glee

There was not Glee this week and no next week? what is happening.

What happened to Bones And Fringe? Fox has not showed them for a couple of weeks now?

I want to watch Glee laryngitis episode online? Some buddy tell me from where can I watch it online.

Today’s Pop five: cubsfan20′s top medical shows

I love this movie: ‘The T.A.M.I. Show’

Comment

First of all, thanks for being patient with me today while I went and did a TV thing. It’s gonna take hours to remove the mascara.

Anyway, here’s a cool thing that has been getting tons of hits on YouTube this week: On Monday, a Glee-related flash mob happened at Ohio State University.

Says Pop reader Julie B.: “Apparently, this was done to promote the new student union. University president Gordon Gee dances in the video — pretty awesome, actually. I don’t know too many university presidents who would dance in a bow tie with Brutus Buckeye!”

Fox should use this to promote the show:

I want to watch Glee online, not have to rent it from Blockbuster or something. Does anybody know of a website I can do that on? Most of them I have to pay like amazon, or I have to fill out a quiz and give them my cell phone number, then they charge me.

by Nadine Cheung Apr 28th 2010 at 7:34PM

Glee has covered the biggest names in music this season, but Justin Bieber has yet to get any love from the hit Fox series. the Canadian pop star reigned at no. 1 for weeks before being pushed out of the no. 1 spot by the ‘Power of Madonna’ EP on Wednesday, so wouldn’t it make sense for the cast to cover one of his songs on their show?

Not really, says Matthew Morrison. In an interview with E! Online, the actor, who plays mr. Schuester, admits he doesn’t have Bieber fever. “I don’t get this Bieber thing,” he says. “I really don’t get it. I hear he was in Australia and they kicked him out because he started a riot. I haven’t even heard his music. I couldn’t tell you one name of his songs — and I’m not lying about that!”

Co-star Kevin McHale knows exactly who Justin is, but he’s not so sure the 16-year-old singer would make room in his schedule to appear on the musical series. “Uh, [Bieber] seems busy,” Kevin says. “I don’t know if he has the time.”

Well, at least one member of the Glee cast is supportive of Justin. Cory Monteith is all for the idea, saying: “I think it would be fun. What’s wrong with a little Bieb? Everyone needs to be a little infected by the Biebonic plague.”

We agree. ‘Baby,’ ‘Eenie Meenie’ or ‘One Less Lonely Girl’ are great covers that could fit into the story lines of the show, and since Justin is actually of high school age, he’d be a perfect guest star. What do you think?

Britney Spears‘ manager Adam Leber is trying to mount another glorious comeback via the hottest musical showcase on TV: “Glee.” after the rousing success of the all-Madonna episode, he tweeted, “Do you guys want to see a Britney Spears episode of GLEE? thoughts?”

We at Zap2it think an all-Britney episode would be fun, but we’d love to see some other musical performers get a crack at a “Glee” showcase. and don’t worry — we didn’t forget Lady Gaga. as successful as Gaga’s been so quickly, she’s still a newbie to the scene. but we think the “Glee” Season 4 premiere has Gaga written all over it. Check out our picks…

Andrea Reiher, Zap2it

Related:

All things ‘Glee’ at Zap2it

http://www.fox.com/glee/?src=home_page_whats_on_tonight
i am, im looking forward to it.

are you going to watch that new show GLEE?

When Fox revealed its plan to broadcast reruns of Fringe and Glee with a live Twitter feed overlay, I said they had to be really really careful. but Fox didn’t listen. from user comments online it looks like the experiment earned itself a big FAIL.

And it wasn’t necessarily because the moderated streams pissed off devoted fans. The problem is that regular viewers were annoyed at the intrusion of the Twitter-based babble taking up precious on-screen real-estate. Check out the pics Dave Zatz managed to grab–the wacky formatting and those huge text boxes obliterate the action.

Of the five commenters on my original article about the plan, all five found the Twitter feed unsatisfying. Sarah Lynd’s response is the simplest, and will represent the kind of response that Fox will be 100% unhappy to hear: “This is one of the stupidests tests I’ve seen. I switched over to 30 Rock.” but these guys are not alone. Dave Zatz himself noted it made “Fringe unwatchable” on his widescreen TV, and speculated it would be even worse in traditional 4:3 format. Meanwhile, over at MonstersAndCritics.com, the first eight anonymous commenters noted how intrusive and annoying it was: “Most annoying thing I have ever seen,” and “take it off the screen so we can see the show” being typical responses.

Positive comments were few and far between. so why did it fail so badly? because whoever was in charge of the look and feel of the Twitter experiment made a massive error, and turned the Twitter overlay from a fun fact-filled add on to a massive, irritating distraction. The content of the Tweets are always going to annoy some fans who just want to watch the show, so Fox should’ve relegated the Twitter overlay to a narrow, dark-colored strip right at the bottom of the screen where it wouldn’t interfere with the action. Fox should check out the BBC’s News graphic overlays, which are a good model for how this could work much more successfully and tastefully.

[via ZatzNotFunny]


about it. now, it seems that they are still have something relating them.
It is then ideal to know: what is ‘fan blah = glee’ provided that ‘glee’ is even?
Would it be possible to know all the possible results?

When Fox revealed its plan to broadcast reruns of Fringe and Glee with a live Twitter feed overlay, I said they had to be really really careful. but Fox didn’t listen. From user comments online it looks like the experiment earned itself a big FAIL.

And it wasn’t necessarily because the moderated streams pissed off devoted fans. The problem is that regular viewers were annoyed at the intrusion of the Twitter-based babble taking up precious on-screen real-estate. Check out the pics Dave Zatz managed to grab–the wacky formatting and those huge text boxes obliterate the action.

Of the five commenters on my original article about the plan, all five found the Twitter feed unsatisfying. Sarah Lynd’s response is the simplest, and will represent the kind of response that Fox will be 100% unhappy to hear: “This is one of the stupidests tests I’ve seen. I switched over to 30 Rock.” but these guys are not alone. Dave Zatz himself noted it made “Fringe unwatchable” on his widescreen TV, and speculated it would be even worse in traditional 4:3 format. meanwhile, over at MonstersAndCritics.com, the first eight anonymous commenters noted how intrusive and annoying it was: “Most annoying thing I have ever seen,” and “take it off the screen so we can see the show” being typical responses.

Positive comments were few and far between. so why did it fail so badly? because whoever was in charge of the look and feel of the Twitter experiment made a massive error, and turned the Twitter overlay from a fun fact-filled add on to a massive, irritating distraction. The content of the Tweets are always going to annoy some fans who just want to watch the show, so Fox should’ve relegated the Twitter overlay to a narrow, dark-colored strip right at the bottom of the screen where it wouldn’t interfere with the action. Fox should check out the BBC’s News graphic overlays, which are a good model for how this could work much more successfully and tastefully.

[via ZatzNotFunny]