Independent voices from the TWT Communities
The Television Critics Association (or TCA) is a group of approximately 200 United States and Canadian journalists and columnists who cover television programming. They meet in the Los Angeles area twice a year, in January and July, in conferences known as Winter and Summer Press Tours. - Source: Wikipedia
Not everyone believes that Philip Roth has written his last book.
Philip Roth is enjoying his retirement from writing and pleased that he will be featured in March on PBS' "American Masters" series.
Five minutes into their season-opening news conference and the new team at "American Idol" were having their first disagreement _ about their disagreements. Then Mariah Carey and Nicki Minaj kept it going.

The world didn't end as some predicted last month. Even more remarkably, NBC demonstrated it just might have a future.
The world didn't end as some predicted last month. Even more remarkably, NBC demonstrated it just might have a future.

FX is staying in business with Charlie Sheen.

It's the moment before the moment of truth. The new fall series are in the wings, just days or weeks from bursting into view and discovering their fate.
Ethel Kennedy says she didn't play matchmaker between a grandson and Taylor Swift but the Kennedys would be "lucky" to have the pop star in the family.
Aaron Sorkin is confronting critics of his HBO drama head on.
Tippi Hedren said Wednesday she survived working with Alfred Hitchcock, but her career was another matter.
Larry David is coming back to HBO _ but not in a new season of "Curb Your Enthusiasm."
Showtime says it's launching a new documentary showcase, with Dick Cheney and the late Richard Pryor among the first to be profiled.
Got a goofy older brother? Parents you still live with even though you're grown up? An unconventional friendship?

The stars of "Modern Family" have reached new contracts to keep working on the Emmy-winning comedy, end-ing a dispute that had threatened to spill over into a courtroom.

Charlie Sheen says he's not insane anymore. Instead, these are good days for the "Anger Management" star, he declares, with his FX sitcom halfway through its initial 10-episode run and poised to get an order for 90 more.