Television News
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Jamie Lynn Spears says she's pregnant
Dec 18 2007 11:15PM (CT)
NEW YORK (AP) - Another Spears baby is reportedly on the way _ and it's not Britney's. Jamie Lynn Spears, the 16-year-old "Zoey 101" star and sister of Britney, told OK! magazine that she's pregnant and that the father is her boyfriend, Casey Aldridge.
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Kimmel joins Leno, O'Brien back on air
Dec 18 2007 9:36PM (CT)
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jimmy Kimmel will join NBC's late-night hosts in returning with new shows Jan. 2 in the midst of the Hollywood writers strike, ABC said Tuesday. Kimmel, along with Jay Leno, Conan O'Brien and other hosts, had honored the strike that began Nov. 5. He said it was a difficult decision to resume work without writers, but he wants to save the jobs of other staffers on the show.
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Hasselhoff, Bach settle divorce issues
Dec 18 2007 8:06PM (CT)
LOS ANGELES (AP) - David Hasselhoff and ex-wife Pamela Bach have agreed on post-divorce terms that include joint custody of their teenage daughters, Hasselhoff's attorney confirmed Tuesday.
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'Sopranos' creator takes witness stand
Dec 18 2007 8:01PM (CT)
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - The creator of "The Sopranos" testified Tuesday that he wanted to cry when he learned in 2002 he was being sued by a former municipal judge who wanted credit for his role in the creation of the hit mob drama.
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`Survivor: China' lunch lady apologizes
Dec 18 2007 2:13PM (CT)
NEW YORK (AP) - A school lunch lady who gained fame as a contestant on CBS' reality show "Survivor: China" wasn't telling the truth when she claimed during Sunday's season finale that she'd been demoted to janitor, her boss says.
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Leno, O'Brien return without writers
Dec 18 2007 8:54AM (CT)
NEW YORK (AP) - NBC's two late-night franchises are coming back. Will the laughs come with them? Jay Leno and Conan O'Brien plan a Jan. 2 return with fresh episodes, ending two months of reruns brought on by the writers' strike, the network said Monday. But until the strike is settled, the hosts will be on their own.
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Hollywood writers reject award shows
Dec 18 2007 7:51AM (CT)
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two of Hollywood's most glamorous events are now caught up in the entertainment industry's ugliest labor dispute in two decades. The Writers Guild of America, West, will not allow its members to write for the Golden Globes on Jan. 13 nor the Academy Awards on Feb. 24.
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