nurse Jackie. (Hollywood Reporter)

Peter Gallagher (The O.C.) has been cast in a multiple-episode story arc in Season Three of Showtime's Californication, where he will play a university dean who fights with David Duchovny's Hank. He joins the previously announced Kathleen Turner and Diane Farr. (Variety)

SCI FI Wire talks to Fringe's Anna Torv about the FOX series, slated to return with new episodes beginning next week. "We discover some things that happened to her when she was really little that she doesn't really remember," said Torv about the upcoming installments. "You start to see the stories, or the lives of Peter and Walter [John Noble] and Olivia kind of begin to interlace a little bit. And you sort of see how their paths have crossed before." (SCI FI Wire)

Kevin Rankin (Friday Night Lights) has been cast as one of the leads in NBC medical drama pilot Trauma, where he will play a paramedic. (Variety)

Gale Harold will return to ABC's Desperate Housewives on May 3rd, six months after being badly injured in a motorcycle accident. Executive producer Marc Cherry hasn't yet indicated whether Harold will return for Desperate Housewives' sixth season this fall but said that Harold's Jackson will turn up in May with a "very important question for Susan -- one that she's kind of stunned by." (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

Richard Dean Anderson (Stargate SG-1) will reprise his role as Jack O'Neil on Sci Fi's upcoming Stargate franchise spin-off series Stargate Universe. "Rick is doing episodes of Universe," said series co-creator Brad Wright. "He was just here yesterday shooting an episode of Universe with us. So that relationship is always on-going, and it’s good to have him back." (Gateworld)

Sony Pictures Television has extended an overall deal with Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan, under which he will remain on board AMC's Breaking Bad, which was recently renewed for a third season, as showrunner/executive producer while also developing new series projects for the studio. (Variety)

Also at the studio, ER executive producer/showrunner David Zabel has signed a two-script deal with Sony Pictures Television, under which Zabel will write two pilot scripts for the studio whose concepts are as yet undetermined. (Hollywood Reporter)

Oxygen has renewed reality series Bad Girls Club for a fourth season. (Variety)

Food Network has ordered six additional episodes of Daisy Martinez's Latin culinary series Viva Daisy! The episodes, produced by Watch Entertainment, will launch in July. (Variety)

Stay tuned.

Channel Surfing: AMC Renews "Breaking Bad" for Third Season, Lifetime Struts on "Project Runway," CBS Shuts Off "Guiding Light," and More

Welcome to your Thursday morning television briefing.

AMC has renewed drama Breaking Bad for a third season, only four episodes into the series' sophomore season, which launched with 1.7 million viewers, a 21 percent increase over the series premiere episode. Series, which stars Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul, Anna Gunn, RJ Mitte, Dean Norris, and Betsy Brandt, will join the ranks of AMC drama Mad Men, also renewed for a third year. (Hollywood Reporter)

The battle over Project Runway has finally ended and now that the dust has cleared, it's Lifetime who will air the sixth season of the reality series this summer. "I couldn’t be more excited that Lifetime will bring its viewers an amazing, all-new season of Project Runway this summer," said Lifetime president/CEO Andrea Wong in a statement. "As the highest-rated cable network for women, Lifetime is the perfect home for this outstanding program as well as its companion series Models of the Runway. All of us at Lifetime are thrilled to move forward with Heidi, Tim, Nina, Michael, The Weinstein Company and the entire Project Runway team. We are proud to add these shows to our growing slate of original programming, including the hit series Army Wives, the all-new upcoming series Drop Dead Diva and our top-rated original movies." (via press release)

It's official: CBS has cancelled long-running soap opera Guiding Light, the longest running drama on television (it launched as a radio series in 1937 before moving to CBS in 1952). The series, set in the fictional enclave of Springfield, will air its final episode on September 18th. (The New York Times)

Pilot casting alert: Justin Bartha (National Treasure) has landed the lead on FOX comedy pilot The Station, where he will play a covert CIA operative stationed in South America; Chris Elliott (Everyone Loves Raymond) has been cast in CBS comedy pilot The Fish Tank; and Melissa Rauch (Kath & Kim) has joined the cast ofLifetime's untitled Sherri Shepherd comedy pilot. (Hollywood Reporter)

Nikki Finke is reporting that NBC is considering cancelling comedy My Name is Earl, which is produced by 20th Century Fox Television, after the studio was said to be unhappy with a "drastically reduced" license fee offered by the Peacock. Finke says that FOX's Kevin Reilly, who originally developed the series when he was at NBC, could pick up the show. (Deadline Hollywood Daily)

Diane Farr (Rescue Me) has been cast in a ten-episode story arc on Season Three of Showtime's Californication, where she will play a randy grad student who falls under the spell of David Duchovny's Hank. "I am so excited to play someone who is girlie," Farr told Entertainment Weekly's Michael Ausiello, "and wears a sundress without a gun or a fire hose in my hand." (
Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

George Segal (Just Shoot Me) has been cast in a multiple-episode story arc on Season Six of HBO's Entourage, where he will play a veteran manager who takes Eric (Kevin Connolly) under his wing. Also attached to recur next season: Jami Gertz, Autumn Reeser, and Alexis Dziena. (Hollywood Reporter)

Season Two of Pushing Daisies will be released on DVD on July 21st. The box set will include all thirteen episodes of the series' second season, including three episodes that have yet to air on television, and will be priced at $39.98 for DVD and $49.99 for Blu-ray. (via press release)

SCI FI Wire talks to Eureka's Colin Ferguson about Season 3.5, which launches in July, about what to expect when the series returns. "Well, at the end of season three, or at the end of season 3.4, or 3.49, Nathan [Ed Quinn] dies, and Salli [Richardson-Whitfield's] character is pregnant," explains Ferguson. "So that picks up right after there, where Salli is pregnant through the whole season. One of Joe [Morton's] ... I keep using the actors' names ... One of Joe's long-lost loves comes back. My character has a love interest all the way through. And then Jordan [Hinson], my daughter, deals with 'Is she going to go to college and leave Eureka or is she going to stay?' So all that stuff gets resolved." (SCI FI Wire)

TLC has secured the life rights of US Airways pilot Chesley Sullenberger, which it will adapt into a documentary special about the life of the pilot, who successfully landed a passenger jet in the Hudson River in January, saving the lives of everyone aboard. The cabler is planning a late 2009 airdate for the doc, which will be produced by Daniel H. Birman Prods. (Variety)

Elsewhere, documentary filmmaker Nanette Burnstein (The Kid Stays in the Picture, American Teen) has signed a deal with RDF USA to develop and produce unscripted series. (Variety)

James Marsters is still open to reprising his role as vampire Spike, should Joss Whedon end up writing a Spike-centric project. "Oh, yeah, when Angel was coming down, [creator] Joss [Whedon] came to me and said, 'Do you want to do a Spike project?'" Marsters told SCI FI Wire. "And I said, 'Heck yes. In fact, whatever you want to do, whether it's Spike or not, wherever I am in the world, just call me. I'll come running. But you have seven years, Joss, because I don't want to do Spike aging. Let's keep him the same age, and I think that I can hold that look for about seven years before it starts to become too different.' Maybe there's a few more years, but at this point, really it would all have to do with a camera test. Can we light my face in such a way that it's still in the same ballpark as what the audience is used to? If that's possible, then I think that it would be a good thing to do." (
SCI FI Wire)

BBC America will launch Apprentice UK, featuring 14 contestants competing for a job with tycoon Sir Alan Sugar, on Tuesday, May 8th at 8 pm ET/PT, with subsequent episodes airing at 9 pm ET/PT. The first four episodes previously aried on CNBC; those will be repeated with the channel having the US premiere of all other installments. (via press release)

Lifetime has ordered four-hour mini-series Everything She Ever Wanted, based on Ann Rule's book about a woman and her much younger husband who are determined, at any cost, to become members of Atlanta's elite. Project, written by Michael Vickerman and directed by Peter Svatek, will star Gina Gershon (Life on Mars), Ryan McPartlin (Chuck), and Victor Garber (Eli Stone). (Hollywood Reporter)

HBO, along with Paramount Pictures and executive producer Robert Evans, are developing a six-hour mini-series about the life of Sidney Korshak, a Chicago attorney who arrived in Hollywood and "leveraged relationships with politicians, labor leaders, showbiz and the underworld to become the ultimate behind-the-scenes showbiz fixer." Project, based on a Vanity Fair article by Nick Tosches, will be written by Art Monterastelli. (Variety)

Could drama be leaving UK's Channel 4? That seems to be under discussion as one board member is floating an idea in which the beleaguered channel would drop all of its drama series in an effort to save millions of pounds and refocus the channel on documentaries and reality series. However, many--including Liza Marshall, the head of drama, and Kevin Lygo, director of television and content, are strongly opposed to the idea. (The Stage)

CBS and Sony Pictures Television, along with executive producer Michael Davies, are said to be developing a daytime one-hour update of game show The $25,000 Pyramid as a possible replacement for Guiding Light. However, other options are being looked at, including in-house productions such as talk shows. (TV Week)

CMT has ordered eight episodes of reality competition series Runnin' Wild... From Ted Nugent, that will "feature the right-wing rock star and hunting advocate teaching contestants how to survive in the wild, then chasing after them along with his 18-year-old son, Rocco." Series is expected to launch in August. (Variety)

Stay tuned.

Bit By A Dead Bee: Sneak Peek at This Week's Episode of AMC's "Breaking Bad"

Can't get enough Breaking Bad?

Check out a sneak peek at this week's episode of Breaking Bad ("Bit By a Dead Bee"), in which Jesse (Aaron Paul) tries to get rid of any incriminating evidence following his agreement with Walt (Bryan Cranston).

Want a little more info? You can read my advance review of the first three episodes of Season Two of Breaking Bad here.



Breaking Bad airs Sunday at 10 pm ET/PT on AMC.

Rage Against the Dying of the Light: An Advance Review of Season Two of AMC's "Breaking Bad"

Would you go gentle into that good night?

To answer Dylan Thomas' eternal question, Walt White (Bryan Cranston) offered a resounding negative on Breaking Bad's first season, which saw the painfully overqualified high school chemistry teacher start cooking meth with his burn-out former student Jesse (Aaron Paul) in an effort to provide for his family after his rather imminent death.

Season Two of the harrowing and engaging Breaking Bad, which launches this weekend on AMC, doesn't change Walt's outlook: if anything--and in spite of the increasingly more dangerous waters in which he finds himself--Walter doesn't correct his path.

However, in the three episodes of Breaking Bad provided to press for review, Walt does find himself increasingly at odds with both his moral compass and his body as his lung cancer continues to eat away at him. And there's the matter of his family--his loving wife Skylar (Anna Gunn), his cerebral palsy-afflicted teenage son Walt Jr. (RJ Mitte), and his snarky in-laws Hank and Marie (Dean Norris and Betsy Brandt)--who are slowly beginning to put together some pieces about what's really going on with Walt. And that's to say nothing of the deal he's just made with the Devil himself: a sociopath drug lord named Tuco (Raymond Cruz).

When we last saw Walt at the end of Season One, he had just formed that very partnership, promising four pounds of crystal meth a week to Tuco, a man just as likely to steal your supply as he is to beat one of his own men within an inch of his life. When we find Walt and Jesse, they are finally coming to terms with just what this arrangement entails.

Tuco is a very scary guy; he's the meth-fueled Keyser Soze of Albuquerque and while he clearly relishes the product that Walt supplies, he has problems of his own as he's under investigation by the DEA and has connections with certain drug cartels south of the border. Making this arrangement (and the likelihood of death and/or dismemberment at the hands of Tuco) very, very dangerous while also being a hell of a lot more lucrative than Jesse's old way of slinging.

Walt's situation wouldn't be sympathetic if he weren't doing the wrong thing for the right reason: namely to provide for Skyler and Walt Jr after his death. Calculating the amount of money they'd need to pay off the mortgage and the home equity loan (and calculating with interest the amount of money for two kids to go to college), Walt anticipates that he can reach that amount in roughly three months.

But this is Breaking Bad and nothing ever goes according to plan in this bleak portrait of a very topsy-turvy American dream. Walt and Jesse are way in over their heads and, well, the drug world of Albuquerque isn't exactly a forgiving place, even if you are dying from cancer.

So what can you expect from the first few episodes of Breaking Bad? Look for Walt and Jesse to fall out with Tuco in a very bad way while the threat of kidnapping looms large; Skylar and Marie continue their estrangement when Marie refuses to admit that she is a kleptomaniac; Hank crosses paths with Walt in his other world; Skylar and Walt hit a rough patch; and the walls close in for Walt and Jesse when they find themselves in an untenable situation.

Breaking Bad is perhaps one of the series that best examples of why we need cable networks willing to take chances with thought-provoking, compelling fare that explores the darker recesses of our collective psyche. There's no way that a series this bleak and raw could survive (much even make it on the air) at a broadcast network these days.

But it's the whip-smart writing on the part of creator Vince Gilligan and his top-notch writing staff, the inspiring (and at times awe-inspiring) performances from Cranston, Gunn, and Paul, the surprising tenderness in the character's relationships, and the injection of black humor (especially from Norris and Brandt) that make
Breaking Bad a grim treat. (Cranston in particular deserves especial attention for throwing himself--body and soul--into this role and transforming himself into a character that's unrecognizable to any he's played to date.)

Yes,
Breaking Bad is dark and brutal. I can't think of another series that offers such a complicated look at life in the US today. It's a series filled with heartache, disappointment, violence, and rage, all overseen by the ever-present specter of death. Yet it's also at its heart about the enduring love one man has for his family, a love that surpasses even his own expectant demise. Would we all be the recipients of a love that burns as pure as the doomed Walt's for his family.

Season Two of Breaking Bad launches Sunday evening at 10 pm ET/PT on AMC.

Break in to AMC's "Breaking Bad"

Just in time for the launch of the series' sophomore season next month, Breaking Bad: Season One is available in stores today as a DVD box set.

The three-disc set features all seven episodes from Breaking Bad's award-winning first season, along with a slew of bonus material, including a making of feature, fourteen Inside Breaking Bad featurettes, deleted scenes, commentary on select episodes, screen tests, and an episode of AMC Shootout featuring creator Vince Gilligan and Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston.

In the meantime, below is one of five Breaking Bad minisodes, entitled "The Break-In," to tide you over until Season Two launches in about a week and a half.



And be sure to also check out Walt's Warning, a first-person customized viral video starring Bryan Cranston that allows viewers choose their own Breaking Bad-driven adventure.

Season Two of Breaking Bad launches Sunday, March 8th at 10 pm ET/PT on AMC.