
Image via E! Online
Normally, we wouldn't print anything that had only one source, but considering supposedly adored hockey mom Sarah Palin got booed at a hockey game over the weekend, it's entirely possible that she's looking to get out of that rumored Saturday Night Live appearance. Not to worry, though: we've got much more thoroughly backed-up news on ER, Life on Mars, Eleventh Hour, South Park's Indiana Jones controversy, Star Trek, Star Wars, and the distinct possibility that a certain human-masked lizard alien miniseries is gonna get a remake.
-- Someone we've never heard of says that those rumors of Sarah Palin getting a chance to turn the SNL tables on Tina Fey in their 10/25 Jon Hamm-hosted episode are just that: rumors. Hey Jezebel, do you know something about "Bill Lucey" that we don't?
-- So... the second episode of outgoing medical drama ER beat the premieres of both Life on Mars and Eleventh Hour last Thursday in the all-important 18-49 demo. What's more, in the overall ratings, ER came in third with the other two shows basically tied. Yes, we believe we have identified the most interesting timeslot of the year.
-- No one will be going after Matt Stone & Trey Parker for South Park's angry (if reiterative) depiction of Steven Spielberg and George Lucas raping Indiana Jones. According to Nikki Finke, Viacom and Paramount, parent companies to Comedy Central and occasional partners to Dreamworks, just want the situation to go away. Not likely.
-- Someone may finally be following through on the often-rumored remake of V, the 1983 alien invasion miniseries that inspired a sequel series and weekly show that introduced us to Michael Ironside. Hey, any of you kids bothered to watch V recently? Wa bought a copy a while back; it's got way more WWII stuff in it that we'd remembered. Imagine Vichy France where the Nazis ate birds!
-- So let's get this straight: right when the Star Wars franchise is making the shift to TV, Paramount execs have decreed that Star Trek has to be more Wars-y -- which (from what we can tell, and what io9 suggests) means making it more movie-ish and, it seems, decoupling it from abject slavery to the TV franchises?