Thursday, September 22, 2011

Disgraced pastor Ted Haggard to appear in "Wife Swap"

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Americans prefer "Modern Family" to "X Factor"

LOS ANGELES | Thu Sep 22, 2011 12:35pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Big, brash new singing contest "The X Factor" was thumped on its U.S. TV debut, with American audiences preferring comedy "Modern Family" in their millions, ratings figures showed on Thursday.

After months of hype and bold predictions by its creator Simon Cowell, just 12.1 million Americans tuned in for the debut of "The X Factor" on Fox -- about half the audience for the most recent season of "American Idol".

Instead, "Modern Family" -- the affectionate ABC mockumentary that won big at the Emmy Awards last weekend -- drew 14.3 million viewers to make it the most-watched TV show of Wednesday night, early numbers for Nielsen media research showed.

Critics were also mostly underwhelmed by "X Factor", which Cowell had predicted earlier this year would thrash the competition and replace "Idol" as the most-watched show on U.S. television.

"It quickly becomes clear that this series, which has billed itself as a new type of competition show, really just remixes the well-established gimmicks of the earlier entries in the genre," wrote Neil Genzlinger of the New York Times.

As for the acid-tongued Cowell -- the "X Factor" creator, executive producer and judge -- Genzlinger said, "This magician no longer has a curtain hiding the secrets of his tricks."

Hollywood trade paper Variety said the series appeared "even more emotionally manipulative and over-produced than its ('Idol') predecessor."

And an extended sequence in which a contestant dropped his pants but was allowed to continue performing was a turn-off for many.

"When a man is allowed to 'sing' a song about being a stud while shaking his presumably naked genitals at the audience (on the screen they are covered by an X) without the judges stopping him...the narrative manipulation suggests the word 'desperate,'" said Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times.

As for the much ballyhooed firing of British singer and judge Cheryl Cole and her replacement by Nicole Scherzinger, many critics were left perplexed.

"Was Cheryl Cole really that hard to understand? Or did someone at Fox just owe Nicole a rather large favor? (Because frankly, Cheryl was awesome, made total sense and was adorable to boot. Please submit your plausible explanations as to why she was fired in the comments section because we're coming up empty.)," wrote TV Guide's Denise Martin.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Schwarzenegger to write "unbelievably true" memoir

NEW YORK | Thu Sep 22, 2011 11:45am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Arnold Schwarzenegger is writing a memoir about his unlikely life story from Austrian-born champion bodybuilder to Hollywood action star to California governor, his publisher said on Thursday.

Schwarzenegger, 64, who in May announced his separation from wife Maria Shriver after admitting to fathering a child out of wedlock, is "chronicling his embodiment of the American Dream" in his second autobiography, publisher Simon & Schuster said.

The memoir, titled "Total Recall: My Unbelievably True Life Story," was acquired by Simon & Schuster after Schwarzenegger began working on the book last year. It will be released in October, 2012.

Four months after he left office as California governor, Schwarzenegger said in May that he was halting discussions for a new "Terminator" movie and all other Hollywood projects in order to focus on personal matters after admitting he fathered a secret child 13 years ago with his family's housekeeper.

He has been ridiculed in the media and Shriver filed for a divorce in July to end their 25 year marriage, citing irreconcilable differences. The couple has four children together.

He has since planned to shoot action roles in movies "Last Stand" and "The Expendables 2".

A spokeswoman for Simon & Schuster would not comment on whether the book would discuss his divorce and sex scandal. The book will be published in the United States, Australia, Canada, India, and the United Kingdom. German rights have been sold to Hoffmann und Campe and Dutch rights to A.W. Bruna.

"Nobody has a life story even close to his. To go from poor immigrant to world class athlete to the biggest movie star in the world to governor of California is an incredible journey," Jonathan Karp, publisher of Simon & Schuster, said in a statement.

Schwarzenegger's first book, "The Education of a Bodybuilder, has never been out of print since its release in 1977, Simon & Schuster said.

(Reporting by Christine Kearney, editing by Patricia Reaney)



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