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Wednesday, Mar 5, 2008 12:00 PM UTC2008-03-05T12:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

TV Daily

Wednesday: "Project Runway" crowns a winner -- will it be Jillian, Rami or Christian? Plus: What did you think of "The Real Housewives of New York City" on Tuesday?

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Prime Pick

Bravo / Virginia Sherwood

What’s better, a passion for draping or a passion for “fierce” ’80s-style hair? Who will impress guest judge Posh Spice the most, and should we really trust the opinions of a shiny, expressionless mannequin? We’ll find out tonight on the finale of “Project Runway” (10 p.m. EST on Bravo) when Jillian, Rami and Christian face off at Fashion Week. Here’s hoping that, after a relatively tame season, at least a little fur flies as the pressure builds. (P.S. Our money’s on Jillian to win it all!) (P.P.S Watch for Salon’s “Project Runway” finale wrap-up immediately following the show.)

Also…

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Sunday, Feb 19, 2012 7:00 PM UTC2012-02-19T19:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

“Downton Abbey,” we’re breaking up

As the Season 2 finale arrives, an obsessive mourns that her favorite show is now just another ridiculous soap

Maggie Smith in "Downton Abbey"

Maggie Smith in "Downton Abbey"

I have a confession to make. “Downton Abbey” is getting on my nerves. This will be taken as heresy in some circles. More specifically, it will be almost treasonous in my own circles. But it’s become harder and harder to sit through the episodes of Season 2 (which concludes tonight) without feeling the need to constantly apologize — to my husband, in particular — for its excesses.

Let me be clear. I remain an avid fan. I loved “Downton Abbey” from the first moment I laid eyes on it. The lustrous sets. The gorgeous costumes. I could watch the upholstery on that show for an hour and be satisfied. Each month that passed between the end of Season 1 and the start of Season 2 brought a small heartache. I squealed just a little when the swelling violins took up again in January.

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  More Michal Lemberger

Saturday, Feb 18, 2012 5:00 PM UTC2012-02-18T17:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Quick Hits: Yuja Wang plays live

This elegant young virtuoso pianist (and not-so-secret Rihanna fan) is on track for a dazzling career

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Quick Hits

 (Credit: Sound Tracks)

At the age of 24, Chinese-born Yuja Wang is one of the most exciting concert pianists in the world. Onstage, she cuts an elegant, sometimes provocative figure. Backstage, she’s more like a teenager, noshing snacks and listening to Rihanna on her earphones. But there’s no doubt that Ms. Wang, now a resident of New York, has captivated audiences and critics, from Beijing to Berlin. Her “virtuosity is stunning,” says the New York Times. “An artist of dazzling genius,” raves the San Francisco Chronicle. She’s earned praise for her almost “superhuman keyboard technique,” as well as her sensitivity and fearlessness.

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Saturday, Feb 18, 2012 12:00 AM UTC2012-02-18T00:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

TV’s golden age of opening credits

Goodbye, theme songs. Now, title sequences for "American Horror Story," "Homeland" and others are required viewing

How opening credits became so cool.

Clips from the opening sequences of "Homeland" and "Mad Men"

One of the new television season’s most unsettling moments took place, as unsettling moments so often do, in a basement festooned with jars of pickled human fetuses.

Twenty seconds into a tour of this gruesomely decorated cellar, our skittery camera feed abruptly cuts out and, with an accompanying crunch of industrial music that could only have been composed by some dude wearing a black trench coat, we’re visually assaulted by an image that will haunt us forever: Connie Britton’s name, typeset in a bold, gothic font.

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  More John Sellers

Friday, Feb 17, 2012 7:00 PM UTC2012-02-17T19:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Jack Donaghy fears the 99 percent

Occupy Wall Street sneaks into "30 Rock" and "The Office." How does the movement avoid becoming just a punch line?

Alec Baldwin as Jack Donaghy

Alec Baldwin as Jack Donaghy  (Credit: NBC/Ali Goldstein)

It’s official. The class war is waging and there’s no denying it – even “30 Rock” says so.

On Thursday night’s episode of the award-winning comedy, Jack Donaghy — the debonair, Reaganite CEO played by Alec Baldwin — confirmed what some of us have been thinking for a while: “We’re on the verge of a class war.”

Since the show’s first episode, Donaghy has embodied a parodic late-capitalist overlord. In previous episodes, however, the fulcrum of his political commentary fell strictly along party lines: he called Obama a communist from Kenya, described Bill Clinton as president “inter-Bush” and engaged in Reagan-themed role-play sex. The jokes last night broke this mold. His reference to class war was not just wheeling out the Republican canard that higher taxes constitute a war on successful people. Donaghy was talking about unrest on the streets of New York.

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Natasha Lennard is Brooklyn-based writer and a project officer for the International News Safety Institute - North America.   More Natasha Lennard

Friday, Feb 17, 2012 6:25 PM UTC2012-02-17T18:25:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Tim and Eric’s comedy of repulsion

In their new movie, the cult comics push the limits of human vulnerability -- and generate laughs from nerves

VIDEO
Tim and Eric

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“Repulsion” is an emotional response that darts past the smug butterfly nets of intellect and rationale to expose my true and shameful feelings: Nothing turns my stomach like a stranger’s display of vulnerability. This reaction sickens me, in turn, and begins a cycle of nausea and self-loathing. I am repulsed, revulsed and repulsed again.

I say a stranger’s vulnerability and not a friend’s, because a loved one’s vulnerability is less of a risk to them, and so less of a burden to me, the witness. In the split moment that a person is vulnerable, or when we project a vulnerability onto them, we become responsible for their existence in the world. In seventh grade, the year-supreme of vulnerability, I overheard a girl in my class talking about her excitement over the year’s first dance. Her mother was taking her to get her hair done, she said, and to buy her a new dress. My skin prickled with discomfort. Didn’t she know the dance wasn’t a “get your hair done” kind of big deal? On the night of the dance, everyone was in a casual dress or jeans. She showed up with an elaborate updo and a ball gown. That moment has forever seared itself in my mind. I wanted to throw up and cry.

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  More Kartina Richardson

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