Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Katie Couric confirms leaving CBS evening news

LOS ANGELES | Tue Apr 26, 2011 3:13pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - News anchor Katie Couric said on Tuesday she was leaving her job at "CBS Evening News" but said details of her next job were still being discussed.

Couric, 54, who became the first female solo anchor of a U.S. weeknight network newscast in 2006, said in an exclusive statement to People magazine that she was "looking at a format that will allow me to engage in more multi-dimensional storytelling".

Details of when and where such a show would air had yet to be determined, she said.

"I have decided to step down from the 'CBS Evening News.' I'm really proud of the talented team on the 'CBS Evening News' and the award-winning work we've been able to do in the past five years in addition to the reporting I've done for '60 Minutes' and 'CBS Sunday Morning.'

"In making the decision to move on, I know the 'Evening News' will be in great hands, but I am excited about the future," Couric said in her statement.

Couric said earlier this month that she was considering other options after her five-year contract at "CBS Evening News" ends in early June.

Couric, a former co-host of rival NBC's morning talk show "Today" for 15 years, has been unable to raise her CBS news broadcast out of third place in the ratings despite the initial media hoopla over her appointment.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Steve Gorman)



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Lindsay Lohan in TV chat blames youth for woes

LOS ANGELES | Tue Apr 26, 2011 12:59pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actress Lindsay Lohan got a standing ovation when she made her first TV outing since spending five hours in jail last week.

Lohan, 24, taped an appearance on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" on Monday that will be broadcast on Tuesday, NBC said.

Lohan was locked up for five hours on Friday and stands trial in June on a charge of stealing a gold necklace from a Los Angeles jewelry store. It was the latest setback in the actress' bid to revive a flagging movie career, after almost four years of trips to drug and alcohol rehab, and jail.

In an excerpt released ahead of Tuesday's broadcast, the former child star attributed some of her troubles to success at an early age. She first found fame at age 11 in "The Parent Trap".

"I think being young and being in the position I was in, you don't really take the time to appreciate what you have, and it is all a kind of whirlwind and people make decisions for you," the "Mean Girls" actress told Leno.

"But I am not a kid anymore. I am 24. I have made a lot of mistakes and I recognize that, but I am in the clear now and as long as I stay focused, I will be able to achieve what I want to achieve," Lohan added.

The studio audience reportedly gave Lohan, who has made few TV appearances since January, a rousing welcome when she turned up unexpectedly on the set.

Lohan found herself behind bars again after a judge ruled that the jewelry theft charge was a violation of her 2007 probation for drunken driving, and sentenced her to 120 days in jail and 480 hours community service. She was released on bail pending an appeal.

The actress last week landed a role in an upcoming movie about New York mob boss John Gotti. But first she faces trial, and another possible spell in jail, for walking out of a jewelry store in January wearing a $2,500 gold necklace without paying for it.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant: Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis)



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"Raymond" TV creator looks for some love in Russia

LOS ANGELES | Tue Apr 26, 2011 12:58pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Everybody Loves Raymond" -- or so the show's creator had reason to think before he went to Moscow to help adapt a Russian remake of his hit TV comedy.

But when he got there, Phil Rosenthal quickly discovered that the Russians didn't share his taste for the absurdity of everyday family life, wouldn't pay for a studio audience and wanted to dress Raymond's stay-at-home wife in stilettos.

Worse still, Russian TV writers had no trouble telling Rosenthal that one of America's most beloved sitcoms was not really funny at all.

Rosenthal recounts the hilarity and the horror in "Exporting Raymond," which opens in U.S. movies theaters on Friday. The documentary marks his first foray into feature filmmaking.

"'Everybody Loves Raymond' is shown dubbed or subtitled in 148 countries, so I was led to believe it would go a little more smoothly than it did in Russia," Rosenthal told Reuters in a recent interview. "I was led to believe that we did have something that was possibly universal."

Starring standup comedian Ray Romano as easygoing sports columnist Raymond Barone and Patricia Heaton as his exasperated wife Debra, "Everybody Loves Raymond" was loosely based on Rosenthal's own family life. Its nine-year run in primetime ended in 2005, but the show lives on in syndication.

Rosenthal was dispatched to Moscow in 2008 to help oversee a Russian remake called "Everybody Loves Kostya." Things got off to an ominous start when he was told he needed kidnap and ransom insurance.

But by far his biggest concern was persuading an ever-changing cast of Russian producers, directors, writers and actors to understand the humor in his show about multi-generational family life.

"My fear of being kidnapped was replaced by the fear of what they were going to do to my show. I didn't know they wouldn't allow a studio audience, which was so important to me," he said.

"They really did give me the excuse that they would have to get chairs. I said I would pay for the chairs!," he said.

Over a period of nine months, Rosenthal also battled over casting, acting and costumes. Glamorous costume designer Elena was determined to put the Debra character in extravagant cocktail attire in a bid to teach Russian women how to dress.

But Rosenthal is quick to point out that "Exporting Raymond" is not intended to make fun of the Russian TV industry.

"The truth is I had the same struggles here in America, just with a different accent. The creative 'No' that you get is the same in every language. It is nice to know executives are the same the world over.

"The joke was on me. The movie might be about a guy who thinks he is an expert on something who goes to a land where nobody cares," he laughed.

As for whether anybody in Russia did fall in love with Kostya, Rosenthal would prefer to reserve that cliffhanger for those who go to watch his documentary.

What he will say is that since 2009, Poland, Egypt, the Netherlands, Israel and British television makers have all sought permission to remake "Everybody Loves Raymond" with their own national twists.

(Editing by Dean Goodman)



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