aaron sorkin
- Want to make sure you see all of this year's Oscar contenders as soon as they're released? We've got you covered.
- Baltimore-born writer-director John Waters will be receiving a lifetime achievement award from the Writers Guild of America East.
- Residents will have a final opportunity to review the county's redesign plans for Centennial Lane and provide feedback on Thursday, Nov. 17 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., in the Burleigh Manor Middle School cafeteria. The meeting was requested by concerned Centennial residents at the second community meeting held on Sept. 8.
- As we approach the finish line of one of the longest primary seasons in history and ponder a general election with two likely candidates who have some of the highest negatives ever, images of presidential greatness are greatly needed. HBO offers one such portrait with "All the Way," a dramatically dazzling exploration of Lyndon Johnson's first year in office after the assassination of John Kennedy.
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- A recap of the Nov. 30 episode of "The Newsroom," as Will continues to defy the F BI and the courts
- A recap of the third-season premiere of "The Newsroom," as ACN's coverage of the Boston Marathon bombing leads to questions about a lot of journalistic truisms
- President Obama's decision to delay executive order on immigration reform until after the mid-term election will cause hardship and not a Senate majority
- Josh Charles and Amy Schumer bring Aaron Sorkin urgency, anger, sexual frustration and angst to a fast-food restaurant in this wicked clip.
- Fans looking for closure on the shocking death of Will Gardner on last week's "The Good Wife," can find some tonight on the CBS series, according to Josh Charles who played the chracter so winningly the last five years.
- A recap of the season 2 closer of HBO's 'The Newsroom," as various loose ends are brought together
- A recap of the next-to-last episode of Season 2 of HBO's "The Newsroom," in which the election nights broadcast commences and heads start to roll
- A recap of this week's episode of 'The Newsroom," in which the fallout from the Genoa story begins
- "The Newsroom" opened "One Step Too Many" in March 2012, with the first meeting of the "Red Team," the fresh set of eyes that Mac had kept out of the loop on the Genoa story.
- We follow developments in the legal case surrounding the Genoa story, and see more of the series of events that led our cast of characters into the lion's den.
- This week, there was good comedy, all of the dialogue that you would expect, and each of the main stories were given enough room to breathe.
- The second season opened with not the hero America deserves, but the one it needs right now -- with the rapid-fire dialogue we have come to expect.
- For a while last year, I started to worry about liking Aaron Sorkin's "The Newsroom" so much.
- Jonah Goldberg says that the former vice president's ideas about single motherhood have become conventional wisdom.
- The hearings on the Benghazi attacks only strengthened Hillary Clinton's stature as a possible 2016 presidential contender.
- Journalistic mistakes are easy to make in the immediate wake of events like the horrific shootings last week in a movie theater in Colorado. Still, that¿s still no excuse for what happened with ABC News veteran Brian Ross Friday morning on ¿Good Morning America.¿ There¿s a journalistic lesson to be learned ¿ and it¿s not as simple as all of us in the media are too obsessed with trying to be first.
- I believe the pilot for Aaron Sorkin's "The Newsroom" is one of the decade's best productions. I love this series for the way it calls out the press for having lost its sense of purpose.
- Aaron Sorkin's "The Newsroom" nails the failure of journalism today
- Online political powerhouse a C-SPAN star on Super Tuesday
- Josh Charles is a very competitive guy. But he's feeling absolutely no pressure to win as he arrives for his first Emmy Awards telecast as a nominee Sunday.
- As nominee for best supporting actor in a drama series, Josh Charles is now going head-to-head with the likes of Andre Braugher of TNT's "Men of a Certain Age" and John Slattery of AMC's "Mad Men" — pretty refined company. And he belongs there