An actor who played a wannabe mobster in "The Sopranos" was sentenced Friday to 10 years in prison for a botched burglary that left an off-duty New York police officer dead.
A jury's decision on Monday to clear a former actor on The Sopranos of killing a New York City policeman during a bungled 2005 burglary has left the victim's sister outraged.
Lillo Brancato Jr., an actor who appeared in "The Sopranos," was acquitted of the 2005 killing an off-duty New York City police officer but found guilty of attempted burglary.
An actor who played a wannabe mobster in "The Sopranos" was sentenced Friday to 10 years in prison for a botched burglary that left an off-duty New York police officer dead.
A jury's decision on Monday to clear a former actor on The Sopranos of killing a New York City policeman during a bungled 2005 burglary has left the victim's sister outraged.
Lillo Brancato Jr., an actor who appeared in "The Sopranos," was acquitted of the 2005 killing an off-duty New York City police officer but found guilty of attempted burglary.
Like the dramatic final scene of "The Sopranos," if you haven't adequately prepared for the transition to digital television on Feb. 17, 2009, your television screen could fade to black.
The Sopranos may be off the air but the Mob clan still rules with an iron fist – at least at Sunday's Screen Actors Guild Awards from Los Angeles's Shrine Auditorium.
Nobody was more surprised than Katherine Heigl's own parents when the Grey's Anatomy star won the Emmy for outstanding supporting actress in a drama on Sunday.
The Sopranos and 30 Rock took top honors, as best dramatic and comedy series, respectively, but it was often "Silent Night" at the 59th annual Primetime Emmy Awards - where such stalwarts as Sally Field and Ray Romano had their onstage comments bleeped.
Besides the possibility of host Ryan Seacrest singing and dancing, Sunday night's 59th annual Emmy Awards will feature the spectacle of doctors going head-to-head against mobsters - or, to be more precise, Grey's Anatomy braving it out for the gold against The Sopranos.
Long hailed as one of the finest series in television history, "The Sopranos" finished its seven-season, 10-year run in a fitting manner: as the outstanding dramatic series of the year at Sunday's 59th annual Primetime Emmy Awards.
An explosive device detonated outside a studio owned by "The Sopranos" star Michael Imperioli early Tuesday, damaging a van but causing no serious injuries, police said.
Grey's Anatomy is in the race for top TV drama at the 59th annual Emmy Awards, with four of its stars (T.R. Knight, Sandra Oh, Chandra Wilson and Katherine Heigl) scoring supporting acting nods, it was announced Thursday morning.
Cable television shows, unless they are the series finale of "The Sopranos," often don't generate the types of ratings that come anything close to what even the least-watched programs on the free broadcast networks get. But cable TV is actually among the hotter segments of the media business these days.
As fans struggled to make sense of the Sopranos finale on Sunday, one popular theory about its ambiguous ending was that creator David Chase wanted to leave the door open for a movie.
A friend recently warned me that you never want to live in two places, that you want to be focused on the job at hand. Nonetheless, all of the writers at my dinner table Sunday night before Game 2 were discussing The Sopranos.
You let the holidays come and go without pulling the trigger. But March Madness looms, not to mention the new season of "The Sopranos." You know it's time to go high definition, but with all the 1080p's and HD MIs and whatever, buying the right TV seems as straightforward as buying the right nuclear submarine. Good news: Now that prices, and the technology, have stabilized, HD is officially a no-brainer. So take this guide and pick your set.
I usually get up early, around 5 A.M. I do some of my best thinking in the morning. That's the time I like to work on deals, or I'll go to breakfast at the 17th Street Cafe and read a script. My da...
As a boy, Jeff Bewkes dreamed of becoming the captain of a small ship. A fast ship, he says now. He'd do some unconventional thing that leads to a big ship, part of a fleet. He'd face the inevitable problems [caused by] the misactions of the others. And then ... somehow prevail.
When Tammy Crystal, 25, bought her first place two years ago, she got some unexpected help. Her grandparents, Pat and John Carter, announced that they were giving her $22,000 for a down payment on ...
Open court, a century-old publisher of academic philosophy books, reached out to the masses in 2001 with a philosophical look at Seinfeld. That book's success spawned a pop-culture series, taking t...
As the fifth and last season of The Sopranos gets under way on March 7, the pressure is on at Home Box Office. Its other franchise series, Sex and the City, began its final run in January, raising ...
President Bush proposes allowing working folks to salt away another $1,000 a month in new tax-free retirement savings accounts. Great plan--except how would you ever come up with the money? Glad yo...
This month HBO is launching a line of gourmet-food products based on its hit mob drama The Sopranos. Named after Artie Bucco, the owner and chef of the show's Nuovo Vesuvio restaurant, the products...
HBO's popular mobster saga may be in the off-season, but that hasn't kept a handful of fans from spending Sunday evenings in the home of their favorite crime family. The 5,000-square-foot colonial ...
There's a great scene in the HBO TV series The Sopranos where the son of the fictional Tony Soprano learns from the Internet that his father is not a waste-management executive, as he'd claimed, bu...
TV's hottest show of the moment isn't Ally McBeal, The Sopranos, or the latest prime-time cartoon on Fox. It's Judge Judy, a daytime phenomenon that has revived a moribund TV format and made a star...
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