November 2007 News Archive (Page 2)

Private Practice Photos From Wednesday

We've compiled two pages of Private Practice pictures from last night's new episode, "In Which Sam Gets Taken For a Ride." Below is a montage of a hot moment between Pete and Addison from Wednesday night ...

She Wants HimAttractionYes!

For a full assortment of Private Practice pictures from last night's episode, just follow this link to our photo gallery. Episode guide to follow shortly ...

Discuss Tonight's Private Practice in Our Forum!

After a one-week hiatus, Private Practice returns with its seventh episode of the new season, entitled "In Which Sam Gets Taken For a Ride." Addison and Pete take their relationship to a new level, as do Violet and Cooper, while Sam finds himself caught up in a dangerous house call.

As always, you can discuss the episode in our Private Practice forum. Share your thoughts with other Private Practice fans and let your voice be heard!

Private Practice Forum

We will have our episode guide, gallery, music guide and much more posted after the show airs this evening. Thanks for visiting Private Practice Insider and we're looking forward to this evening's new episode right along with you.

Kate Walsh Pregnant ... with Private Practice

This just in: Kate Walsh is totally pregnant (with a TV show)!

When Extra asked the recently married 40-year-old actress the inevitable "when are you having a baby" question, Kate Walsh replied:

"Right now, my baby is Private Practice... she is beautiful, strong, and growing every week."

We couldn't agree more.

Extra then asked Kate Walsh, 40, if she was indeed pregnant, to which she joked: "I'm pregnant with triplets now and I feel really good!"

Kate and Alex Kiss

After a short courtship earlier this year, Kate Walsh and Alex Young, 35, a 20th Century Fox production executive, married in September in Ojai, Calif.

Walsh sat down with Extra this week on the set of Private Practice and, for the record, denied being pregnant in the literal sense, explaining:

"No... Both of us are pretty much working constantly and seeing each other whenever we can... that's him, the pretty blond guy over there!"

Private Practice returns with an all-new episode tonight at 9.

"In Which Sam Gets Taken For a Ride" Clips

Addison and Pete practically tear each other's clothes off in this hot clip from the seventh episode of the first season of Private Practice, "In Which Sam Gets Taken For a Ride," airing Wednesday night. Hot stuff! Check it out ...

"Why don't we just... see how it goes?"

Follow the jump for another intense clip from the episode, in which Pete and Addison help deliver a baby for a woman who's clearly wanting none of it ...

Continue Reading...

"In Which Sam Gets Taken For a Ride" Promo

Love - or at least sex - is in the air at Oceanside Wellness Center as Addison comes out and says she's going to take it to a new level with Pete. Meanwhile, Sam goes on a house call that proves dangerous. Here's a promo for "In Which Sam Gets Taken For a Ride," which airs tomorrow night at 9.

Looks like another good episode. Discuss it in our forum!

Private Practice Caption Contest 2

Happy weekend, fans, and welcome to the results of the second edition of the Private Practice Caption Contest. Let's take a look at who won ...

The Private Practice photo yielded a lot of quality captions, but we chose Lisa as the winner. Something very Grey's Anatomy-like about this particular entry. But we loved them all this week. Congratulations to all of you!

The winning caption appears beneath the picture. Scroll down to read the full list of replies we received. Thanks for playing the Caption Contest and for making us the #1 Private Practice source online. We appreciate your support!

Here is this week's Caption Contest image:

Dell, Sam

Dell: "I heard. About your marriage. And if there's anything you need me to do, to cheer you up, I'm around. Day or night. Night, in particular."

Shonda Rhimes Supports Striking Writers

As with its parent series, Grey's Anatomy, Private Practice sure doesn't appear to be exempt from the repercussions and ripple effects of the ongoing strike being staged by the Writers Guild of America (WGA).

Shonda RhimesIf the writers' walkout endures, Private Practice, like many other series, may be forced to go off the air, or resort to reruns.

Despite such a grim possibility, Shonda Rhimes, its creator and executive producer, has given her complete support to the writers' cause.

According to the San Jose Mercury News, most new shows like Pushing Daisies and Private Practice, which had been picked up for full seasons a few weeks ago, will be able to churn out no more than 10 to 11 episodes of their debut seasons if current boycott continues.

But Rhimes, the woman behind both Grey's Anatomy and Private Practice, has sent an e-mail message to the members of the WGA stating she would "choose not to render my services as a producer" while they walk out.

"I absolutely believed that I would edit our episodes," Shonda Rhimes wrote in her e-mail, which was widely circulated earlier this week.

"Until a thought hit me: how can I walk a picket line and then continue to work? How am I supposed to look at myself in the mirror or look at my child years from now and know that I did not have the courage of my convictions to stand up and put myself more at risk than anyone else?"

In a separate statement, Rhimes was quoted as having been of the opinion that the disgruntled writers truly do want to return to their duties.

"I feel like the writers really want to go back to work," Private Practice creator and executive producer Rhimes said during an event in New York.

Private Practice Hitting its Stride

Michael Ausiello of TV Guide has been a Private Practice critic from the start, but he's (slowly) coming around. Here's what he says in his latest column, which includes some quotes from Paul Adelstein (Cooper)...

Question: Got any Private Practice scoop? Was it just me or was the latest episode of Private Practice 100 times better than previous episodes?

Answer: I don't know if I'd go that far. In fact, I know I wouldn't go that far. While Private Practice is definitely improving, it's still not must-see TV. Yet. For one thing, the characters need to stop behaving like they're on The Hills. The concluding beachfront make-out scene between Kate Walsh and Tim Daly was so Lauren Conrad-Brody Jenner it wasn't even funny.

Still, the show is much better today than it was a month ago, and Paul Adelstein — perhaps Private Practice's most consistent bright spot — credits creator and executive producer Shonda Rhimes' prowess as a master tweaker.

Cooper Ponders

"Shonda is a great adjuster," Paul Adelstein said. "I mean, if you go back and look at the first few episodes of Grey's Anatomy and then towards the end or middle of their first season, you see that she figures out how to gel a cast and tell a story. What she does is very ambitious, in terms of a mix in tones, and it takes a while to get that alchemy right. I feel like we're hitting our stride."

On the romance front, Adelstein says Cooper and Violet will soon address the whole attraction-repulsion thing they've got going on.

"They make some decisions about how they think it should proceed, and then they try to act like [adults], and then, you know, hilarity ensues."

Private Practice: New Depth, New Bombshells

With no Private Practice airing this week, let's take a look back at last week's episode, courtesy of this Entertainment Weekly commentary ...

Private Practice got deeper with "In Which Charlotte Goes Down the Rabbit Hole." Charlotte opened up about her alcoholic mom, who didn't touch her while she was growing up. Dell offhandedly mentioned that he'd been abused when he was growing up. A patient named Angie asks Naomi and Addison to tell her husband he's unable to father a child - even though he can.

The Marrying Kind

Addison, Cooper, and Dell emerged as the wise ones.

Fending off Pete Wilder, Addison resolved to hold out for true love, lasting love, marriage, and children. And her advice to Angie — "live your whole life" — resonated enough to make the patient tell her husband the truth.

Coop, meanwhile, figured out that a young patient was being abused by her MS-suffering mother. But Dell evidently knew all along — which makes you wonder why he never said anything before.

Then again, he's, like, a receptionist. The receptionist who does nothing to hide his huge crush on the woman who owns the place, but nevertheless.

Even the music that seems to hamper every ABC drama (you listening, Brothers and Sisters?), turning any serious moment into a lighthearted romp, seemed to be somewhat under wraps. But they let loose with some bombshells just the same. They do love their bombshells on Private Practice!

Continue reading this review by Entertainment Weekly ...

Private Practice at the Head of the New Class

You know it's been an underwhelming fall TV season when Sabrina Bryan being voted off Dancing with the Stars is big news. New hit shows? Not many!

Six weeks into the new season, not one new series has broken out of the pack to generate buzz and become a success the way Heroes did last year.

Still, Private Practice has emerged as one of the top contenders for class of the freshman class in 2007-08. Here's a look at how Private Practice and other new shows stack up to the competition, from the Detroit Free Press ...

Private Practice

The fall's top-rated rookies: Private Practice (No. 19, 13.2 million), Pushing Daisies (No. 27, 11.1 million), Bionic Woman (No. 28, 11 million) and Women's Murder Club (No. 33, 10.1 million).

The critics' top five: In no particular order; Pushing Daisies, Back to You, Dirty Sexy Money, Reaper and Aliens in America.

Top time slot slugfest: It's Wednesday night fights at 9, when Criminal Minds remains top dog, but rookies Private Practice, Bionic Woman and Gossip Girl have all carved successful niches despite big competition.

Most significant viewer trend: The growing impact of the TiVo, or Digital Video Recorder (DVR). The penetration of DVRs has more than doubled from last year, going from 9 to 20 percent.

Gloomy remake mistake: Bionic Woman, which despite buzz and fairly solid viewership is one intensely grim sci-fi fairy tale. And Bionic Woman has a chronic problem - the sullen mope performance of Michelle Ryan.

Continue reading this article here ...

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