On this week’s All About Sex, TLC’s late night, love-centric talk show, the hosts — Margaret Cho, Heather McDonald, Marissa Jaret Winokur and Dr. Tiffanie Davis Henry — tell you how pull off some Fifty Shades of Grey-style excitement on a fifty-shades-of-broke budget. Just in time to spice up the waning hours of the most romantic day of the year — Valentine’s Day — the “Reinventing Romance” episode also features author Shannon Boodram discussing the 20-something perspective on sex and offering tips for taking the perfect sexting photo (kids, do not try this at home). Plus, the hosts tackle viewer questions about the more practical (and problematic) side of sex including the best … Continue reading →
The post This week on TLC’s All About Sex: Color your Valentine’s Day Fifty Shades of Grey appeared first on Channel Guide Magazine.
The post This week on TLC’s All About Sex: Color your Valentine’s Day Fifty Shades of Grey appeared first on Channel Guide Magazine.
- 2/13/2015
- by Lori Acken
- ChannelGuideMag
For Dr. Jennifer Ashton, the end of "The Revolution" is at hand.
The score for ABC's effort to replace two long-running daytime dramas with weekday lifestyle programs is now 1-1: "All My Children" substitute "The Chew" is staying, but "The Revolution" -- which took the "One Life to Live" slot and involved medical expert Ashton, design authority Ty Pennington, style source Tim Gunn and others - is not. Its final telecast is Friday, July 6, and Ashton is happy with the attempt even if it didn't last too long.
"For me, the experience has been amazing," she reflects. "I always consider it a privilege to have the opportunity to communicate through television with millions of people ... and to deliver information in a way that has the potential to improve their lives. When you're talking about medicine and health and wellness, that's a very real possibility, and I feel we did that.
The score for ABC's effort to replace two long-running daytime dramas with weekday lifestyle programs is now 1-1: "All My Children" substitute "The Chew" is staying, but "The Revolution" -- which took the "One Life to Live" slot and involved medical expert Ashton, design authority Ty Pennington, style source Tim Gunn and others - is not. Its final telecast is Friday, July 6, and Ashton is happy with the attempt even if it didn't last too long.
"For me, the experience has been amazing," she reflects. "I always consider it a privilege to have the opportunity to communicate through television with millions of people ... and to deliver information in a way that has the potential to improve their lives. When you're talking about medicine and health and wellness, that's a very real possibility, and I feel we did that.
- 7/6/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Will The Revolution still be televised? The ABC daytime makeover show — hosted by Jennifer Ashton, Tim Gunn, Tiffanie Davis Henry, Harley Pasternak and Ty Pennington — has had a difficult time reinventing ABC's daytime lineup, only pulling about half the viewers that One Life to Live previously attracted in the timeslot. The Revolution may have to make way for Katie Couric's new talk show, which launches on many ABC stations this fall. But...
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- 3/28/2012
- by Michael Schneider
- TVGuide - Breaking News
On ABC's new daytime show, "The Revolution," five lifestyle experts provide tips to help improve women's lives. There's a physical trainer (Harley Pasternak), a doctor (Jennifer Ashton), a therapist (Tiffanie Davis Henry) and a clothing consultant (Tim Gunn). The last slot -- a lifestyle guru -- is filled by Ty Pennington, the boisterous host of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition."
Pennington is more than just a pretty face who's handy with a hammer -- he has his own furniture, home decor and linen lines as well. The 47-year-old spoke to The Huffington Post about his new show and was refreshingly honest about his lifelong battle with Adhd.
"The Revolution" sounds a little like "Queer Eye" for women.
(Laughs) That's interesting. What I think is kind of neat about "Revolution" is that it's sort of helping people in so many different categories of their life. It's not just about health and fitness.
Pennington is more than just a pretty face who's handy with a hammer -- he has his own furniture, home decor and linen lines as well. The 47-year-old spoke to The Huffington Post about his new show and was refreshingly honest about his lifelong battle with Adhd.
"The Revolution" sounds a little like "Queer Eye" for women.
(Laughs) That's interesting. What I think is kind of neat about "Revolution" is that it's sort of helping people in so many different categories of their life. It's not just about health and fitness.
- 2/21/2012
- by Nicki Gostin
- Huffington Post
On ABC's new daytime show, "The Revolution," five lifestyle experts provide tips to help improve women's lives. There's a physical trainer (Harley Pasternak), a doctor (Jennifer Ashton), a therapist (Tiffanie Davis Henry) and a clothing consultant (Tim Gunn). The last slot -- a lifestyle guru -- is filled by Ty Pennington, the boisterous host of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition."
Pennington is more than just a pretty face who's handy with a hammer -- he has his own furniture, home decor and linen lines as well. The 47-year-old spoke to The Huffington Post about his new show and was refreshingly honest about his lifelong battle with Adhd.
"The Revolution" sounds a little like "Queer Eye" for women.
(Laughs) That's interesting. What I think is kind of neat about "Revolution" is that it's sort of helping people in so many different categories of their life. It's not just about health and fitness.
Pennington is more than just a pretty face who's handy with a hammer -- he has his own furniture, home decor and linen lines as well. The 47-year-old spoke to The Huffington Post about his new show and was refreshingly honest about his lifelong battle with Adhd.
"The Revolution" sounds a little like "Queer Eye" for women.
(Laughs) That's interesting. What I think is kind of neat about "Revolution" is that it's sort of helping people in so many different categories of their life. It's not just about health and fitness.
- 2/21/2012
- by Nicki Gostin
- Aol TV.
In our ongoing effort to watch anything and everything that’s on television, Thursday afternoon found us trying to get through an episode of ABC’s new daytime chatter, The Revolution.
Please know that the operative word in the previous sentence was “trying.” Because man, we haven’t seen such a hot mess of a show since Working It.
For the initiated, The Revolution is a rip-off of every lifestyle show to ever hit the airwaves. Now, this in and of itself isn’t necessarily something worth getting one’s knickers in a knot over. After all, there are whole cable channels filled with exactly this same sort of dreck. (We’d ask why the airwaves needed another show in this particular genre, but the answer — based on The Revolution’s dismal ratings — is that it didn’t.) But what makes this show so particularly odious is that ABC yanked a 43-year-old scripted drama,...
Please know that the operative word in the previous sentence was “trying.” Because man, we haven’t seen such a hot mess of a show since Working It.
For the initiated, The Revolution is a rip-off of every lifestyle show to ever hit the airwaves. Now, this in and of itself isn’t necessarily something worth getting one’s knickers in a knot over. After all, there are whole cable channels filled with exactly this same sort of dreck. (We’d ask why the airwaves needed another show in this particular genre, but the answer — based on The Revolution’s dismal ratings — is that it didn’t.) But what makes this show so particularly odious is that ABC yanked a 43-year-old scripted drama,...
- 2/16/2012
- by theTVaddict
- The TV Addict
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