Category: Parks and Recreation

Tweeters' Digest: The week in TV tweets

Lowe
In between the self-promotion (watch my show!), the responses to fans (thanks for watching my show!) and the revelations of personal minutiae (I'm going to the gym before I watch my show!), famous people take to Twitter to comment on the news of the world.

With Rob Lowe and Anderson Cooper on the revolution in Egypt, Donald Glover and Adrian Grenier anticipating the SuperBowl and Damon Lindelof still defending the final episode of "Lost," here are some highlights of the week — after the jump — as captured in tweets from actors, show runners, TV anchors and reality stars.

— Joy Press

twitter.com/joypress

Photo: Rob Lowe. Credit: Al Seib / Los Angeles Times.

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Amy Poehler wants to know if her Emmy nomination comes with cash

Poehler Immediately after she learned she had been nominated for her lead role on "Parks & Recreation," Amy Poehler says she did some online banking, withdrew some money and bought herself a small plane.

"I should really find out if any money comes with this nomination," she joked. (At least, we think she was joking.) On a more serious note: "It's been a great year for women in comedy. To be included among them is just excellent."

Asked who she felt was snubbed, she mentioned her costars. And Meryl Streep. And "those kids from 'Twilight.'"

If she actually wins, she says she will fashion the statue into a broach to wear on her lapel.

"Either that, or I would design an apartment around it," she said. "I have no room for false modesty. It would be the first thing you saw when you walked into the place."

What would her character, Leslie, say if she won?

"She would be ill-prepared," she said. "She would spend a precious 20 seconds thanking the kind person who filled her seat while she went to the bathroom. Then she would end with a quote from Eleanor Roosevelt or an empowering lyric from Salt-n-Pepa."

-- Greg Braxton and Maria Elena Fernandez (twitter.com/writerchica)

RELATED:

Emmy voters did right by dramas and comedies but need a reality check

List of Emmy nominations

Photo: Amy Poehler on "Parks and Recreation." Credit: Chris Haston/NBC.


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Upfronts: Scripted shows on NBC - a reversal of fortune

Gaspin!! NBC has fallen in love with scripted shows again.

In a bid to slash costs last year, the beleaguered network put a record-low seven hours of scripted programming on its weekly prime-time schedule. Nearly one-quarter of the lineup was devoted to an ill-fated and now-defunct 10 p.m. talk show with Jay Leno.

But after a bruising year of low ratings and bad headlines, NBC has raced back to traditional dramas and comedies with a lineup that executives in New York officially released on Sunday. The network is nearly doubling down on scripted formats, which will now occupy 12 hours a week (out of a total of 22) on the schedule. Among the eight new shows slated for fall are splashy action hours from star producers Jerry Bruckheimer and J.J. Abrams and a legal drama starring Jimmy Smits.

"This new schedule brings NBC back to basics with its commitment to quality scripted programming," Jeff Gaspin, chairman of NBC Universal Television Entertainment, said in a statement.

It’s a near-complete reversal from last year, when NBC insisted that the new economic model required  slashing program costs by scheduling cheaper alternatives, such as Leno’s show.

"One thing we learned from this year: If you’re going to compete at 10 o’clock, you have to put your very best content on," Gaspin told reporters in a Sunday conference call. "There’s just too much competition from cable and DVRs."

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Getting to know new 'Parks and Recreation' stars Rob Lowe and Adam Scott

What will Rob Lowe and Adam Scott be doing when their characters arrive at Pawnee, Ind.'s "Parks and Recreation" department?

"We're going to gut it with a machete," Scott told a room of reporters Monday at NBC's press day in Pasadena. Lowe and Scott will play a pair of state auditors charged with cutting the department's budget by almost half. 

Series executive producer Mike Schur alluded to the ripped-from-the-headlines budget cuts arc last month when word leaked that "Parks and Recreation" regular Paul Schneider would be leaving the show.

"What's nice about the show is that it deals with the real impact of people losing their jobs," pregnant star Amy Poehler said. The comedy "comes from them deciding which programs should stay and which should go -- and who's in charge of that." 

Lowe and Scott's characters -- Chris and Ben, respectively -- have a "good cop, bad cop" dynamic, said Schur.

"Rob comes in and flashes those pearly whites and makes everyone feel good and happy," he said. "And then Adam comes in and starts slashing things right and left... Ron Swanson, of course, couldn't be happier."

It's been reported that Ben will become a love interest for Poehler's Leslie Knope -- but the actors say initially they'll butt heads. 

"Leslie's gone from big ideas to triage, so that's been fun to play," Poehler said.

"I come in and my character is fairly cynical," Scott said. "Leslie's idealism tests that."

The show is in the middle of production on Season 3. Poehler recently wrote an episode that will revolve around an all-night telethon with special guest and former Indiana Pacers player Detlef Schrempf. 

-- Denise Martin

Exclusive: Aziz Ansari to host the 2010 MTV Movie Awards

Aziz Perhaps this is why Aziz Ansari has been studying up on "Twilight."

Insiders tell Show Tracker exclusively that the comedian and "Parks and Recreation" star is in final negotiations to host the 2010 MTV Movie Awards, slated to air live June 6 from the Gibson Amphitheatre in Universal City.

Last week, Ansari spent a couple of days live-tweeting his first-ever viewings of "Twilight" and its sequel "New Moon":

"Never thought I'd see a dude pull up in a Subaru Forrester with such authority. ... #TwilightAziz"

(As of last Thursday, the comedian was still unsure about whether he was Team Edward or Team Jacob.)

"Twilight" swept the evening at the 2009 ceremony -- five awards including the one for best movie -- and stars Taylor Lautner, Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart turned up to present a special extended trailer for "New Moon." (With the third "Twilight" film, "Eclipse," premiering June 30 -- and with MTV long leading the charge in all things "Twilight"-related -- one presumes viewers this year will get a similar treat.)

Meanwhile, it's safe to say demand for Azari is only going to skyrocket from here: He's costarring in the Jonah Hill-Russell Brand comedy "Get Him to the Greek," out June 4; his new stand-up comedy tour, "Aziz Ansari: Dangerously Delicious Tour," kicks off this summer (tickets on sale for most cities); and NBC just picked up "Parks and Recreation" for a third season, complete with new cast members.

Nominations for the 2010 MTV Movie Awards have not yet been announced. A spokeswoman for MTV declined comment and Ansari's reps could not be reached.

-- Denise Martin (follow me on Twitter @denisemartin)

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'Parks and Recreation': Mike Schur tells us why Paul Schneider is leaving the show, plus more details on Adam Scott and Rob Lowe

Making bureaucracy work: How 'Parks and Recreation' overcame bad buzz

The Sunday Conversation: Aziz Ansari sure can pick a fight

Photo credit: Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times

'Parks and Recreation': Mike Schur tells us why Paul Schneider is leaving the show, plus more details on Adam Scott and Rob Lowe

Paul1 It's true, "Parks and Recreation" fans -- Mark Brendanawicz is not long for Pawnee.

A report earlier today hinted that Paul Schneider, who plays Pawnee city planner Mark, would be leaving the NBC comedy, recently renewed for a third season.

"Parks" co-creator and executive producer Mike Schur confirmed the news exclusively for Show Tracker, explained what will happen to Mark's character (on the positive side: Schneider may not be gone for good), and revealed more details about the incoming stories for Adam Scott and Rob Lowe.

We're upset. What happened?

Mike Schur: Well, the fact that you are upset is in part at least why this is happening. Let me start from the beginning. The God's honest absolute truth is this character, Mark, is at least partially based on a real guy that [co-creator and executive producer Greg Daniels] and I met while we were doing research. His career had a very interesting trajectory, which is he worked for the government for a long time as a city planner and he got so fed up with the lifestyle and the red tape and the bureaucracy, that he ... moved into the private sector. Then he got so fed up and tired of how gross corporations are that he moved back to the government. He oscillated back and forth multiple times.

When we first cast Paul, we told him that the idea would be Mark would leave and then ideally he would come back in a different capacity working for a different company. And then he would leave again and come back, and so on... It's not something you usually do on TV shows but we thought it was a good way to illustrate both the positive and negative aspects of working for a government. It was one of the first things we talked about with him.

What happened was in the wake of "Bright Star" [a film in which Schneider co-starred] and winning a lot of awards, Paul now has this film career that is just taking off in a big way. [Show Tracker notes Schneider's major credits include "Lars and the Real Girl" and "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford."] And the movie opportunities he's getting are incredibly cool interesting movies, not the summer blockbuster movies that can be scheduled around TV actors when they need to be.

So, in the end, it was a combination of us always knowing that the character would always leave some day, the timing of this movie, and then sort of feeling like, well, the way the character's gone...we were all on the same page here and we decided to write the character out.

But the goal and the aim is to have him come back as soon as his schedule permits and as soon as the arcs we're writing call for it. We very much want him back and he has told us he very much wants to come back in the future. It really is one of those mutually beneficial situations. And we're hoping we can have him back in Season 3.

What will happen to Mark between now and the end of the season?

He's going to remain in the world of the show in a way that not only allows but hopefully demands that he'll reenter it. He's not going to be killed in some weird accident.

Paul2 Maybe an obvious question, but where does that leave Ann and Mark's relationship? Post-Valentine's Day, things seem to be up in the air between them...

Mark's relationship with Ann comes to a crossroads toward the end of the year. It's something we're building toward. Most of the beats in that story haven't aired yet, ironically, because we let Rashida Jones (Ann) out of two episodes because she was shooting a David Fincher movie. Two episodes from now begins that arc.

When the Adam Scott news broke, some begun speculating that he might be a replacement for Paul -- true?

He's really not. The story that Adam Scott and Rob Lowe are coming in for ... they're not new city planners sitting across the hall. It's not like the government is firing Mark and replacing him with Adam's character. Adam is from a different world. It's not the same thing.

Variety said Adam would be a love interest for Leslie...

It's not wrong. But it's funny to say he's a love interest for Amy's character when he hasn't shot a scene yet. It's kind of silly. It's not right or wrong, if that makes any sense?

Adam's character is entering the world, he's about Amy's age, he's a man and he's single? I think that's where that came from? Look, no one ever conceived April and Andy would be romantically involved until we shot this one episode and said, "Hey, they have chemistry!" So we taste it, that's more the way we do things here. We like to get actors we think are good and just throw them into a big stew and mix it up and see what happens.

Can you tease anything else about Rob Lowe? We heard he's in for two episodes this season, and six more -- at least -- next season. He's been tweeting his excitement all day.

That's correct. He was super funny in the table read. He and Adam both were fantastic. It was very exciting. He and Adam come in as part of a team sent in from a distant land to try to help the town of Pawnee through a rough patch. There are all these stories in the news now like Kansas City is closing half of their public schools now, and, I don't know if this actually happened, but the entire state of Idaho was threatening to shut down the Parks department...and Idaho is essentially just one large park. Most cities and towns in the country right now are going through these rough patches involving plummeting tax revenue and layoffs. So we're doing a torn-from-the-headlines thing about Pawnee and Adam and Rob's characters come in to help them fix their budget problems.

OK, sounds good. We're still kind of bummed about Paul leaving though...

We really like him as an actor and as a human being, so we're hoping that it all works out and he can come back. We hope that he won't just do award-winning movie after award-winning movie...

-- Denise Martin

Photo: Paul Schneider (Christina House / For The Times); Amy Poehler and Paul Schneider (Gina Ferazzi / For the Times)

RELATED:

Making bureaucracy work: How 'Parks and Recreation' overcame bad buzz

The Sunday Conversation: Aziz Ansari sure can pick a fight

'Party Down' star Adam Scott joins the cast of NBC's 'Parks and Recreation'; plus, more details on Rob Lowe

Adam-scott-headshot Good and bad news, comedy fans: Adam Scott, whom you know as disillusioned actor-turned-caterer Henry Pollard on the Starz comedy series "Party Down," is joining the cast of NBC's "Parks and Recreation."

No details yet on Scott's character or how he'll make his debut on the Pawnee scene, but expect him to pop up in the last two episodes of "Parks'" second season.

“I'm more than flattered and extremely excited to be joining the incredible cast of 'Parks and Recreation,'" Scott told Show Tracker. "The ball is now in my court to completely screw this up.”

So does this spell the end for the critically acclaimed but little seen "Party Down"?

Don't fret -- yet. Expect to see plenty of Henry during the second season, which premieres April 23. Production on those 10 episodes wrapped in October. Fans will remember that when we last saw Henry he had become Party Down's new team leader after Ron got his chance to open Soup'r Crackers.

Starz is waiting to see how the second season performs in the ratings before it commits to a third, but  Scott said he'd be open to coming back to reprise his role should "Party Down" be renewed.

Whew!

"Party Down" lost original series regular Jane Lynch after she joined the cast of "Glee" last year, but we're told Lynch's randy Constance Carmell will return for the Season 2 finale.

Meanwhile, EW.com reported on Wednesday that Rob Lowe was nearing a deal to also join "Parks and Recreation" after he exits ABC's "Brothers & Sisters" at the end of the season. A "Parks and Recreation" insider told Show Tracker that Lowe would appear in the last two episodes of this season and up to six more episodes during Season 3. A rep for NBC had no comment on the report.

As part of his deal with "Parks and Recreation," Scott has also signed a first-look production deal with NBC and Universal Media Studios under which he'll develop TV projects.

"Parks and Recreation" executive producer Mike Schur said Scott "is brilliant and funny -- and he's funny in a lot of different ways. There just aren't that many people with a comedic range that spans 'Step Brothers' to 'Party Down.'" 

Scott is up for an Independent Spirit Award this weekend for his performance in the film "The Vicious Kind."

-- Denise Martin

Photo credit: Starz

RELATED:

The Sunday Conversation: 'Parks and Recreation' star Aziz Ansari sure can pick a fight

Making bureaucracy work: How NBC's 'Parks and Recreation' overcame bad buzz

Robert Lloyd's best of 2009 list

The Sunday Conversation: 'Parks and Recreation' star Aziz Ansari sure can pick a fight

Aziz2

Whether it's competing television shows or innocent young relatives, no one's safe from comedian Aziz Ansari. Read our brief and slightly combative Q&A with one of the stars of NBC's "Parks and Recreation" that ran in Sunday's Calendar section.

-- Denise Martin

Photo: Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times

Related:

Making bureaucracy work: How NBC's 'Parks and Recreation' beat bad buzz

Making bureaucracy work: How NBC's 'Parks and Recreation' overcame bad buzz

PR1
And they thought it wouldn't last: In the face of bad buzz and with a little perseverance, "Parks and Recreation" executive producers Greg Daniels and Michael Schur have changed minds about their Amy Poehler comedy, once seen as a knock-off of "The Office." Now, critics are raving. Below is a longer version of the feature running in Thursday's Calendar section.

In the NBC comedy “Parks and Recreation,” Amy Poehler plays Leslie Knope, an upbeat, low-level bureaucrat determined to make the fictional town of Pawnee, Ind., a better place.

Leslie’s cheerful, tireless ambition in the face of cynics is echoed by series creators Greg Daniels and Michael Schur, who previously gave us "The Office." And who can blame them? Few industry observers thought “Parks,” which launched as a midseason replacement last spring, would survive even this long.

First, there were production delays to accommodate Poehler’s pregnancy. Then there were the early test screenings and poor scores that landed on the desk of influential Hollywood blogger Nikki Finke, who practically declared the show DOA before its premiere. Many critics said the show was needlessly similar to “The Office” -- both in its mock documentary format and naive lead. With all the bad vibes, it was no wonder that ratings slid throughout its six-episode first season.

“My sense is that if we had built ‘Parks and Recreation’ around a 90-year-old Maasai warrior people would still have said, ‘He reminds me of [“The Office’s”] Michael Scott,’ ” Schur said. “There was just no way to escape it. “

Until Daniels and Schur did.

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NBC picks up `Community,' `Parks and Recreation' and 'Mercy' for season

NBC has picked up its Thursday comedies "Community" and "Parks and Recreation" and its Wednesday medical drama "Mercy" for the full season.

The pick-ups of these three shows are not surprising since NBC has had few other bright spots this season. Both "Community" and "Parks and Recreation" are critical darlings and, while their audiences are small, the network is no doubt hoping they will broaden their appeal the way "The Office" has over the last few years.

On Wednesday nights, "Mercy" has been growing its audience and has improved the 8-9 p.m. time period compared with a year ago.

"We're confident 'Mercy' can be a strong player for us," said Angela Bromstad, president of prime-time entertainment for NBC.

-- Joe Flint

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