The ladies of "The View" got a little R-rated Wednesday morning, when co-host Whoopi Goldberg showed Barbara Walters how she likes men to turn her on.
During a conversation about G-spots, Goldberg said that "her truly favorite spot" are her hands. "I love when a man rubs my hands," Goldberg said.
"Give me your hand," Walters demanded. Goldberg walked over to Walters with her arm extended. Walters started to awkwardly hold/rub her hand, but Goldberg interrupted her. "No baby, look. Come here," Goldberg said as she started massaging Walters palm.
"Oh that's what you want!" Walters yelled. "So every time someone does this to you, you get an orgasm?"
"No it's a whole other thing," Goldberg said. "If I'm going to let somebody touch me, there are certain places that, for me, it's alright because it takes time." Goldberg continued, "You know how the girls used to say they like a man with slow hands? That's what that means."
"Do you think there's any other program on the air that has this kind of a discussion?" Walters wondered.
"Nope, not at all," co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck quipped.
Walters has been letting her freak flag fly as of late. Last week, she asked Hasselbeck if she likes to have "rough sex" with her husband.
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Add to myYahoo!With the Network’s traditional May UpFronts just around the corner, theTVaddict.com thought[...]
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Add to myYahoo!The city council election in Pawnee is coming up soon, but before Election Day, the candidates will put it all on the line in a crucial debate. Thursday's terrific episode of "Parks and Recreation" (9:30 p.m. ET on NBC) features Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) publicly debating her chief rival, airhead candy heir Bobby Newport (Paul Rudd), as well as a few fringe candidates who have ... let's just say non-mainstream beliefs and platforms.
"The Debate" -- which also features a fall-down funny subplot for Chris Pratt's Andy -- was written and directed by "Parks and Rec" star Poehler (it was her first time directing the show). One of her biggest scripting challenges involved a crucial piece of dialogue that is not just a mission statement for the hardworking Leslie Knope, but could also serve as distillation of the core values of the show.
"Leslie has to kind of have a moment in the debate where she has to decide if she’s going to play politics or be herself," Poehler said in a recent interview. "And it’s something she struggles with all the time on the show -- how much should she be herself, and how much should she learn how to play the game? Sometimes she’s way too much herself, and sometimes she loses herself along the way."
But one of the most enjoyable things about "Parks and Recreation" is how it uses comical events -- a debate that threatens to descend into chaos, a public forum that goes awry, a town festival that doesn't go quite right -- to celebrate the earnest desires and aspirations of its characters. Leslie may get frustrated with Bobby Newport or with the fringe candidates' attempts to hijack the debate, but the more seriously she takes the debate, the higher the stakes, comedically and dramatically.
"Passion in politics is interesting and fun to play, because you can take big swings and you can make big mistakes," Poehler noted. "People see the slow time-release of presidential politics, and it’s a lot of manufactured passion, but it’s very controlled. In small, low-level politics, people really like to talk about their feelings. [The question is,] how passionate is Leslie? Does she keep at it if things don’t go her way? Can she remain optimistic in the face of pressure, or in the face of disappointment or opportunity?"
It's hard to think of Leslie ever losing her passion for Pawnee, though executive producer Michael Schur made it clear in an interview that Leslie could lose the race (viewers will find out who won the election in the May 10 finale). Still, for Leslie and her campaign manager, boyfriend Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott), one of the most galling things about the race has been the fact she has often trailed Newport in the polls, despite her frighteningly complete grasp of the issues.
"He is just a likable guy," Poehler said. "What Bobby Newport has and what is played so beautifully by Paul is an ease. Leslie’s biggest nightmare is not a tough opponent who is fierce and mean. Her biggest nightmare is a guy who doesn’t even really want the job. The guy who is going to maybe get it because his dad wants him to have a job during the day."
Taking the toxic elements out of a political situation and yet incisively commenting on the challenges of government and public service may be, aside from the creation of Ron Swanson, the show's greatest accomplishment. When I spoke to Schur, I put it to him that the show, which features one of the most detailed and specific fictional cities in popular culture, is essentially a comedic version of "The Wire."
"That's the hope," Schur replied.
Of course, "Parks and Recreation" reaches a different conclusion from "The Wire," which often made the case that individuals can occasionally change, but institutions and bureaucracies never do. Many episodes of "Parks and Rec," on the other hand, revolve around the idea that compromise between people with different beliefs is possible, and that very different individuals and factions can work together to contribute positively to their community. There's an optimism to the show -- and a collegiality among the characters -- that feels like an antidote to the often poisonous nature of our national political dialogue. That is very much by design, Schur said.
"It’s certainly not apolitical," said Schur, who noted that Leslie "believes that government can do good things, and that’s generally speaking, a Democratic idea." But as he notes, "the politics of it are lessened by the fact that what she’s doing is going to a soccer field where two youth soccer groups were accidentally scheduled to have the soccer field at the same time and trying to come up with a solution."
As Poehler says, on the local level, "like in a city council election, people’s politics don’t come into play as much as their personality. And one could certainly argue [that's the case in a] presidential race, but not as much. [On the local level,] you’re voting for the guy or the woman that you like for city council. One person wants to close the school; one person wants to open a park."
Of course the first goal of the Peabody-winning "Parks and Rec" is to be funny as it shows just how hard it can be to open a park, but the show also does a capable job of reflecting the fact that most people don't necessarily adhere to a strident or stringent party line or possess extreme beliefs. The three fringe debaters in Thursday's episode, for example, are "just straight satire of just of the extremes of our political system," Schur said. They don't represent the norm; Leslie and Ron do. Ron's go-it-alone belief system is diametrically opposed to Leslie's we're-all-in-this-together worldview, and yet they are both portrayed respectfully and clearly enjoy working together.
"I think 90 percent of people in America have, if you could get inside their brains and their souls and get them away from television and TV talk shows and speeches and Super PACs and all that sort of stuff… they would have a mix of beliefs that are traditionally Republican [and] Democratic," Schur said. But he also notes, "we have never said the words 'Democrat' or 'Republican' on the show and we never will. We are aided by the fact that many City Council elections don’t have party affiliations, so that’s one thing that’s good. We don’t try to avoid issues at all. In fact, I think we try to use them. But we use them in a way that’s hopefully equal-handed and satirical instead of preachy or soap box-y."
No doubt the show will continue to explore those issues in a potential fifth season, but before then, we have to see whether all the hard work of Leslie and her campaign staff paid off. If she wins, Schur said, she can still work in the Parks department (the City Council gig is part-time), and if she loses, well, you can still expect changes among the Parks department employees. Schur likes to shake things up at the end of seasons and put the characters in different places -- but not too different.
"I want people to tune in next year and feel like, no matter what the result of the election is, that they’re watching the same show that they’ve been watching so far. So it’s tricky, but I also ... I get antsy," he said. "We have ambitious people. Ben is ambitious, Leslie’s ambitious, and when you have ambitious people, if you keep them in the same place doing the same thing for too long, you start to feel sad for them because they’re not exploring their lives. …I don’t like everyone to be the same all the time. I don’t like people hanging out in the same apartments, in the same desks and stuff for too long."
Look for more from my interview with Amy Poehler next week.
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Add to myYahoo!After airing the first season of "The Glee Project" on Sunday nights throughout the summer last year, Oxygen is now taking yet another risky move: shifting the show back to the same night that "Glee" regularly...

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Add to myYahoo!James Van Der Beek has been getting a lot of questions about a possible "Dawson's Creek" reunion these days. And while several members of the cast, himself included, have said they'd be interested in doing something, Van Der Beek cautioned fans on "Live! With Kelly" (weekdays on ABC) that there's no actual project in the works.
"I feel like this is the number one question that we get asked. Nobody's producing it, nobody's writing it, it's just something that comes in press," he said.
But in March, Van Der Beek, who currently stars as a parody of himself on ABC's "Don't Trust The B---- In Apartment 23" (Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m. ET), told EW he would be open to the possibility if "somebody came up with a brilliant idea how to do it."
On Wednesday, Van Der Beek noted on "Live!" that his former co-star Michelle Williams doesn't exactly tamp down the speculation when she's asked about it. "Michelle Williams is always like, 'Absolutely!' I think because her character is dead." He went on to push back against Williams' idea that Jen Lindley could return as a ghost. "We never had a ghost on the show. We've never been one of the shows that's done that," he said chuckling.
When Kelly Ripa and guest co-host Mario Lopez, who himself participated in a partial "Saved By The Bell" reunion organized by Jimmy Fallon, continued to press "The Beek From The Creek" on whether he'd be open to the idea, he let up a little bit. "Why not?" he conceded.
Watch James Van Der Beek poke fun at himself and his Dawson Leery past on "Don't Trust The B---- In Apartment 23" on Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m. ET on ABC.
TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.
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Add to myYahoo!The Girl with No Name: The residents all embark on job interviews and treat each other even worse than usual while Meredith postpones her biggest interview to help out a young patient who was held captive for years and somehow manages to earn mocking for doing so.
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Add to myYahoo!If anyone has been wondering just when we will see Kim Kardashian make her "Drop Dead Diva" debut, we now at least have a little bit of a better idea.According to The Hollywood Reporter, the hit series...

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Add to myYahoo!There was no spinning chair and no toll-free number on which to call and vote, but by the time John[...]
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Add to myYahoo!One year after the Billboard Music Awards became cross-promotion for "The Hangover: Part II," this time around ABC is going to be getting in on the action with one of their own shows.According to Entertainment Weekly...

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