White People Problems, Barkley as Shaq, ESPN Bowl Madness, an all-new Charles Barkley Postgame Translator App, and more......
2012 brings new hope for fans of musicals, thrillers, "Lost"-style mysteries, and more.
ABC's latest sitcom draws on masculine anxiety new and old.
An interview with the "Summer Heights High" writer/actor, whose latest series starts airing on HBO this weekend
Synesthesia, Stockholm Syndrome, and Autosomal Dominant Compelling Helio-Ophthalmic Outburst Syndrome. These classic characters had them all.
Is your spiritual vibe clashing with Christmas? Then try some of these imaginary TV alternatives
The cancelled HBO show bucked the trend of portraying men as bumbling, incompetent losers
The three half-hour comedies got nixed while "Enlightenment" was spared
Whether they played minor characters, got overshadowed by a big star, or were good actors trapped in bad shows, here are this year's unheralded TV heroes
The series ended its inaugural season with a bang, then a whimper. Is there any suspense left for next year?
It's a late-'90s SNL reunion as Rachel Dratch, Amy Poehler, Horatio Sanz, Chris Kattan, Tracy Morgan, and Tina Fey join Jimmy Fallon on the season's best episode to date.
They snubbed Steve Carell and celebrated a show called "Necessary Roughness"—just two examples of the frustrating, glorious randomness of the awards
Like other clever, well constructed series before it, the meta sitcom wasn't built for the long haul
The meta NBC show skewered the earnest Fox series brilliantly with its Christmas episode—but missed one key point
Atlantic writers and editors pick their favorite moments on "Parks and Recreation," "Friday Night Lights," "Homeland," and more
Alec Baldwin does damage control, Stefon welcomes families to NY, cameos by Matt Damon and Val Kilmer, Katy Perry as Florence + the Machine, and more.
NBC shelves a cult favorite, "True Blood" gets weird, and more lowlights from a frustrating season
Which TV animals have become more than just background props for their human counterparts?
Maya Rudolph drops by, Kenan Thompson skewers Herman Cain, Bill Hader returns as morbid Dateline guy, and Steve Buscemi plays a delightful assortment of oddballs.
Today's sitcom couples actually like each other—unlike the bickering husbands and wives of the past few decades