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Petra
Due to todays press release of Marketwire, Vincent Kartheiser will be one of the celebrities who take part in the 7TH Annual Invitational World Poker Tour(R) on February 28th, 2009 in the Commerce Casino, 6131 East Telegraph Rd, Los Angeles. This event will support educational efforts in Africa and takes place in coorperation with some Charity organisations. For more Information, read the article at Marketwire


Laut der heutigen Pressemitteilung von Marketwire, wird Vincent Kartheiser einer der Teilnehmer der 7TH Annual Invitational World Poker Tour(R) sein, die am 28. Februar 2009 im Commerce Casino, 6131 East Telegraph Rd, Los Angeles stattfindet. Mit diesem Event sollen Ausbildungsmaßnahmen in Afrika unterstützt werden, weshalb es in Zusammenarbeit mit diversen Charity Organisationen stattfindet. Für weitere Informationen, lest den Artikel bei Marketwire
 
 
Current Mood: sick
 
 
Petra
This article was actually from January 9th, but I didn't find the time to past it before. I found it @ Entertainment Weekly's Popwatch and it is about the fact, that Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men will continue for a 3rd season. And read the beautiful comment at the end by Elena about Vincent :-)
Enjoy :-)

Dieser Artikel stammt eigentlich vom 9. Januar, aber ich hatte bisher keine zeit zum Updaten. Ich habe ihn bei Entertainment Weekly's Popwatch, er handelt von der Verlängerung von Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men für eine weitere Staffel. Lest auch die Kommentare dazu, es ist ein wunderschöner über Vincent dabei :-)
Viel Spaß


'Mad Men' is coming back! Praise be to AMC.

By Mike Bruno
Jan 9, 2009, 09:00 AM

Ah, finally a pinch of good news for The Great Depression '09: Mad Men is coming back! A third season (set to premiere this summer) may seem like a no-brainer to readers of Entertainment Weekly, where we've been gaga for the Madison Avenue smokers' lounge since it debuted in 2007. But undying love doesn't always keep a show on the air (Exhibit B: the just barely DirecTV-rescued Friday Night Lights), especially when there's a contract dispute like the one between Mad Men producer Lionsgate and series creator Matthew Weiner (AMC head Charles Collier says he's optimistic about Weiner eventually coming on board).

I have to admit, I was a little put off at the beginning of season 2. I think after the first season (which I watched one-after-the-other from my DVR) I was just so pumped for it to come back that I sort of forgot that Mad Men is about slowly seeping into every pore, not blasting you in the face with an icy splash. Episodes end with a subtlety that sometimes takes me a couple days to realize how devastating it actually was (Don sending away his admiring daughter then collapsing on the bathroom toilet, silently peering at the man he saw staring back at him from the door mirror). I think what really hooked me on season 2 was how Don finally got some comeuppance. Betty (whose cold detachment is a bit too one-dimensional, for my taste) finally booted her cheating bread-winner, ostracizing him to the solitude of a sterile hotel room. As we saw Don lying on top of a shiny bedspread, missing his home, his kids, his life, I felt like we were growing ever closer to a vulnerability that he spends every smoking/drinking/car seat-humping moment to hide. I love Don as much as any other man, woman, and child with a pulse, and I don't enjoy it when he fails or hurts. But Mad Men is at its core about people struggling to deal with themselves and each other in a changing, unpredictable world, and it was satisfying in the second season to see some piper-paying after all the crap he's pulled.

Plus, how about that intense scene between Peggy and Pete they left us with? And don't even get me started on Joan -- I could watch an hour of Joan walking around the office delivering mail. Let's just hope they don't waste any time addressing that nastiness with her fiance. I don't like how that was left hanging. So how about it, PopWatchers? More Mad Men! YES! What did you love most about last season, and what do you want when it comes back?

Source: Entertainment Weekly's Popwatch
--------------

Besides that, you should defintely read the comments, there is a beautiful line about Vincent Kartheiser:

Elena
Fri, Jan 9, 2009 at 11:41 AM EST

If you had come back in a time machine and told me that I would one day be singing the praises of a Vincent Kartheiser, the snot-nosed brat Connor on the amazingly popular Angel, I would have sent you on your merry way.
That last scene between Peter and Peggy, the way that Peggy is so matter-of-fact about it, and the way that Peter's face slowly breaks over the course of the conversation, then that haunting shot of him with a shotgun...
Mad Men wins at life!

---------------

Now I have to go back to work :-)

 
 
Petra
Today I found an Interview with Vincent Kartheiser mostly about his character Pete in Mad Men at Today Sunday Ent. I promise, that is my last entry today :-)))
Enjoy :-)

Eben habe ich ein neues Interview with Vincent Kartheiser über seinen Part als Pete in Mad Men auf der Webseite Today Sunday Ent gefunden, Viel Spaß!


For the love of Pete

By BILL HARRIS
Sun, October 19, 2008

Pete Campbell can be a jerk. But while watching last week's episode of Mad Men, we actually felt sorry for him.

There was Pete, played by Vincent Kartheiser, anxious to have at least a little fun in the sun during an advertising business trip to California. Pete's boss Don Draper, played by Jon Hamm, nixed that idea with a curt, "You want to be on vacation, Pete? Because I can make that happen."

Then before you know it, dour Don takes off with some 21-year-old hot chick in a convertible, leaving Pete to make excuses to would-be clients.

In many ways, Pete -- with his rich-kid demeanour and blind ambition -- is the villain in the Emmy Award-winning Mad Men, which is set in the early 1960s and airs Sundays on A and AMC. But Kartheiser doesn't see Pete that way, and certainly, Pete wouldn't see himself that way.

"Pete is an annoying guy, but you feel sorry for him in the way you feel sorry for Steve Carell in The Office," Kartheiser said.

"Pete's life made him who he is and I think he wonders why people aren't more sympathetic. 'Why doesn't everyone like me? Can't they see what I've been through to get here? Why can't they just give me what I deserve?' "

Kartheiser, 29, looks younger when dressed in everyday 2008 clothes. The snappy suits Pete wears in Mad Men make him look older, and while it's a cliche to say people grew up faster 45 years ago than they do now, Kartheiser cautioned the clothes don't make the man.

"I actually have been through a lot more in my life than Pete has," said Kartheiser, a native of Minnesota who previously was known for his role as Connor in the TV series Angel.

"I think Pete is less of a man than me. The difference in the visual is that Pete had a finishing-school upbringing. I'm an actor, so part of my job is looking like a bum. So I think manners and age are being confused here.

"But these days we constantly hear about how kids are growing up so fast. We've always had weird ideas about that. I personally think people always are the same. To say that (people in the early 1960s) came from a different era, therefore they were a whole different breed of human, it just doesn't work. I think they were pretending more. There was a lot of posturing."

Posturing is a big part of Pete's repertoire, and it probably will continue to be. But you know, Don is a big phony himself, so Pete hardly is alone.

"Pete is a confused young man who wants to excel, wants to be worthy, wants to be valued," Kartheiser said. "He has cutting-edge ideas and he's at the forefront of change. And I think he feels others don't respond well to that.

"That said, he talks more than he probably should, and he loves the taste of his shoe."


 
 
Petra
Today I found an Interview with Vincent Kartheiser's and Elisabeth Moss about their characters in Mad Men at The Canadian Press. Enjoy :-)

Eben habe ich ein neues Interview with Vincent Kartheiser's und Elisabeth Moss über ihre Rollen in Mad Men auf der Webseite The Canadian Press gefunden, Viel Spaß!



'Mad Men' stars Vincent Kartheiser and Elisabeth Moss have fun as Pete and Peggy

By: NEW YORK —

On the "Mad Men" premiere last summer, a boozy Pete Campbell hauled himself from his bachelor party to the door of Peggy Olson's modest Brooklyn apartment.
"I wanted to see you tonight," implored Pete, an overzealous ad account executive who, at that late hour, was gripped by panic at his looming marriage.
Peggy, the winsome new hire in the Sterling Cooper secretarial pool, surprised herself by letting him in.
Airing Sundays on AMC in the U.S. and on A channel in Canada, the Peabody Award-winning "Mad Men" now is in its second season. And it has kept Pete and Peggy entangled in multiple ways, none of them romantic and most of them hush-hush (including the child that Pete still doesn't know about).
Fortunately, things are much lighter between Vincent Kartheiser and Elisabeth Moss, who play that pair on the splendid '60s-era drama. In a joint interview, they tease each other, laugh a lot, and seem like pals.
Turns out Kartheiser (at 29, a former regular on "Angel," the spinoff of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer") and Moss (who is 26 and played presidential daughter Zoey on "The West Wing") had met before they got "Mad Men." A few years back, both took part in a filmmaking workshop.
"You had a prima donna actor," says Kartheiser in self-appraisal, then nods toward Moss magisterially, "and Miss Perfect."
"Two sides of the coin," chuckles Moss.
Kartheiser recalls a scene: "I had a disease called congenital analgesia, which means I couldn't feel anything. My character was always burning himself with cigarettes and saying, 'Whatever."'
"And I was supposed to be in love with you," says Moss with a grin.
On "Mad Men," they enjoy far more, um, dramatic leeway.
"At the beginning Peggy was definitely naive," muses Moss, appraising the distance she's come, "and I wouldn't say she's toughened up, but, instead, the problems hitting her now have become bigger. At first, it was learning to use a typewriter, and now it's a baby - with the father of the baby someone she works with."
But she's moving up in the agency. A quick learner, she's now helping create ad campaigns. And she's gingerly overcoming anti-female bias in the workplace - even from Pete Campbell.
Meanwhile, Campbell continues trying to win approval from Don Draper, the magnetic though tormented agency exec at the show's core. But Draper (played by Jon Hamm) hates him. Campbell, for all his skill in the advertising game, lacks people skills. He's sort of a jerk - isn't he?
"Well, it's unfortunate that you see it that way," Kartheiser tells the interviewer with mock indignation. "Some people just AREN'T as likable as others, no matter what they do. Pete Campbell does the same (stuff) as Don Draper, but Draper's way more likable, and gets away with things."
Of course, no sweeping term such as "likability" does justice to the series' world of characters, who, even as they all share screen time, emerge as complex individuals.
"Jon is the lead, and he always has something going on," says Moss. "But I don't think the rest of us feel left out, or that we don't get our moments."
"We trust Matt," says Kartheiser, meaning "Mad Men" mastermind Matthew Weiner. "I don't think anyone in our cast has any doubt that he always has the best story line in mind, and that's what we're there to serve."
"Yesterday he said to me, 'The next episode we're shooting is about objects,' and I said, 'OK,"' Moss marvels. "He always has this grand idea, and we're just lucky to be part of it."
Moss even feels lucky to have "carried" Peggy's "child." It was a shrewdly gradual plumping-up process that went unrecognized as anything other than weight gain, even by the unwitting mother-to-be - until, much to Peggy's shock on the season finale, she went into labour.
"Over seven episodes, I had four stages of padding and three stages of makeup," says Moss. Friends she hadn't seen in years watched the show and - shades of Kirstie Alley! - worried that she had an eating disorder. "But they didn't want to ask."
"Like: 'Did you quit smoking?"' chortles Kartheiser.
But that was last season (and 1960). Now "Mad Men" has progressed to spring 1962.
For Moss, who (like Kartheiser and most of the cast) wasn't born yet, it's a history lesson she is moving through.
"But I've learned more about the similarities than the differences between then and now," she says. "Usually, you look back on another era in terms of the milestones. But at the same time, people were just living their lives."
She might have added: That's where the unexpected drama unfolds, where "Mad Men" lives its life.


Now I definitely have continue working :-)))

Edit: I found out later, that these interview originally belongs to Yahoo News and was posted before by Kartheiser_grl
 
 
Current Mood: busy
 
 
Petra
Today I found 3 new reviews about the last episode of Mad Men - Flight 1, where especially Vincent Kartheiser as Pete gets praised. For those of you who haven't seen the episode yet: All of them contain heavy spoilers!!!
Enjoy :-)

Soeben habe ich einen 3 Reviews der aktuellen Episode von Mad Men - Flight 1 gefunden, in denen besonders Vincent Kartheiser als Pete gelobt wurde. Achtung: Diese Artikel verraten wichtige Details der Folge!!!
Viel Spaß beim Lesen :-)


* * * * * * * * * * * * * S P O I L E R * * * * * * * * * * * *

 
 
Current Mood: calm
 
 
Petra
06 June 2008 @ 10:48 am
Today I found a new article @ Variety about the guys of Mad Men, especially Vincent Kartheiser and John Slattery. Enjoy :-)

Soeben habe ich einen neuen Artikel bei Variety über die Männer von Mad Men, speziell Vincent Kartheiser und John Slattery, gefunden. Viel Spaß beim Lesen :-)




The guys from 'Mad Men'

Supporting men in Emmy contention
By PAULA HENDRICKSON


While period pieces can be an enjoyable escape for actors, the associated multitasking can be arduous.

"There's the physical part of it," says John Slattery, who plays Roger Sterling on AMC's 1960s-set "Mad Men." "We did a scene where I had to come in, make a drink and light a cigarette. I was like, 'How the hell did they do this?' Smoking and drinking at the same time isn't easy."

Associated props and the constricting clothes of the era impact the actors' performances as well.

"It all goes into how you stand, how you sit, whether you can breathe," Slattery says. "That gives you something to occupy yourself that distracts you from being self-conscious, which to my mind is what it's all about."

But there's a downside, too.

"When you're dealing with a project that takes place in another era, there are more chances for us to take people out of the story through inaccuracy," says Vincent Kartheiser, who plays Pete Campbell. He notes the entire crew's dedication to getting the details correct -- down to sweaty armpits for an episode set during a week in 1960 that actually experienced a record-breaking heat wave -- makes his job easier.

Both say working in "Mad Men's" large ensemble had distinct advantages.

"It's a collaborative space," Kartheiser says, "and that allows you, as an actor, to really commit to that moment and make those choices. And because everyone around you is doing that, too, you don't feel like you're left out on a limb."

"To some people, ensembles create a competitive atmosphere where you want to try to outdo somebody," Slattery says. "But to my mind, the better the actor you have opposite you is only going to make the team better."

Slattery originally wanted to play Don Draper but now is very comfortable in Roger's skin.

"I feel like I've grown into it, and the writers see that. If you can deliver for those writers, they like nothing more. If you can take what they write and add something to it, it make their job that much easier."

JOHN SLATTERY

Favorite scene: "Roger's had a heart attack and is in the hospital. The guy has a particular moral code and now he's afraid he's going to die. Then his wife comes in, and he just falls apart. He turns into a little boy who's afraid to die."

What you like most about your character: "I like how complicated he is. I think he's a healthy person despite all of his unhealthy behavior because he sees the situation and pragmatically comes up with a plan of action. Whether it's right or wrong, he dives in, acts and takes the consequences."

TV guilty pleasure: "Project Runway." "I like it because the people are so talented. They have 10 minutes, you give them a piece of cloth, and they make something out of it! What I like is the show is about the creativity, not just, 'Let's vote the biggest asshole off the island.'"

VINCENT KARTHEISER

Favorite scene: "I loved the scene with Pete's mom and dad, and with his in-laws. As much as I love doing the stuff in the office, there's something about getting out on location. They take these bars and turn them into 1960 New York, and it's pretty amazing."

What you like most about your character: "I like Pete's ambition, that he doesn't think before he talks most of the time. And I kind of like his naivete -- he just imagines that something will work the way he plans for it to work, and then he goes about sticking his foot in his mouth. I can really relate to it."



Source: Varity
 
 
Current Mood: happy
 
 
Petra
I found a new article about Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men on the US-Today website.


Heute habe ich einen neuen Artikel über
Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men auf der Webseite von US-Today gefunden



The future is now for AMC's 'Mad Men'

By Bill Keveney, USA TODAY


The ad men at the heart of Mad Men would have an easy time promoting the second season of the Golden Globe-winning drama: a mix of the familiar with a twist — a small hop forward in time.

As the AMC period piece ended Season 1 shortly after the 1960 presidential election, hotshot ad exec Don Draper (Jon Hamm) found himself home all alone for Thanksgiving. Times weren't any better for some of his Sterling Cooper colleagues, with one recovering from a heart attack, another on the outs with his wife, and a third in anguish after bearing a son from a hidden pregnancy.

When Mad Men returns for a 13-episode run, the heavy-smoking, hard-drinking New Yorkers will find themselves at a point in the not-too-distant future. Creator Matthew Weiner won't say exactly when, other than it won't be long enough for the characters to escape their pasts.

"The world has changed a little bit, but the stories will involve two things: One is that you have to live with the consequences of your actions, and (the other is) people don't change," he says. Viewers "will be seeing their old friends, but they will have new problems."

That's definitely the case with the dapper Draper. As with many of the products he sells, he isn't not what he appears to be beneath the shiny surface. He traded identities with a slain fellow soldier in the Korean War and reinvented his life.

"A theme in our show is, what's the truth behind the image? What's the man behind the myth?" says Hamm, who won a Golden Globe for his portrayal of the complicated Draper. "We just found out basically at the end of the first season who Don really was. There's a whole empty period of time between the Korean War and Don coming home and Don moving to New York and Don getting a job in advertising."

One second-season answer Weiner will give is that all the main characters are back, including agency partner Roger Sterling (John Slattery), who suffered a heart attack late in the first season.

"Duck (Mark Moses) is now head of accounts. Pete (Vincent Kartheiser) is in accounts limbo and Peggy (Elisabeth Moss) is a junior copywriter. Don is still partner and creative director," says Weiner, who wrote for The Sopranos. The company has undergone some change: "You'll feel that right away from the first episode. You will know that something different has happened."

Family dynamics change, too. Don's wife, Betty (January Jones), overcame her denial about his infidelity late in the first season and that has an effect on their relationship. Betty "is such an interesting person and so not who we thought she was," Weiner says.

He says viewers will see subtle changes to mark the passage of time, including more hints that an era often portrayed as placid was not. Appearances will still deceive, Hamm says: "Through a veil of nostalgia, everybody looks so put together, so beautiful. They were so cool and just so. In reality, a lot of them were fairly miserable."



Edit: Remember my post about the LAT's Envelope Primetime Screening? I just checked the official site to find out, that the Mad Men Q&A is full! Lets's hope, that we'll find some nice pictures and quotes afterwards :-)))
 
 
Current Mood: busy
 
 
Petra
I managed to capture the video clip from Entertainment Weekly's Mad Men - Behind the scenes of season 2. I only could grab 30 fps, which lead to a slight quality loss regarding the state of being synchronous. But that's the best I can do with my tools, so I hope you can enjoy it nevertheless :-) The size of the clip is almost 70Mb, you need a player capable of playing quick time files. Klick at the image or the link to download:


Hier habe ich einen Download Link für Euch für den Videoclip von Entertainment Weekly's Mad Men - Behind the scenes of seson 2. Leider konnte ich nur 30fps aufzeichnen, do dass das Bild und der Ton nicht ganz synchron sind. Ihr benötigt einen Player, der Quicktimefiles abspielen kann, die Dateigröße ist etwa 70 MB.



Download Link:







This Clip actually belongs to a large
article about the next season of Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men in the June's Entertainment Weekly magazine, it was originally discovered first 2 days ago at Whedonesque:
Edit: This article was posted before by [info]proggrrl @
[madmen_tv] I just didn't checked it out before my update. So thanks to proggrrl for the heads-on :-)


EW Cover Summer TV Preview: Cover Story

Mad Men: Inside Summer TV's No. 1 Hidden Gem

The gorgeous Golden Globe-winning drama returns for another season armed with accolades and a big-budget marketing campaign. But can the cult hit sell itself to new viewers?
By Missy Schwartz

The workday has begun at the Sterling Cooper advertising agency, yet the offices are unusually quiet. It's early May on the downtown Los Angeles soundstage that houses the Mad Men sets, and right now there are no clattering typewriters, ringing phones, or hushed voices sharing juicy gossip. Save for lighter moments in between takes — like when actor Jon Hamm grins naughtily as he tosses his fedora across the room at show creator Matthew Weiner, and misses — the atmosphere is dead serious. As cameras begin rolling, a dozen or so Sterling Cooper employees, including the ambitious junior exec Pete Campbell (
Vincent Kartheiser), are huddled around a secretary's desk, hanging on to every word coming from her transistor radio. They listen to the breaking news: A plane departing from New York's Idlewild Airport has crashed in Long Island. Nearly a hundred people are dead. When bosses Don Draper (Hamm) and Roger Sterling (John Slattery) join the stunned staffers, Don immediately orders his team to halt production on their new campaign for Mohawk Airlines. ''The rest of you,'' he commands, all stern composure, ''stop crying and figure out how we're going to hit the ground running in three weeks with new work.'





 
 
Current Mood: determined
 
 
Petra
This is the second post I have to make today: I found this article about Vincent's Mad Men at "The Envelop" @ Los Angeles Times. It doesn't have any actual news in it, more some general comments on the quality of the show:

Und noch ein Eintrag heute: soeben habe ich einen Artikel in der Los Angeles Times entdeckt, in dem ein kurzer Überblick über Vincent's Mad Men und ein paar Bemerkungen über die Qualität fallen gelassen werden:

 
 
Petra
The first season of Vincent's Mad Men will be aired on Canadian TV from June 8, 2008. The article provides a short description of the show, tells the schedule and mentions most awards but Vincent's. I think, it's time for AMC to sell the show to Germany :-)))




Sources: CTV.ca



Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men hat es jetzt nach Kanada geschafft, dort wird ab 8. Juni die erste Staffel ausgestrahlt. Neid :-)
 
 
Current Mood: tired
 
 
Petra
My MacBook was sick for the last 2 days, therefore I have a couple of news for you today:

Nominees: Best Show You're Not Watching

Logo nominated Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men as one of the shows in their categoriy: Best Show You're Not Watching. Logo is the new lesbian & gay network from MTV Networks. For what it's worth it: it's an audience award, so everybody can vote for it here:

Vote !

So you all know what to do, right?

Sources: Debora on Basket of Kisses and fitzwilliamlogo on [madmen_tv]



New Mad Men article & image from Vanity Fair

Vanity Fair provided a new picture of the Mad Men cast and a nice short article about the show, unfortunately it doesn't say anything about my favoured characters Vincent's Pete and Elisabeth Moss' Peggy, but, you can't have everything :-) :

Full Vanity Fair Article )





Sources: Vanity Fair



The L.A. Times: Can Mad Men, Dexter, Damages or Tudors reap Emmy bids?





Some LAT journalists talk about their thoughts on the upcoming Emmy nominations:

Full NYT acticle )

Sources: L.A. Times


Logo hat Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men für einen Award in der Kategorie: Best Show You're Not Watching nominiert :-). Hinter Logo verbirgt sich der schwul/lesbische Bereich von MTV. Das schöne an diesem Award ist, dass jede(r) mit abstimmen kann:

Abstimmen !

Ihr wißt also, was Ihr zu tun habt?

Ansonsten hat es diese Woche sowohl in der Vanity Fair als auch in der L.A. Times kleine Artikel mit Bildern zu Mad Men gegeben. Es war nichts über Vincent darin enthalten, nur eine paar allgemeine Bemerkungen zu der Show bzw. Vermutungen darüber, wer dieses Jahr für einen Emmy nominiert wird.
 
 
Current Mood: calm
 
 
Petra
There are a couple of small informations on Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men winning the Peabody Award. Read what they say about the show - not much, but still worth reading, Mad Men has obviously some fans among the jounalists  and mark June, 16th :-):


  • Peabody Homepage itself : "...Peabodys also went to Mad Men, AMC`s richly detailed and evocative drama set in the world of New York advertising in the early 1960s ... The awards will be presented on June 16 at a luncheon at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City. Brian Williams, the distinguished anchor and managing editor of NBC Nightly News, will be the master of ceremonies..."
  • TV-Squad: "Subjectively speaking, I applaud them for recognizing some great TV shows (in addition to the news and documentaries). I cannot disagree with any of the main awards; Mad Men, Dexter, 30 Rock and The Colbert Report are superbly scripted entertainment, brilliantly executed."
  • Chicago Tribune : "... I've said it before and it's worth saying again -- every single year, the 16-person Peabody board does a much, much better job of honoring excellence in television than the Emmy organization ever has...Congrats to this year's Peabody winners -- from where I'm sitting, every award is much deserved...One final note about "Mad Men" -- the great AMC series will arrive on DVD July 1. If my recommendations haven't convinced you to check this show out, perhaps the Peabody Award will?

Vincent Kartheiser's Mad Men 
hat den nächsten kleinen Award gewonnen :-)


Thanks to [info]yahtzee63 for the heads up :-)
 
 
Current Mood: cheerful
 
 
Petra
20 September 2007 @ 08:44 am
In this Article from Variety prdeict, that Vincent Kartheisers Mad Men will be back in June for a secaond season:

Posted: Wed., Sep. 19, 2007, 10:11am PT

'Mad Men' to return to AMC New York-based series a critical favorite By STEVEN ZEITCHIK

'Mad Men' gets a second season. AMC is set to announce it has renewed "Mad Men," its debut effort in the scripted-drama category, sources said Wednesday. Net has ordered 13 episodes of the Matthew Weiner drama and will bring it back in June, possibly using the show as a lead-in for another new scripted series. Production of the period show about New York ad execs in the early 1960s will remain in L.A. and not move to Gotham as some had previously speculated. AMC spokesman Matt Frankel declined comment. Critical fave has attracted a hard-core set of fans since it debuted in July, though ratings have sometimes been modest. For its initial Thursday-night airings, show has averaged 1.1 million viewers over its nine episodes thus far, with 430,000 viewers in adults 18-49. Viewership is roughly flat compared to the net's equivalent timeslot a year ago but up 6% over its primetime average during the period. Over the past few weeks, the show's household rating has grown 31% when all airings are factored in. Scripted dramas have become a priority for the net, which has greenlit Vince Gilligan meth drama "Breaking Bad" and is developing a limited-series from "Apocalypse Now" writer John Milius (Daily Variety, July 20).More than one option (Co) Daily Variety (Co) Daily Variety Net's oater "Broken Trail," the most watched program in the history of cable, picked up four Emmys, including miniseries. Execs hope the wins and the prestige provide a foundation for other scripted dramas. Among the other hourlongs the net has in development are the war series "Gonzo," from Michael Oates Palmer ("The West Wing"), and "Continuum," a sci-fi thriller from Tom Fontana ("Oz").

In einem Artikel vonVariety wird verkündet, daß eine 2 Season von Vincent Kartheisers Mad Men ab Juni zu sehen sein wird. Allerdings gibt es noch keinen offiziellen Kommentar von AMC dazu