Who Wants The Wedding On 'Rob'?
It looks like the pattern is quickly being established on "Rob" (Thu., 8:30 p.m. EST on CBS). To the show's credit, the ethnic jokes took a back-seat ...
It looks like the pattern is quickly being established on "Rob" (Thu., 8:30 p.m. EST on CBS). To the show's credit, the ethnic jokes took a back-seat ...
Posted 01.13.2012
Is this the best American TV can do? Rob Schneider is marrying into a Mexican-American family on CBS' new sitcom, Rob, on Thursday nights, but cons...
Posted 03.13.2012
The pilot episode of "Rob" (Thu., 8:30 p.m. EST on CBS) was all about Rob (Rob Schneider) meeting Maggie's (Claudia Bassols) family for the first time...
Posted 01.10.2012
Rob Schneider may be the star of the new CBS "Rob!" but his wife came up with the show's concept. The comedian stopped by "The Talk" (weekdays on CBS)...
Posted 12.11.2011
It looks like Rob Schneider will ring in the New Year trying to win over the hearts of Hispanics with his new CBS sitcom, "Rob!" "What is America? ...
The Adam Carolla Show | Posted 08.21.2011
Rob Schneider says that if you want your life to be interesting, you have to surround yourself with people who don't always do what you want them to. It's a lifelong promise of something horrible happening to you every single morning. Man, if only Rob gave the Best Man speech at my wedding.
Gregory Weinkauf | Posted 05.25.2011
Whatever he's like in person, the baggage associated with Baron Cohen as a performer primarily involves being a repulsive, sociopathic jerk. I never knew Freddie -- but that's simply not Freddie.
Jackie K. Cooper | Posted 05.25.2011
Adam Sandler has evolved from frat boy comic to Saturday Night Live regular to movie star. He has evolved from immature antics to romantic comedy to family man. His new film Grown-Ups is a mark of that change.
Marshall Fine | Posted 05.25.2011
Grown Ups is a scam on the audience. What's alarming is that there is an entire generation who consider these guys the comedy touchstones of their era. This is why Generation X is doomed.
Mike Ragogna | Posted 05.25.2011
Bingo! re-establishes Miller as that Chicago blues-y guy, tackling ten standards that might as well be his own. George Thorogood certainly should be looking over his shoulder.
Marshall Fine | Posted 05.25.2011
Almost as primal as the age-old dichotomy between good and evil is the struggle between art and commerce. Does the market taint the artist? Does the...
Douglas MacKinnon | Posted 05.25.2011
How dare we derive pleasure from a movie that elitist reviewers writing for a minute collection of fellow elitists have deemed prosaic, unimaginative, and beneath them.
Posted 03.20.2012