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Wb starlet
Wb starlet




It will be the show he's been touring with, but viewers will see behind-the-scenes footage and the star will "cater. He's also promising a "one-of-a-kind show" that's "one of the hottest" of the year. Well, it won't be live in this time zone (but we're used to that by now). "Expect nothing but live - live, yes, live vocal performances," Usher himself promised. USHER IS THE HOTTEST thing in music right now, and he's on Showtime tonight at 10 p.m. There's a small amount of entertainment value in the campiness, but not enough to waste an hour of your life.

wb starlet

And she's not exactly known as one of Hollywood's great thespians.īasically, "The Starlet" is just another lame, derivative reality show that latched onto a couple of actresses who didn't have much else to do - actresses who see themselves as Great Talents, while others might disagree. 1," but she's never carried a high-profile project. Oh, there's no doubt Fox has had some success in movies like "Independence Day" and "Kill Bill, Vol. Scary.Īs are scenes of Fox dispensing her, ahem, acting wisdom. "It's an obligation to pass on what you know," Dunaway insisted. Well, they haven't seen her in much lately - Dunaway's last really high-profile gig was in 1981, when she camped her way through "Mommy Dearest." That was years before any of the aspiring starlets were born. "Things rub off on you," she said, continuing (somewhat confusingly), "I'm very interested in the fan base, because those people come to see us." The irony of having played a character in "Network" who would do anything for ratings hasn't entirely escaped Dunaway. (Big deal.)ĭunaway, Fox and casting director Joseph Middleton decide who goes and who stays each week, with Dunaway making like Donald Trump and delivering the painfully campy, "Don't call us, we'll call you" to the losers. The format is painfully familiar - 10 young women compete to be "The Starlet" and win "a career-launching role" on "One Tree Hill" (huh?!!?), a management contract and a talent deal with the WB. Those questions are far more intriguing than the WB's new reality show "The Starlet" (Sunday, 7 p.m., Ch. Fox are passing judgment on the acting abilities of others. It's hard to say which is more ironic - that Faye Dunaway, who won an Oscar for her role in "Network" back in 1976, is now part of a reality show.






Wb starlet