TMC
10-27-2018, 09:31 PM
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/25/arts/television/busy-philipps-memoir-busy-tonight.html
“Years ago, people had floated the idea of me doing a talk show, and I always sort of railed against it because I felt like I’m an actor, and that’s what I love,” says the former Cougar Town and Freaks and Geeks star, who has found a second wind on her sitcom-like Instagram Stories. But at some point, she said, “you have to lean into” what you’re good at. “Not that I’m not good at acting. I think I am, but it’s just so hard to do," says Philipps, whose four-night-a-week E! talk show Busy Tonight launches Sunday. Fey came on board after casting her on an unsuccessful sitcom project last year. Phillips is “so warm and instantly likable and refreshing when you talk to her,” Fey said. “I always sort of gravitate toward things that I myself would be interested in as a viewer. I felt like her presence is funny, natural and positive in a way — she’s not shying away from talking about difficult things in her life, or in the world.”
Busy Philipps' Busy Tonight is still effectively an enigma after its first week (https://variety.com/2018/tv/reviews/busy-tonight-review-busy-philipps-e-1203017060/)
"Busy Tonight is a positivity-only zone and so ends up communicating little at all. It’s not antithetical to self-care to have standards," says Daniel D'Addario, adding: "We know she generally likes popular things and wants to give her viewer a smooth place to land before bed. But talk demands a crystal-clear point-of-view, and Busy Tonight has yet to find that, making its endless references to the language of self-help and its production excesses like the nightly lullaby feel like the antic search for a personality, not the expression of one. Some things about television shows we’ve seen before are worth keeping." ALSO: Nobody on Busy Tonight knows what to do with his or her body yet (https://www.theringer.com/tv/2018/10/31/18045634/busy-philipps-tonight-hasan-minhaj-patriot-act-late-night-shows-review).
“Years ago, people had floated the idea of me doing a talk show, and I always sort of railed against it because I felt like I’m an actor, and that’s what I love,” says the former Cougar Town and Freaks and Geeks star, who has found a second wind on her sitcom-like Instagram Stories. But at some point, she said, “you have to lean into” what you’re good at. “Not that I’m not good at acting. I think I am, but it’s just so hard to do," says Philipps, whose four-night-a-week E! talk show Busy Tonight launches Sunday. Fey came on board after casting her on an unsuccessful sitcom project last year. Phillips is “so warm and instantly likable and refreshing when you talk to her,” Fey said. “I always sort of gravitate toward things that I myself would be interested in as a viewer. I felt like her presence is funny, natural and positive in a way — she’s not shying away from talking about difficult things in her life, or in the world.”
Busy Philipps' Busy Tonight is still effectively an enigma after its first week (https://variety.com/2018/tv/reviews/busy-tonight-review-busy-philipps-e-1203017060/)
"Busy Tonight is a positivity-only zone and so ends up communicating little at all. It’s not antithetical to self-care to have standards," says Daniel D'Addario, adding: "We know she generally likes popular things and wants to give her viewer a smooth place to land before bed. But talk demands a crystal-clear point-of-view, and Busy Tonight has yet to find that, making its endless references to the language of self-help and its production excesses like the nightly lullaby feel like the antic search for a personality, not the expression of one. Some things about television shows we’ve seen before are worth keeping." ALSO: Nobody on Busy Tonight knows what to do with his or her body yet (https://www.theringer.com/tv/2018/10/31/18045634/busy-philipps-tonight-hasan-minhaj-patriot-act-late-night-shows-review).