“The GirlfrienD experience” Hill’s story

Find out What makes Riley Keough different from her character in "The Girlfriend Experience"

How far does friendship go in a

"Game of Silence"

Check out What inspired Jason Jones to make

"The Detour"

Golfers

go green at The Masters

folio

Connect to these shows within this magazine!

How

Anita Hill's story

inspired Kerry Washington

+

Gabrielle Reece JOHN CENA

MINDY KALING Cliff Curtis Richard Trethewey

Courtesy of Gracenote April 10 - 16, 2016

C

contents Click to jump to these featured sections!

What's HOT this

Week!

YOURTVLINK

"The Detour"

gets on the road on TBS

CELEBRITY

4 Gabrielle Reece

Women undergo a metamorphosis in NBC's "Strong"

5 John Cena

shows his, and others', "American Grit"

6 Mindy Kaling

"The Mindy Project" resumes its Hulu run

"Game of Silence" speaks loudly for tormented friends

8 Cliff Curtis

Grieving is not an option in "Fear the Walking Dead"

"The Girlfriend

17 Experience"

Soderbergh brings "The

Girlfriend Experience" to Starz

9 Richard Trethewey

Getting to know the plumbing and heating expert

FOOD

7 "Cake Masters"

Goldman takes cakes to a new level

the story!

"Confirmation" Supreme Court nominee faces accusations

MOVIES

20-21 Featuring: Theatrical

Review, Our top DVD pick, and Coming Soon on DVD.

IN EVERY ISSUE

22-23 Featuring: Our top

suggested programs to watch this week!

Page 2 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote April 10 - 16, 2016

SPORTS

18-19 Jason Day

seeks coveted green jacket at The Masters

REALITY

16 Jackie Robinson

is remembered, on and off the baseball field, by Ken Burns

Editor's choice

Clarence Thomas'

`Confirmation'

recalled in HBO film

By George Dickie A pivotal recent moment in American culture and history is revisited this month in a new HBO Films presentation.

S STORY

"Confirmation," premiering Saturday, April 16, recalls the 1991 confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas (Wendell Pierce, "Treme"), an African American jurist who was nominated by President George H.W. Bush to fill the seat vacated by the retirement of Thurgood Marshall earlier that year.

Near the end of those September 1991 hearings, after an FBI interview with Anita Hill (Kerry Washington, "Scandal"), a young African American lawyer and academic who worked for Thomas at the Department of Education, was leaked to the media, Hill was called to testify, and she testified that he had subjected her to comments of a sexual nature, and accused him of sexual harassment, allegations that he denied.

The hearings captivated the nation's attention and set off a national conversation on sexual equality in the workplace, a debate what would forever change the way we look at and treat the issue, both inside and outside the workplace.

The film also stars Greg Kinnear ("Heaven Is for Real") as Sen. Joe Biden, who presided over the hearings as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee; Jeffrey Wright ("Casino Royale") as Charles Ogletree, Hill's lead attorney during the hearings; and Jennifer Hudson ("Dreamgirls") as Angela Wright, another Thomas accuser who was never called to testify.

Pictured: Wendell Pierce

around victims' rights, around how we think about the workplace, how we think about women, how we think about race, how we think about power."

In preparing to play Thomas, Pierce had to check his prejudices about man at the door and find his humanity.

"(I) had this wonderful epiphany studying the man," he says, "and realized how much we had in common. His family coming from Pin Point, Georgia; my family from Assumption Parish in Louisiana. My grandfather had a saying. `Can't die three days before the creation of the world, so don't ever tell me you can't do anything.' His grandfather said, `Can't is already dead. I helped to bury him.' And his grandfather was someone who is a hero of his. ... And I realized that the only way that I was going to be able to play the man was to be authentic and true to his humanity and his experience.

"And the situation just gives you a wealth of things to play," he continues. " `What did I do? Do I even remember it?' `At the pinnacle of my career, something comes from my past that challenges it.' And so that is something that we all can understand and put ourselves into."

As the film's protagonist, Washington, who was 14 at the time of the real hearings, told a recent gathering of TV critics in Pasadena, Calif., that she took inspiration from Hill's story.

"I'm really inspired by the difference that a person can make in Washington and the kind of cultural shift that happened after the events that take place in our film," says Washington, who is also an executive producer of the film. "I think it's really inspiring to think about how much changed, how we were all transformed by these events in terms of our language changing around sexual harassment,

Washington, hopes "Confirmation" continues what she calls the "global conversation" on the issues raised.

"That is an outcome that we all felt was really important," she says. "... And yet some of the issues are still rearing their head in terms of gender and in terms of race and how we understand those things. So I think, really, the outcome of what happened was that the conversation began and we want to make sure that that conversation continues."

Click or tap on icon for more!

April 10 - 16, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 3

C CELEBRITY

George Dickie's Q&A

GabrielleReece of `Strong' Wednesday on NBC

Click or tap here for more! folio

Page 4 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote April 10 - 16, 2016

In what kind of shape coming in are the female contestants on NBC's "Strong"?

It varies. You have some women that certainly in their definition, they would like to lose weight. I would say without making this a description, these are very typical women and have sort of maybe through the process of working and maybe having family just gotten off their (peak condition) a bit and they haven't been able to figure out or haven't had the opportunity ... to find their way back. And the other side of it is there were a few younger women in the cast that what their deal is is it almost looks like they're looking for their voice.

Part of shaping up is changing the mental as well as the physical. How does that play out for the contestants?

From week one to three, the look in their eyes, it starts to shift. And even when they're standing in front of these really daunting challenges ... you see them go, "Hey you know what? I am free and this is going to be hard and I don't know if I can do it but ... I'm gonna give it my best." And so that was the most interesting thing for me to watch, of them taking this on and a real shift in the look in the eye.

Watching these women transform before your eyes had to be gratifying for you, no?

I honestly am so thrilled and feel so fortunate to be a part of this show because it couldn't have been more perfect for me as far as what I want to do and the message I want to be involved with selling. I loved it. And going to work was inspiring because you get to see the changes and the (contestants are) taking on these epic challenges. And it was funny, when we were done shooting at the end of it, I was exhausted because you do get all so emotionally invested in these people because they're putting it out there.

Jay Bobbin's Q&A

C CELEBRITY

JohnCena

of `American Grit' Thursday

on Fox

Reality-competition shows have been staged on various levels of complexity ? or not ? so were you surprised to find "American Grit" as big a production as it is?

It's massive, and that's very important in doing the heroes (the military personnel involved) justice. When you put a show like this together, you can't really do it on the cheap. I was really impressed not only with the location selection, but with the execution and production. We had an enormous crew, and everyone literally earned their money. It was quite an adventure in the Pacific Northwest, but it was a fun one. Everybody was motivated to be a part of something new and special.

Is part of the appeal of "American Grit" for you the chance to reach a different audience?

Yeah. You're always trying to reach as many eyes as you can, especially when you have a product that you feel is entertaining. When folks see this, though, they will focus on the "cadre" (the militaryveteran mentors) and the competitors.

You became a movie-comedy star last year by working with several of the genre's current titans, Amy Schumer (in "Trainwreck") and Tina Fey and Amy Poehler (in "Sisters"). Did that process go as you'd hoped?

Absolutely. I savored every moment and was as much of a sponge as I could be, trying to learn from those folks, but looking at the whole experience at the same time. I looked at it as something that I wanted to do and that would be fun to do, and it was. And it was very memorable.

Click or tap on icon for more!

April 10 - 16, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 5

................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download