Is Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce the setting of Ken Cosgrove's book? Is Barney's half-sister the mother of Ted's kids?
The awards show's fixation on the sitcom demonstrates that it still doesn't get comedy.
The former "Office" star's new sitcom has lots in common with Zooey Deschanel's—for better and for worse.
Fans make pilgrimages to Tom's Restaurant and the house from "Full House." But some places don't embrace the crowds.
Ben Chang, Cersei Lannister, and eight other antagonists who give viewers the creeps
This is what immoral reality TV looks like.
The post-Wiig/Samberg-era gets off to a solid start with "Clint Eastwood & Chair," Jay Pharoah as Obama, Taran Killam as Paul Ryan, and a "Gangnam Style" visit from rapper PSY.
High school may be the best four years (or nine seasons) of your life, but it can't last forever.
The once-great show has become the victim of its own gimmick.
After several years of duds, the actors who played Rachel, Ross, Joey, Phoebe, Monica, and Chandler have finally figured out which roles work for them.
A look at two shows that address modern fatherhood—with varying degrees of success
Some went out with a bang, others with a well-crafted whimper—but these 20 television shows all wrapped things up in memorable fashion.
The show's last episode of the half-season raises the question: Is the end near for Walter White?
As the first part of the final season comes to a close, one truth is increasingly clear: Walter was never good to begin with.
The much-maligned Aaron Sorkin show has its flaws—and that's OK.
Phyllis Diller was among the first to show us all that women could, indeed, be funny--but they'd have to give up their looks, smarts, and accomplishments first.
A look at the storylines that will dominate the upcoming television season
This week's episode shows just how much the characters have evolved in their calculated use of science.
Ellen Burstyn's character started out as comic relief, but then emerged as the show's surprising moral center.
Some silly, others horrifying, these 10 reality-show oddities tested the limits of what Americans will watch on television.