@ Lukes | Press Reviews

This blog contains press articles that are related to Gilmore Girls and/or its cast members, published since the show first started airing in 2000. The articles are archived according to the date they were added to the blog. Their original publishing dates are posted in their titles.

Sunday, January 02, 2005

(2004) Lauren Graham Enjoys Phantom Chirstmas Holidays

GILMORE GIRLS star LAUREN GRAHAM enjoys an unusual after-meal activity on Christmas Day - she and her fellow diners race to clear the table to the PHANTOM OF THE OPERA soundtrack.

The actress, who was once romantically linked to former FRIENDS star MATTHEW PERRY, admits the long-running activity is the brainchild of her aunt.

She says, "In my family there's something called the 'Running of the Phantom', which was started a long time ago by my aunt.

"You put on the Phantom of the Opera CD and run around the table. The winner is the person who gets the most stuff cleared.

"It is really, we realised, just an elaborate way to get the kids to do the dishes. Duh. But it still kind of works."

10/12/2004 19:18

http://www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/mndwebpages/lauren%20graham%20enjoys%20phantom%20christmas%20holidays


(2004) TV Gal Chooses Her 10 Best Characters

(Monday, December 06 08:02 AM)
By Amy Amatangelo

LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com) - Right now there are some colossally bad characters on television. A click across the dial and you can run into the ever-annoying Lucy Camden Kinkirk (I'm convinced that "7th Heaven" has some sort of subliminal hypnosis going on and that's why I continue to tune in each week), the perpetually randy gang on "One Tree Hill" and, as mentioned last week, practically every single female character they've added to "The West Wing" since season one.

But 'tis is the season of giving and presents and candy. "Summerland" is back in February and there will soon be a second season of the Ashlee Simpson show, how can we not be joyful? So let's not fret about the worst characters. Won't you join me in my reindeer game of celebrating the ten best characters currently on television.

Sometimes great writing fuses with a brilliant performance to form a perfect television character. The character pops off the screen and commands our attention. They can make a mediocre show good (witness Topher Grace on "That '70s Show"), a good show great (where would "The Shield" be without Vic Mackey?), and a great show exceptional ("24" would be nothing without Jack Bauer).

All characters on my list are from network television shows that are at least in their second season and I stuck to the rule of only one character per show (if I didn't, the residents of Stars Hollow would make up half the list). This season has offered up some terrific characters (a very special shout-out to Bree on "Desperate Housewives" and Sawyer on "Lost." We'll probably see you guys next year) but great characters evolve over time. To make room for some NKOTT (new kids on the TV), I've entered Dennis Franz's fabulous Andy Sipowicz on "NYPD Blue into the TV Gal Hall of Fame. He has set the standard.

Here are my picks for ten best characters currently on prime-time network television:

1. GOB on "Arrested Development": With his deadpan voice and ever-solemn expression, Michael's older brother GOB is the funniest member of the Bluth family (and that's some tough competition). Whether he's magically spilling pennies or ripping off his "stripper" pants, Will Arnett's brilliant portrayal is hilarious because GOB takes everything so very seriously. I honestly don't know how he plays the character without completely cracking up.

2. Dr. Cox on "Scrubs": He's the proverbial character with a heart of gold taken to a whole new level. John C. McGinley easily whips out his rapid-fire, positively hilarious dialogue with a sneaky charm and a sly smile. But every snarky diatribe belies a man who cares about his patients and his students. An intense character like this could have easily gone the wrong way (think Phil on "Ed"), but McGinley's innate appeal and obvious understanding of his character has made Dr. Cox one of the more complex characters in a TV comedy.

3. Emily Gilmore on "Gilmore Girls": You already know one of my favorite things about "Gilmore Girls" is ability to have multiple story lines that cross generational lines. And yes it is hard to pick just one character out of this great show. But Kelly Bishop has the unique ability to be both humorous (witness her scheming to set Rory up) and heartbreaking(witness her sobbing after her date). As the impeccably controlled and society oriented Emily Gilmore, Bishop is a woman who knows she's made mistakes and is still desperately trying to connect with a daughter she'll never fully understand. Of all the relationships on "Gilmore Girls," it's Lorelai and her mother's that I consistently find the most gripping.

4. Sydney Bristow on "Alias": It's been a tough fall without television's butt-kicking heroine. Seriously, could this woman do anything that we wouldn't believe? Skip ahead two years in time. No problem. Speak every language we've ever heard of and some we haven't -- sure, we believe it. Fly all over the world and never look jet-lagged. Why not? Create a costume out of duck-tape and felt-tip marker? Of course she can. In this fantasy world of spy mommies and daddies, spies who love Sydney and spies who don't, Jennifer Garner has succeeded in making Sydney as ordinary as the proverbial girl next door (you know if the girl next door had to consistently go undercover in a rubber dress) Even last season when the show lost its mojo (you know how I felt about the face masks), our Syd was still riveting.

5. Donna on "The West Wing": Donna is the grounding force in the fictional Oval Office. In between hilarious banter with her boss and consistent concern for him, Donna has blossomed into great modern female character -- a his girl Friday for the new millennium. But if they don't put Josh and Donna together soon, I'm going to be in a fight with "The West Wing."

6. Ephram on "Everwood": As the series' protagonist, Ephram is still dealing with his mother's death, forging a relationship with his previously distant father, and navigating the thrill of first love. And I simply adore this kid. Confident in his awkwardness, unsure of his life-long goals, devoted to his sister, self-deprecatingly funny, Gregory Smith has shaped one of the best teenagers ever to hit prime time.

7. Maxine on "Judging Amy": Often exasperated, always overworked, and never knowing when to quit, Tyne Daly's Maxine Gray is the consistent thread to the series. And Daly is an obvious pro. Like I feel about Dennis Franz, Maxine could go an entire episode without saying a word and we would still know exactly what she was thinking.

8. Jack on "Without a Trace": It's not easy to stand out on a show that is a procedural drama. And an actor not as experienced as Anthony LaPaglia may not have been able to balance the missing person of the week with Jack's personal trials (his divorce, his now shaky friendship with Vivian). LaPaglia gives a world-weary depth to Agent Jack Malone.

9. Joan on "Joan of Arcadia": Joan Girardi is moody, irrational, self-centered and unpredictable. She's prone to whining, stomping of the feet, and slamming doors. Sound like any teen you might know? Even though she talks to God and has a divine mission of the week, Joan may be the most realistic teen on TV. This season Amber Tamblyn has deftly handle the death of a friend and the trials of first love. She's perfect in her imperfection.

10. Seth on "The O.C.": The gangly Adam Brody effortlessly delivers his hilarious and sweetly sarcastic lines. He's positively delightful and brings a level of humor not often seen on prime time soaps. Heck, even his wardrobe is a hoot. Although I'm getting a little concerned this season because clearly Brody and the rest of "The O.C." gang are aware of how everyone just loves Seth. And Seth is much cuter when he isn't cognizant of how cute he is.
Agree with me? Disagree with me? Who do you think are the best characters on prime time network television? Talk about it on the TV Gal message board.

http://tv.zap2it.com/tveditorial/tve_main/1,1002,276%7C92204%7C1%7C,00.html

(2000) Review in Entertainment Weekly

On the L.A. set of the WB's ''Gilmore Girls,'' the titular twosome -- Rory and Lorelai -- are having a good old fashioned mother daughter spat. Rory's swamped with work, but Lorelai keeps bugging her to take an ice cream break. Finally, Rory erupts: ''Lorelai, go to your room!''
It sounds like your average family dramedy scene, except for one thing: Rory (Alexis Bledel) is a serious minded 16 year old prep schooler, and Lorelai (Lauren Graham) is her free spirited 32 year old single mother. Do the math, and you'll figure out this is not your stereotypical American TV clan. ''['Gilmore''s] strength is that it's a family show that does not pander or condescend to families,'' says Graham (''M.Y.O.B.''). ''It's not so soft that your grandmother could watch it with her dentures out.''


In other words, ''it's not going to be '7th Heaven,''' declares ''Gilmore'' creator Amy Sherman-Palladino (''Roseanne''). What sets the show apart are its sardonic one liners (''On the way home, you can pull a Menendez,'' Lorelai tells Rory before dragging her to dinner at her stuffy grandparents' house), its multicultural cast (Lorelai manages a hotel in the diverse fictional hamlet of Stars Hollow, Conn.), and unusually close familial bonding (Rory and Lorelai share the same taste in lip gloss and Macy Gray CDs).


Yet Sherman-Palladino can thank shows like ''Heaven'' for helping get her series on the air. As that 99 44/100 percent pure drama started cleaning up in the ratings, a group of advertisers (including Procter & Gamble and Johnson & Johnson) formed the Family Friendly Programming Forum to fund the development of similar series. When Graham learned ''Gilmore'' was supported by the FFPF, however, she admits that it ''made me so nervous.... I would be more comfortable if it were called the Dysfunctional Family Friendly Forum.'' Not to worry: Despite its ominous moniker, the FFPF has no political agenda. ''It's not a right wing thing,'' says Graham. ''It's mainly supporting shows with a multigenerational element that you could watch as a family.''


Sounds good, but up against NBC's ''Friends,'' will there be any families left to watch ''Gilmore''? ''People really like those six kids,'' Sherman-Palladino says, adding tartly ''Well, they're not kids anymore -- they're all, like, 80.'' Still, ''there probably isn't a tougher time slot,'' WB Entertainment president Susanne Daniels concedes. ''But in a strange way, that's a vote of confidence from us.'' If the show can overcome this potentially crippling ''vote of confidence'' and attract a small, loyal cult the way ''Popular'' did in the same spot last season, Daniels promises ''Gilmore'' won't be a goner. -- Bruce Fretts

http://www.ew.com/ew/features/000929/falltv/gilmore.html

(2000) 'Gilmore Girls' lives up to its billing

"GILMORE GIRLS" (7 Thursday, Channel 18)

The WB describes "Gilmore Girls" as "a humorous, heartfelt, multigenerational drama about friendship, family and the ties that bind."

Well, get this: It actually is.

Hotel manager Lorelai Gilmore (Lauren Graham) is the 32-year-old single mother of a precocious 16-year-old-daughter, Rory (Alexis Bledel), who prefers H.L. Mencken to Eminem. Lorelai has been estranged from her patrician parents (Kelly Bishop and America's Official WASP Father, Edward Herrmann), which has suited her just fine - until she realizes that, in order to borrow money from the elder Gilmores for Rory's private-school tuition, she'll have to cozy up to them.

But Mater and Pater, who at first come on like cartoon villains, turn out to have more than two dimensions. By the third episode, the intergenerational dynamic has gotten almost as maddening - and as fascinating - as real life.

More farcical are Lorelai's days at the inn with the sniffy French concierge (Yanic Truesdale), the accident-prone cook (Melissa McCarthy) and other appealingly off-center folks. Most of the time, sophisticated writing and skilled acting keep the eccentricity from getting too cute.

Graham, who has sparkled through the gloom of "Conrad Bloom," "Townies" and other flops, and newcomer Bledel are wonderful as the bickering, kvetching, teasing, loving mother and daughter. Creator Amy Sherman-Palladino won a Peabody Award for her writing on "Roseanne," and "Gilmore Girls" has some of the zest of that family classic.

The most surprising thing about the show is that it was fostered by a consortium of more than 40 advertisers - including Coca-Cola, General Motors and Procter & Gamble - which has put up $1 million to fund the development of family-friendly scripts. This initiative, of which "Gilmore Girls" is the first product, sounds both too good to be true and too awkward to work - but, on the evidence of this series, it looks like the real deal.

http://www.jsonline.com/enter/tvradio/wein/oct00/weincol05100400.asp

(2000) Get to know 'Gilmore Girls'

By Rick Bird, Post staff reporter

It's being touted as family friendly programming. And indeed it is. But not in the sense you might think.

''Gilmore Girls'' premieres tonight (at 8 on WB, Channel 64) as we are introduced to one of the most witty and sassy mother-daughter buddy shows seen on TV in some time. This free-spirited dramedy is one of the more endearing, engaging shows of the new season.

''I thought it would be fun to write about a mom and daughter who were pals instead of just a mother-daughter relationship,'' said the show's creator and producer, Amy Sherman-Palladino, who won an Emmy for her writing on ''Roseanne.''

''I also wanted to put this style teen on TV. Sexually innocent teens are not represented. I thought that would be interesting, especially with a mother who was more sexually aware than she was at that age.''

The premise of the show is that Lorelai Gilmore had her daughter, Rory, when she was 16 and chose to raise the baby on her own. That caused a rift with her old-money parents. In the premiere, the studious Rory has been admitted to an exclusive New England prep school, and Lorelai must reconnect with her parents to ask them to pay for her daughter's education.
The storyline opens up various cross-generational conflicts ranging from grandparent relationships to the clash of cultures at prep schools, and the plight of single parents.
''Grandparents can be closer to their grandchildren than they are to their children, and we want to explore that dynamic,'' Ms. Sherman-Palladino said.

The show is touted as the first to come out of the initiative from the Family Friendly Programming Forum, a group of TV's biggest advertisers, spearheaded by Procter & Gamble executive Bob Wehling. The Forum, in a partnership with WB, put up $1 million to develop scripts for shows suitable for the 8 p.m. family hour, which has slowly become as much a sex and violence hour as the rest of the evening.

While ''Gilmore Girls'' fits the bill, the truth is it didn't come directly from the Family Friendly effort.

''They handed the network the money and said develop scripts that we can advertise on,'' Ms. Sherman-Palladino said. ''When I pitched this to the WB they had already used the development money on other scripts. Then they said, "Maybe this can fit into what we were given the money for.' ''

In fact, Ms. Sherman-Palladino had no idea the Family Friendly Forum existed when she developed ''Gilmore Girls.''

''I didn't even hear the word (family friendly) until we were filming in Canada,'' Ms. Sherman-Palladino said. ''And I saw a Wall Street Journal article about this and it mentioned my show and I said, "Oh ... really.' ''

At first she had to overcome the Hollywood writer's knee-jerk reaction to supposed morality groups dictating what to put on TV. ''"Everyone is afraid of the term ''family friendly'' - including me, when I first heard it. I thought, "What does this mean?'... I thought somewhere there's a room of people eating white bread and mayonnaise and cranking out family-friendly scripts,'' she said with a laugh. ''But I think their agenda was just that we need variety on TV, and I'm all for that.''

She said she has never talked to anyone with the Forum, or received script notes from the group.

Indeed, ''Gilmore Girls'' may not fit some people's definition of what's suitable for the entire family with its edgy, flippant dialogue, the premise of an unwed mother and a scene where the mother and daughter joke about their breast size. But P&G's Wehling says the Forum has no political or moral agenda. He said the group loosely defines ''family friendly'' as quality programming that can draw the whole family together, and he thinks ''Gilmore Girls'' does just that.

''Being in a family is tough these days. There are issues between the mother and the daughter and the mother's parents. The way they handle the situations is very positive. It sends a good message out there to other people who are struggling with these relationship issues,'' Wehling said.

''Gilmore Girls'' is marvelously cast with Lorelai Gilmore played by Lauren Graham. who had a recurring role as the consultant in ''NewsRadio.'' Eighteen-year-old newcomer Alexis Bledel plays the daughter and Sally Struthers plays the Gilmores' next-door neighbor.

Publication date: 10-05-00

http://www.cincypost.com/living/girls100500.html

(2000) Gilmore Girls

Ever wish the great TV mothers and fathers of the '80s--the Huxtables, the Keatons, the Seavers--were your real-life parents and any problem you had could be solved with 30 minutes and a hug?


It's been a while since a family drama topped the TV must-see list--the 7th Heaven Camdens are way too square--but this season, there's finally a woman we're dying to call Mom. Meet Lorelai Gilmore, single mother and one half of the Gilmore Girls.


Lorelai (Lauren Graham) got pregnant at the tender age of 16, decided to keep her baby, refused to take part in a shotgun marriage and got a job. All this pissed off her upper-crust parents to no end. Now, Lorelai successfully manages the Independence Inn, and daughter Rory has reached sweet 16.


Why It Works: The show isn't just a teen dream about the sweetest family setup since Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead. Sure, Lorelai is one hip mama--she carries mood-enhancing lip gloss and listens to Macy Gray. But she also pries into Rory's love life and is way too obsessed with getting her daughter into a good college.


The show's location and supporting cast remind us of another successful series. Gilmore Girls is set in a quaint Connecticut town, but pop a moose into the opening sequence, and you've got the New England version of Northern Exposure. There're lovable small-town gathering spots (Luke's coffee shop) and a similar mix of quirky regulars, like dance instructor and social commentator Miss Patty (Liz Torres).


Why You'll Love It: Graham's career at one time seemed cursed. She's popped up in almost every pilot season for the last four years in such duds as Townies, Good Company, Conrad Bloom and this summer's short-lived M.Y.O.B. (where, ironically, she played guardian to her 16-year-old niece). Finally, the ultratalented actress gets a chance to shine in a show that looks like it just might stick around.--Lia Haberman

http://www.eonline.com/Features/Features/Tube2000/Shows/index2.html

(2000) Single White Females

Gilmore Girls is a series about an attractive, youthful, vibrant single mother and her more sober but equally fabulous daughter. It comes on the heels of some 1999 movies with the same premise, for instance, Tumbleweeds (directed by Gavin O'Connor) and Anywhere But Here (Wayne Wang). Both of these films illustrated how a girl's already confusing pre-teen and teenage years are further complicated by relationships with mothers who do not fit the mold, and who often place their own desires above the presumed needs of their children. For these girls, having a wacky mother is something of a curse.

In the case of Gilmore Girls, however, the world is generally quite good. People in Stars Hollow, Connecticut (population 9,973), where the Gilmore Girls live, confront problems directly, through communication and after thoughtful consideration. The two Girls of the title are 32-year-old Lorelai Gilmore (Lauren Graham) and her daughter 16-year-old Lorelai "Rory" Gilmore (newcomer Alexis Bledel). Graham is fresh off the short-lived NBC summer series M.Y.O.B., also about a single woman raising a teenage girl. As Opal Brown on M.Y.O.B., Graham had to play the heavy. In her new incarnation, she gets to be free-spirited and fun. The twist of Gilmore Girls is supposed to be that mom has the heart of a teenager, while teenaged Rory is serious, like an adult.

The series was created by Amy Sherman-Palladino, who also wrote the series premiere and whose production credits include Veronica's Closet. The director of this first episode is Leslie Linka Glatter, who has previously directed episodes of Ally McBeal and The West Wing. Gilmore Girls resembles The West Wing in its witty idealism, lack of sarcasm, and portrayal of people as either good or just misguided. Lorelai's parents fit the latter category: Emily and Richard Gilmore (Kelly Bishop and The Practice's Edward Herrmann) are cold and status-conscious. Richard seems oblivious to all but his golf game, and Emily, while she means well, is starchy and interfering, and seems to want to remake Rory into the daughter Lorelai never became as a result of her teen pregnancy and decision to raise her child on her own.

Despite Lorelai's short skirts, the script has her continually concerned that her daughter not follow in her footsteps. She is an ideal parent in that she is heavily involved in her daughter's life, and also presumably better able to understand her daughter because of their age proximity. Mom looks so young that the two are often mistaken for sisters. And both are quite adorable. Lorelai has a successful career managing an inn and lives in a charming old house with plenty of room. She wears chic suits and high heels to work, but she's so cool that she also looks great in cutoffs, a tight T-shirt, and cowboy boots. Plus, she squeals with delight when she hears the latest XTC cd. Daughter is a straight-A student who actually likes her private school uniform (despite the fact that this is the WB, the plaid kilts on the girls at Chilton fall to the knee and their sweaters are rather bulky -- Britney Spears need not apply). Rory is smart and hard-working, even reading Madame Bovary just for fun.

While this inversion of parent-child cliches may seem to run counter to recent calls for more "family values" on television, the series has a stamp of approval from the Family Friendly Forum's Script Development Fund, described on the WB Website as follows: "An initiative between some of the nation's top advertisers and the WB, the program is intended to offer a greater array of compelling family programming on network television. The strong, loving mother-daughter relationship portrayed in Gilmore Girls reflects the growing reality of this new type of American family -- approximately fifty percent of families today consist of one-parent households" (www.familyprogramawards.com/). Almost immediately, you learn that the decision for Lorelai not to marry Rory's father was mutual, and the two remain on good terms (the yet-unseen Christopher is a successful entrepreneur who lives in California).

In fact, Lorelai appears to be a happy single parent -- something rarely seen on television drama and quite a switch from the days of Murphy Brown, who was vilified by politicians (most loudly, Dan Quayle) for her decision to rear her child on her own. I think the difference here is in the amount of apology offered. Murphy Brown offered no excuses and was unrepentant. While Lorelai Gilmore is plainly pleased to have Rory in her life, she does talk of having "thrown [her] life away" and things not going as she had "planned." Not that insisting that one's child be educated and aware of the consequences of sex is surely a bad thing, but in the case of Gilmore Girls, never-wed single parenting falls into the "mistakes were made" category, while Murphy Brown made an active choice.

In addition, in both cases, the mothers are privileged, white, and have financial support on which to fall in case of emergency -- Murphy through her career and Lorelai through her wealthy parents. I am still waiting for a show focusing on a non-white, content parent who is single by choice. The idealized New England setting also helps counter the non-traditional family in Gilmore Girls. This isn't a mother and child in anonymous suburbs — or worse, the city. What better place raise a child than in a quaint, clean, Connecticut village in which everyone knows everyone else. Without a dad, I guess it does take a village to raise a child. Go ahead girls, don't have an abortion — have that baby at age 16. It will all work out just fine, right? If you are pretty and charming and live in Utopia, everything will be great.

And this version of Utopia is indeed unbelievably healthy and endearing, full of quirky New Englanders. They take care of one another: the coffee shop owner is concerned about Lorelai's caffeine intake; town busybody Miss Patty (Liz Torres) knows of a part-time job for a kid who needs money. Drella (Alex Borstein), the cranky harp player in the Independence Inn where Lorelai works, is an amusing curmudgeon who ignores the inn's clients but plays her instrument beautifully. There are some less endearing folks on the show, but they're clearly plot contrivances. The students and faculty at the Chilton school — which is in Hartford, not Stars Hollow —for instance, make Rory's first day there miserable. One girl, unprovoked, tells her to "stay out of the way" and not work on the school paper; one boy continually refers to Rory as "Mary" (as in Virgin) and creepily comes on to her in the hallway; the headmaster, a friend of Richard and Emily's, warns her she is likely to fail out of Chilton. What I get from this is that rich country club people are much more likely than others to be uptight and mean than anyone else; they are by definition critical and insecure. In my experience, this is not entirely false, but in Gilmore Girls it sets up a very neat and not terribly original "us against them" situation, reminiscent of John Hughes films, among many, many others. Still, it is an attractive premise — Americans love the underdog, right? And the bad people really are not evil, just a product of their circumstances: they don't know any better.

I get the same feeling watching Gilmore Girls as when I watch My So-Called Life. The situation and the characters seem too sweet and idealized; when people are less than kind, they have reasons — psychological problems, trouble at home, unrequited love, too much WASPiness. Nothing that happens is too dire or pressing. There are no vampires in Stars Hollow. The Gilmores' world is a relentlessly comforting and inviting one. So even if I'm not fascinated or much surprised, when the show is over, not only do I want to know how Rory deals with the mean girl at school, I want to help her out. Does the cute boy from Episode 1 come back? I want to go for drinks with Lorelai and discuss whether she should go out with the rich Chilton dad or with the cute, cranky coffee house owner. These questions and others equally insignificant may keep me coming back to the show, at least for a little while.

http://www.popmatters.com/tv/reviews/g/gilmore-girls.shtml

(2000) 'Gilmore Girls' is family and advertiser friendly

LOS ANGELES -- Here are key facts about the new TV series Gilmore Girls:

1) The hourlong comedy-drama about a single mom and her teen-age daughter is airing as part of an effort by major advertisers to create more family friendly shows.

2) It's on the youth-obsessed WB network, where people born before 1966 are as rare as denture adhesive ads.

Now here's the truth: Gilmore Girls is more than the sum of its parts. It's a fresh and disarming show that is (1) wholesome but not sanitized to the point of blandness; (2) a combination of youthful energy and mature smarts; and (3) funny without sitcom hokum.

While star-driven shows on the bigger networks grab the spotlight, this little gem (airing at 8 p.m. Thursdays on Channel 20) is worth a close look.

Still wary? Consider that Amy Sherman-Palladino, who dreamed up the series, named her company Dorothy Parker Drank Here Productions. Parker, the wickedly sophisticated writer, might well have gotten a kick out of Gilmore Girls.

Lauren Graham stars as Lorelai Gilmore, a 32-year-old managing a country inn and raising 16-year-old Rory (Alexis Bledel) in a picture-perfect Connecticut town. The pilot for Gilmore Girls was developed with a pool of funds contributed by major advertisers including Procter & Gamble, General Motors and Sears, who pronounced themselves tired of hawking products on sexy and violent network shows.

The advertisers approached all the broadcast networks with their concerns, striking a deal with WB after it offered the most specific plan. WB supervises script development and decides which, if any, go into production; the advertisers agreed to bankroll at least eight scripts, which generally cost between $60,000 and $90,000.

In other words, the sponsors pay but don't have a say in a show's content.

"One thing we told them early on is this has to remain totally network-controlled creatively," says Jamie Kellner, WB chief executive officer.

Gilmore Girls fits the advertisers' intent because it's about "families that work, about a love-filled household with a successful woman and a successful child," Kellner says.

http://www.detnews.com/2000/entertainment/0010/19/f05-136374.htm