Adieu Larry Gelbart...and Laugh Tracks
Gelbart, who wrote Tootsie and many of the early episodes of M*A*S*H, spent years rejecting the industry's efforts to manipulate TV-watchers into emitting less-than-sincere laughs.
Gelbart, who wrote Tootsie and many of the early episodes of M*A*S*H, spent years rejecting the industry's efforts to manipulate TV-watchers into emitting less-than-sincere laughs.
Robert J. Elisberg | Posted 11.11.2009 | Entertainment
He was an amazing writer and probably a better person. There may have been more renowned writers in a single medium, but his versatility was breathtaking.
Margarita Alarcon | Posted 11.11.2009 | New York
For years Dr. Leo Orris and his family would be our sanctuary, our conversations, our endless nights of discussions where themes would range from the history of SDS and SNICC to how to end the Vietnam War.
Anna Jane Grossman | Posted 10.16.2009 | Living
I don't need to wait until the morning papers to get the full life stories of dead luminaries. In fact, I don't even need to wait until they are dead.
Spencer Green | Posted 07.30.2009 | Comedy
The famed site, unknown by the general public until now, was built as a temporary safe haven for celebrities to hide from TMZ and other like-minded media reporters but has been adapted for the current emergency.
Tallulah Morehead | Posted 02.02.2009 | Entertainment
It's time to say goodbye to my many fellow celebrities who have foolishly neglected to survive this past year.
Marcia DeSanctis | Posted 01.31.2009 | Politics
Huntington theorized that, with the end of the Cold War and the removal of ideology as a source of conflict, it would be cultural and religious differences that would now propel history.
Alex Remington | Posted 10.29.2008 | Entertainment
Paul Newman was beautiful. You could never root against him. It might have been easier for him to sink into villainy if he wore dull-colored contact lenses, to blunt the brilliance of his eyes, to hide the twinkle.
Melissa Kirsch | Posted 05.27.2008 | Media
Here we have a raft of errors that took over eight months for the Times to correct, even though the deceased's son brought the errors to the attention of the paper twice during that time.
Anna Jane Grossman | Posted 11.25.2009 | Entertainment