Ready to take a trip back to the Bar None Dude Ranch?It's been 25 years since Nickelodeon's first live-action series "Hey Dude" debuted in 1989, running for two years and 65 episodes on the then-relatively new network.The series went on to become a classic for any kid born in the early '80s -- and it's that crazy nostalgia factor that got the entire cast to reunite this week at the Atx Television Festival in Austin, Texas. Christine Taylor, David Lascher, Debrah Kalman, Geoffrey Coy, Jonathan Galkin, Josh Tygiel and David Brisbane were all on hand for the epic reunion, along with writers Graham Yost, Alan Goodman and Lisa Melamed.So, what have they all been up to? And how does Paris Hilton factor in? Check out what we learned from the panel and subsequent press conference below!1.) Paris Hilton Is a Huge "Hey Dude" Fan When a show has a...
- 6/8/2014
- by tooFab Staff
- TooFab
Charlie Sheen's $100 million lawsuit against Warner Bros. Television and Two and a Half Men co-creator Chuck Lorre will not go to trial, Deadline reports.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Alan Goodman ruled Wednesday that the suit will have to be settled in arbitration.
Charlie Sheen sues Warner Bros., Chuck Lorre for $100 million
Sheen's attorney, Marty Singer, had pushed...
Read More >...
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Alan Goodman ruled Wednesday that the suit will have to be settled in arbitration.
Charlie Sheen sues Warner Bros., Chuck Lorre for $100 million
Sheen's attorney, Marty Singer, had pushed...
Read More >...
- 6/15/2011
- by Kate Stanhope
- TVGuide - Breaking News
Charlie Sheen will have to continue his $100 million lawsuit against his former "Two and a Half Men" bosses behind closed doors: a judge has shot down his request for a trial. Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Alan Goodman ruled Wednesday the manner will proceed in arbitration, as Warner Bros. TV had sought. Sheen's lawsuit against the studio and executive producer Chuck Lorre contends that Sheen was improperly fired from the show after he publicly criticized his bosses in his barrage of media interviews in February and March. His attorney, Marty Singer, had...
- 6/15/2011
- The Wrap
La Superior Court Judge Alan Goodman just issued a ruling in both Charlie Sheen vs. Warner Bros TV and Sheen vs. Two And A Half Men co-creator Chuck Lorre lawsuits: they will have to be settled in arbitration and won't go to trial. The studio had argued that Sheen's $100 million lawsuit over his firing from the hit CBS/Wbtv comedy had to be handled through arbitration per the actor's contract, and that Lorre's own arbitration clause requires that part of the litigation to also go though a mediator. Sheen's attorney Marty Singer had been demanding a public trial. "We're very gratified by the court's ruling enforcing the parties' arbitration agreement," Wbtv said in a statement after the ruling. There's no doubt the lawsuit would have been a circus since there already was a ruling to let a video camera team film in the Santa Monica Superior Courtroom. Team Sheen and the media wanted it,...
- 6/15/2011
- by NELLIE ANDREEVA
- Deadline TV
Wanting to be the Facebook for kids under the age of 13 is an ambitious target for any startup, so it helps to have some experienced hands on deck. Everloop, a social media space targeting tweens and younger, followed up on a $3.1M fundraising effort by hiring new executives from Disney, AOL Time Warner and Nickelodeon. Sandra Barger, former Disney senior vice president at Disney, was named Everloop's chief marketing officer. AOL Time Warner vet Tobin Trevarthen joins as vice president of business development. And Alan Goodman, who developed the famous MTV...
- 6/13/2011
- The Wrap
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