Peacock’s “I Love You, You Hate Me” two-part docuseries about the rise and fall of Barney the Dinosaur is the fifth title to launch as part of the platform’s inaugural DocFest and arguably the most anticipated.
The docu about the purple dinosaur who preached love and acceptance on PBS “Barney & Friends” debuts Oct. 12 on the streaming service. It examines Barney’s meteoric rise and how the Tyrannosaurus rex quickly became the target of hate and rage across pop culture and the early internet. Hailing from Scout Productions and director Tommy Avallone, the doc features interviews with the show’s cast and crew as well as boldface names, including Bill Nye the Science Guy and NBC’s Al Roker. The series also incorporates archival footage from the PBS’ series, which began airing in 1992.
Avallone says the inspiration for “I Love You, You Hate Me” came after seeing a...
The docu about the purple dinosaur who preached love and acceptance on PBS “Barney & Friends” debuts Oct. 12 on the streaming service. It examines Barney’s meteoric rise and how the Tyrannosaurus rex quickly became the target of hate and rage across pop culture and the early internet. Hailing from Scout Productions and director Tommy Avallone, the doc features interviews with the show’s cast and crew as well as boldface names, including Bill Nye the Science Guy and NBC’s Al Roker. The series also incorporates archival footage from the PBS’ series, which began airing in 1992.
Avallone says the inspiration for “I Love You, You Hate Me” came after seeing a...
- 10/13/2022
- by Addie Morfoot
- Variety Film + TV
The core message of the immensely popular “Barney and Friends” kids show was to spread love and kindness to one another, but the trailer for a new Peacock docuseries highlights the idea that America was not so eager to accept that message.
In the trailer for the upcoming two-part docuseries “I Love You, You Hate Me,” multiple talking heads, from Bill Nye the Science Guy to NBC’s Al Roker, share stories of how quickly the world turned against the friendly dinosaur, rejecting its values of inclusion and respect. Bob West, a Barney performer who stepped into costume for the happy purple dinosaur, shared that death threats were made against his entire family. “They were violent and explicit, death and dismemberment of my family,” he says in the trailer. “They were gonna come and find me, and they were going to kill me.”
Much of the dialogue in the trailer surrounds the show’s creator,...
In the trailer for the upcoming two-part docuseries “I Love You, You Hate Me,” multiple talking heads, from Bill Nye the Science Guy to NBC’s Al Roker, share stories of how quickly the world turned against the friendly dinosaur, rejecting its values of inclusion and respect. Bob West, a Barney performer who stepped into costume for the happy purple dinosaur, shared that death threats were made against his entire family. “They were violent and explicit, death and dismemberment of my family,” he says in the trailer. “They were gonna come and find me, and they were going to kill me.”
Much of the dialogue in the trailer surrounds the show’s creator,...
- 9/28/2022
- by EJ Panaligan
- Variety Film + TV
Susan Lucci is amped up about her new role as Genevieve on Lifetime's upcoming "Devious Maids," but she's still savoring a recent honor at the Smithsonian Institution.
"It was mind-boggling," Lucci says of the May ceremony with Alex Trebek and Phil and Kathy Parker, the creators of "Barney."
The "All My Children" star donated an outfit for the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History. The new exhibit will showcase memorabilia from daytime TV.
"We grow up in this country and [the museum] is held in such high regard and the ceremony itself was so much fun," Lucci tells Zap2it.
"Just to be there -- I have not been to the Smithsonian since my children were little and I loved it so much then and love it so much now. I wished my first generation Italian-American dad had been alive to see this."
The Smithsonian asked Lucci for memorabilia related to the Emmys.
"It was mind-boggling," Lucci says of the May ceremony with Alex Trebek and Phil and Kathy Parker, the creators of "Barney."
The "All My Children" star donated an outfit for the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History. The new exhibit will showcase memorabilia from daytime TV.
"We grow up in this country and [the museum] is held in such high regard and the ceremony itself was so much fun," Lucci tells Zap2it.
"Just to be there -- I have not been to the Smithsonian since my children were little and I loved it so much then and love it so much now. I wished my first generation Italian-American dad had been alive to see this."
The Smithsonian asked Lucci for memorabilia related to the Emmys.
- 6/1/2013
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
Washington -- It was one of the most iconic moments in the history of daytime TV: With a shout of "The streak is over!" Susan Lucci, after 19 nominations, won the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series.
Fourteen years later, the pale pink dress and bedazzled Manolo Blahnik shoes Lucci wore that night in 1999 are officially part of American history. At a ceremony Thursday to mark a new partnership between the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History and the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, Lucci's Emmys outfit, along with other artifacts of classic daytime TV, were added to the museum's culture collection.
Other inducted items include memorabilia from "Jeopardy!" and an original "Barney" script.
Trebek, who donated "Jeopardy" category cards, a contestants' buzzer, final reveal panels and a 1984 script, told the Los Angeles Times that he had stored the Final Jeopardy question panels, from...
Fourteen years later, the pale pink dress and bedazzled Manolo Blahnik shoes Lucci wore that night in 1999 are officially part of American history. At a ceremony Thursday to mark a new partnership between the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History and the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, Lucci's Emmys outfit, along with other artifacts of classic daytime TV, were added to the museum's culture collection.
Other inducted items include memorabilia from "Jeopardy!" and an original "Barney" script.
Trebek, who donated "Jeopardy" category cards, a contestants' buzzer, final reveal panels and a 1984 script, told the Los Angeles Times that he had stored the Final Jeopardy question panels, from...
- 5/9/2013
- by The Huffington Post
- Huffington Post
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