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| By Tim Cuprisin Media Columnist E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Tim Cuprisin |
| Published Nov. 5, 2009 at 11:00 a.m. |
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CBS is scaling back the sixth season of its long-running crime drama, "Numbers." Or, as the network annoyingly calls it, "Numb3rs."
The normal 22-episode run has been cut back to 16 episodes, a strong sign that this will be the last season for the show that airs in the 9 p.m. Friday slot on Channel 58, and stars Rob Morrow.
CBS is one of the few spots where 9 p.m. Friday isn't automatically a death slot. Its audience tends to be older than the other networks, and more of those older viewers tend to watch on Friday, generally a night with low viewership.
Michael Ausiello is reporting at Entertainment Weekly that a number of other CBS shows are getting additional episodes, including Monday night sitcoms "How I Met Your Mother," "Two and a Half Men," and "The Big Bang Theory."
The first two would have their run for the season upped to 24 episodes, with "Bang" getting one more episode, for 23.
An Internet radio and TV collection: The Wisconsin Broadcasters Association has launched an on-line Wisconsin Museum of Broadcasting with what's hoped to be an expanding collection of audio and video from radio and TV outlets across the state.
On radio: Milwaukee radio has mercifully spared us another record year of early Christmas music -- which is something of a gift itself. Who's going to take the plunge first is a closely-guarded secret, but if you need an injection of holiday music right now, Time Warner Cable's Music Choice, available on digital cable, already has non-stop Christmas tunes on Channel 933.
A news guy tries comedy: If you've ever heard NBC's Brian Williams chatting in a less-than-serious interview, you know he can be a pretty funny guy. His comedy chops are tested tonight at 8:30 on Channel 4 when he plays himself on "30 Rock," auditioning for the open slot on the show's fictional "TGS."
It's not his first visit to "30 Rock," and it's not without precedent. Walter Cronkite dropped by CBS' "Mary Tyler Moore Show" back in the 1970s when a network anchor was a much bigger deal.
But is there anything questionable about NBC's top news anchor trying his hand at sitcomedy?
Video from his "audition" follows below.
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