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It’s Legend’s
‘Wake Up!’ Demonstrates The
Relevance of Yesteryear’s Songs

LOS ANGELES--The music of the Civil Rights/Vietnam Eras routinely reflected the social and economic tensions of the times.  War and financial struggles are again upon us, though you wouldn’t really know it listening to most current artists. [Read full story]

Campbell:  Model, Citizen
‘It’s Not Charismatic,’ Designer Says, ‘It’s More Powerful Than That’

NEW YORK--“I have a past,” Naomi Campbell said one day last week. 
“I’m not proud of my past, some of the circumstances I was in.  I’ve said that a hundred times.  But I admit to my past.  I own it.  I don’t deny it.  Denial is a very bad thing.” [Read full story]

Singer Says, ‘Be Positive’
Usher Revels in New Roles as a Father and Mentor

Changing Taglines
Broadway Is Seeing Benefits
Of Building Its Black Audience

NEW YORK--They thought it was about Elvis.
That’s what a focus group of a dozen Black women concluded about the musical, “Memphis,” last summer when they were asked to assess the show’s tagline, “The Birth of Rock ‘n’ Roll.”
[Read full story]A Documentary
For Lee, a New Requiem Produced for New Orleans

[Read full story]

Becoming Me
Former Secretary Of State Lauds Not-Quite Ordinary Parents

This can’t be the right place.
You would expect the home of Condoleezza Rice (the most successful Black woman in the history of the executive branch) to be festooned with mementos from her tenure under two Bush presidencies, which culminated in her role as secretary of state. [Read full story]


Weather

WeatherBug

What's On TV?

A Comedy
‘Lottery Ticket’ Comes Up a Few Numbers Short

NEW YORK--“Lottery Ticket” is no prize.
The comedy is broad, bordering on offensive, the laughs are few, and the positive message feels tacked on.  But star Bow Wow shows his early youthful talent has blossomed into a bona fide star appeal. [Read full story]

From Mali
String Band Expanding Boundaries of a West African Instrument

There were no Western instruments onstage when the Malian griot Bassekou Koyate and his band, Ngoni Ba, performed at SummerStage in Central Park  
[Read full story]

Khaki, Man!
A Leaner, Sexier Look, but Decidedly More Dressed Up Than Jeans

NEW YORK--The country may not be in the midst of a great color conciliation, what with Red and Blue paint balls flying as furiously as ever, but fashion is. [Read full story]

Men Who Share a Name Take Different Paths in Life

On a glorious spring afternoon, sunshine glitters off the bales of silver barbed wire at Maryland’s vast Jessup Correctional Institution prison complex. [Read full story

Campbell:  Model, Citizen
‘It’s Not Charismatic,’ Designer Says, ‘It’s More Powerful Than That’

NEW YORK--“I have a past,” Naomi Campbell said one day last week. 
“I’m not proud of my past, some of the circumstances I was in.  I’ve said that a hundred times.  But I admit to my past.  I own it.  I don’t deny it.  Denial is a very bad thing.” [Read full story]


Entertainment

‘The Game’ Is a Winner,
Helped by BET Loyalists
Sitcom Thrives When It Didn’t on Another Network

Chronicle News Services

NEW YORK--Sometimes, what a television show needs is a new neighborhood.
“The Game,” a situation-comedy about pro football players’ relationships with women, puttered along in obscurity for three years on the CW network. 
The season it was canceled, it attracted only 1.9 million viewers an episode. 
Then, it was resurrected with two new episodes last week on the cable channel, BET, which picked up the program and resumed production as part of an effort to add scripted shows to its schedule. 
The response from BET viewers, Forbes said, was “jaw-dropping.” 
The first two episodes of the new season averaged 7.7 million viewers, making it the most-watched sitcom ever on cable television.
When the Nielsen ratings came in, there were hugs in the halls at BET.  The 30-year-old channel had never had such high ratings for a series. 
“Just over the moon” is how Debra L. Lee, the chairman of BET Networks, described her reaction. 
“It proves that cable is competitive,” she said.
How does a show quadruple its audience? 
Miss Lee credit’s a smart marketing plan, fan bases on Facebook and Twitter, and frequent showings on BET of repeat episodes in the past year, which ginned up interest in the new episodes.
The channel’s target audience also mattered. 
Most of the stars of “The Game” are Black, as are most of its viewers. 
In those ways, it differs from the other shows on the CW, which is best known for dramas like “Gossip Girl.”  BET is programmed for Black viewers.
“Folks know what to expect from BET all day long,” Miss Lee said, praising the strength of the brand.
“The Game” had a higher rating on BET last week than it ever had on the CW even though, according to Nielsen, the CW normally has 60 percent more viewers in prime time, 1.9 million, than BET, 747,000.
In mid-2008, a viewer named Stacey Mattocks created a Facebook page for the show, and months later she became more active because of speculation that the CW might cancel “The Game.” 
She had been a fan of “Girlfriends,” the show that had spawned “The Game,” and had already been canceled. 
“I didn’t want to lose my other show,” Miss Mattocks said.
But she did, briefly.  With cancellation looming, an online campaign by the stars failed to persuade the CW to keep the program. 
Having tasted success with “Gossip Girl,” the network decided to stop showing sitcoms altogether.  “The Game” ended in May of 2009.
Miss Mattocks said she thought the CW had neglected the show, partly by moving it into less favorable time slots.  The CW declined to comment.
In 2009, BET began playing old episodes of “The Game,” which was critical to its success later.
“A lot of fans had never heard of it until it was on cable,” Miss Mattocks said. 
Her Facebook page continued to gain fans, so when BET ordered new episodes of the show last May, it embraced her page--with three million fans--instead of trying to create one from scratch.  The channel now pays her to run the fan page part time, in addition to her job at an insurance company in Florida.
The show received traditional marketing, too. 
Teasers about the return of “The Game” started appearing on BET as early as last June, and later commercials depicted viewers celebrating its return. 
One such spot, filmed on the Georgia Tech campus, had the cast walking out of a stadium tunnel, surrounded by cheering fans.
“It helped to extend the message that we were doing this for them,” said Janet Rolle, BET’s chief marketing officer.
It almost certainly helped that BET had only one other scripted sitcom, “Let’s Stay Together,” to promote. 
The CW, like other broadcasters, has a fuller slate of shows. 
BET paired the two new sitcoms last Tuesday, and “Let’s Stay Together” averaged 4.4 million viewers.
“The Game” features the same stars as before.  Keeping pace with the altered production, the story “picks up two years later,” Salim Akil, who is an executive producer alongside his wife, Mara Brock Akil, and Kelsey Grammer, told reporters this month. 
The time-shifting helps explain why the characters live in new homes now.  (“I think the sets were destroyed” after the CW cancellation, Miss Akil said.)
Miss Lee, who took over BET in 2005, had predicted that “The Game” could be “a game-changer” for the channel, which she has steered toward scripted and higher-quality programming.
“This is really the top of the mountain, in terms of what I’ve been trying to accomplish, and what I knew BET could do,” she said on Friday. 
She said she plans to announce another new sitcom at a presentation for advertisers in the spring.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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