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NBC Saves ‘Community,’ but Drops Two Other Series

NBC Saves ‘Community,’ but Drops Two Other Series

Against all expectations, NBC renewed its quirky comedy “Community” on Friday night, at the same time that it quietly pulled the plug on the eventually ill-named “Smash.”

The network also announced a few more new shows, bringing its total for the new television season to 13, one more than ABC has picked up â€" so far.

“Community” surely benefited from having NBC as one of its owners, but the comedy seemed to find some new legs late in its run this season. It has been written off after the departure of its creator Dan Harmon.

For “Smash,” it was simply a story of a promising idea that could not survive a disappointing execution. Though close to the heart of the head of NBC programming, Robert Greenblatt, the show tried to retrofit this season and sank quickly. NBC also dropped the comedy “The New Normal.”

But it kept up the announcements of new shows, adding another comedy and two more dramas. The comedy “Welcome to the Family” is a broad sitcom about a teenage couple who wind up pregnant and are forced to mix their Anglo and Hispanic families.

NBC is known to be high on the drama “The Blacklist,” which has an odd premise: one of the most wanted men in America is arrested and promises to help law enforcement but only by working with one obscure F.B.I. agent. James Spader stars.

The other drama, “The Night Shift,” is a homage of sorts to “E.R.,” telling stories about the graveyard shift at a hospital.

NBC will also offer a limited series “Dracula,” with Jonathan Rhys Meyers as the king vampire. And though announced long ago, NBC’s highest profile new comedy will have Michael J. Fox playing a version of himself, a dad with Parkinson’s in “The Michael J. Fox Show.”



British Police Deny Protecting Jimmy Savile

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Tesla’s Elon Musk Leaves Zuckerberg’s Fwd.us

Technology Industry Lobbying Group Loses Supporters

Elon Musk, a founder of the electric carmaker Tesla and one of the technology industry’s most outspoken exponents of clean energy, has stepped down from a prominent Silicon Valley advocacy group that is pushing for changes to the nation’s immigration laws and that has sponsored advertisements that promote a contentious oil pipeline.

The advocacy group, Fwd.us, is spearheaded by Facebook’s co-founder and chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, and counts many tech industry executives among its supporters. To drum up political support for overhauling immigration law, the group has bankrolled ads for lawmakers who support the Keystone XL oil pipeline, a lightning-rod issue for environmentalists.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Musk’s second company, SpaceX, a rocket manufacturer, confirmed that he was no longer involved with Fwd.us, but declined to elaborate. The news was first reported Friday evening by Reuters.

The Reuters report said that David Sacks, chief executive of Yammer, a social networking company, had also withdrawn support. Neither his office nor Fwd.us returned calls seeking comment.

Fwd.us has been criticized by some environmental groups, though its backers have defended its “innovative tactics” as part of a broader strategy to rewrite immigration law. Fwd.us said it spent in “the seven figures” for three television spots that support senators who play a prominent role in the progress of the immigration bill.

One advertisement supports a plan for border enforcement by Marco Rubio, a Republican. Another supports Lindsey Graham, a Republican who like Mr. Rubio is part of the Gang of Eight that drafted the immigration bill. A third television ad is for Mark Begich, a Democrat from Alaska, where conservative voters are critical of legislation that offers relief to those who immigrate illegally to this country.

The advertisements prompted strong reaction from a coalition of liberal organizations that includes the Sierra Club, the League of Conservation Voters and MoveOn.org. They announced earlier this week that they would suspend buying advertisements on Facebook, which they acknowledged would have little economic impact on the company.

Fwd.us includes people like John Doerr, a venture capitalist who invests in clean technology firms, and Reid Hoffman, an entrepreneur who founded the electronic payment company PayPal with Mr. Musk and Mr. Sacks.

The group has declined to say who gave how much money to the cause, except to list major donors. By Friday afternoon, neither Mr. Musk nor Mr. Sacks were on the roster of contributors.



Privacy Breach on Bloomberg’s Data Terminals

Privacy Breach on Bloomberg’s Data Terminals

A shudder went through Wall Street on Friday after the revelation that Bloomberg News reporters had extracted subscribers’ private information through the company’s ubiquitous data terminals to break news.

The company confirmed that reporters at Bloomberg News, the journalism arm of Bloomberg L.P., had for years used the company’s terminals to monitor when subscribers had logged onto the service and to find out what functions, like the news wire, corporate bond trades or an equities index, they had looked at. Bloomberg terminals, which cost an average of more than $20,000 a year, are found in nearly every banking and trading company.

Bloomberg said the functions that allowed journalists to monitor subscribers were promptly disabled after Goldman Sachs complained that a Bloomberg reporter had, while inquiring about a partner’s employment status, pointed out that the partner had not logged onto his Bloomberg terminal lately.

The incident led to broader concerns about the line at Bloomberg between its lucrative terminal business and the hypercompetitive newsroom, threatening to undermine the credibility of both. In a secretive world that thrives on opacity, traders and financial firms jealously guard every speck of information about their activity to avoid tipping their hand on their trades and investments.

“On Wall Street, anonymity is critically important. Secrecy and the ability to cover one’s tracks is paramount,” said Michael J. Driscoll, a former senior trader at Bear Stearns who now teaches at Adelphi University. He added: “If Bloomberg reporters crossed that line, that’s an issue.”

The news gathering technique appears more widespread than the Goldman incident, which was first reported by The New York Post. A preliminary analysis at Bloomberg revealed that “several hundred” reporters had used the technique, a person briefed on the analysis said. (Bloomberg employs more than 2,400 journalists worldwide. A spokesman declined to comment on the analysis and said no reporters had been fired.)

There are also fears that the monitoring may have gone beyond Wall Street. Banking regulators at the Federal Reserve are examining whether their own employees were subject to tracking by Bloomberg reporters, according to people briefed on the matter. A spokeswoman for the Fed declined to comment.

There are now more than 315,000 Bloomberg terminal subscribers worldwide who rely on the desktop computer for research, trading, communication and a constant stream of financial information and news.

But as it turned out, what the subscribers were doing was not always confidential. Bloomberg reporters used the “Z function” â€" a command using the letter Z and a company’s name â€" to view a list of subscribers at a firm. Then, a Bloomberg user could click on a subscriber’s name, which would take the user to a function called UUID. The UUID function then provided background on an individual subscriber, including contact information, when the subscriber had last logged on, chat information between subscribers and customer service representatives, and weekly statistics on how often they used a particular function. A company spokesman said both of those functions had been disabled in the newsroom.

Terminals never allowed journalists to see specific securities or trades, but even general hints of what users are searching could provide a glimpse into Wall Street’s thinking â€" powerful currency in the competitive world of financial journalism. Daniel L. Doctoroff, chief executive of Bloomberg L.P. and a close confidant to the company’s founder, Michael R. Bloomberg, said in a memo to employees that “client trust is our highest priority and the cornerstone of our business.” Mr. Bloomberg stepped away from day-to-day operations when he became mayor of New York City.

Last month, the company further centralized its data security efforts, including appointing Steve Ross, a senior executive, to the newly created role of client data compliance officer.

“To be clear, the limited customer relationship data previously available to our reporters never included access to our trading, portfolio, monitor, blotter or other related systems or our clients’ messages,” Mr. Doctoroff said. He posted a damage control message to clients on the Bloomberg terminal and blog, calling the reporting practice a “mistake.”

Nathaniel Popper contributed reporting.



CBS to Add 4 Comedies, Including Another From Chuck Lorre

CBS to Add 4 Comedies, Including Another From Chuck Lorre

CBS joined other networks in sending out orders for new series Friday and, for CBS, that list was longer and included some untraditional ideas.

But there were also familiar connections to CBS’s great success in the last decade, led by yet another new comedy from that network’s prime hit-maker, Chuck Lorre, and a long roster of stars with pedigrees, like Robin Williams, Will Arnett, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Josh Holloway and Toni Collette.

CBS will add two new dramas, both breaking CBS’s recent mold by relying on either serialized storylines or sci-fi elements.

The comedies will be highlighted by the new entry from Mr. Lorre (“Two and a Half Men,” “The Big Bang Theory”). This is one is called “Mom,” and Anna Faris (“Entourage”) plays a newly sober young women who moves back to Napa Valley to live with her mother, Allison Janney (“The West Wing”).

Mr. Williams returns to television for the first time since “Mork” to star with Ms. Gellar in a comedy called “Crazy Ones,” about a father-daughter team at an ad agency. It is created by David E. Kelley (“Ally McBeal”).

CBS also has a new comedy from Greg Garcia of “My Name is Earl.” Called “The Millers,” it stars Mr. Arnett as a recently divorced man with parent problems; J.B. Smoove and Beau Bridges are also in the cast.

A fourth new comedy â€" CBS is clearly looking to expand its strength in comedy â€" is called “We Are Men” and it’s about a young guy learning the ropes from older male friends in a rental complex. It stars Kal Penn (“House”) and Tony Shalhoub (“Monk”).

Mr. Holloway of “Lost” returns in a new drama called “Intelligence” about a United States cyberforce that makes use of one man’s special gifts: he has a microchip in his brain that allow him access to the “entire electromagnetic spectrum”; Marg Helgenberger (“C.S.I.”) is co-star.

The other CBS drama, which surely sounds like a serialized show, is “Hostages” which focuses on a family caught in a giant conspiracy. It stars Ms. Collette (“Tara”) and Dylan McDermott (“American Horror Story.”)



CBS to Add 4 Comedies, Including Another From Chuck Lorre

CBS to Add 4 Comedies, Including Another From Chuck Lorre

CBS joined other networks in sending out orders for new series Friday and, for CBS, that list was longer and included some untraditional ideas.

But there were also familiar connections to CBS’s great success in the last decade, led by yet another new comedy from that network’s prime hit-maker, Chuck Lorre, and a long roster of stars with pedigrees, like Robin Williams, Will Arnett, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Josh Holloway and Toni Collette.

CBS will add two new dramas, both breaking CBS’s recent mold by relying on either serialized storylines or sci-fi elements.

The comedies will be highlighted by the new entry from Mr. Lorre (“Two and a Half Men,” “The Big Bang Theory”). This is one is called “Mom,” and Anna Faris (“Entourage”) plays a newly sober young women who moves back to Napa Valley to live with her mother, Allison Janney (“The West Wing”).

Mr. Williams returns to television for the first time since “Mork” to star with Ms. Gellar in a comedy called “Crazy Ones,” about a father-daughter team at an ad agency. It is created by David E. Kelley (“Ally McBeal”).

CBS also has a new comedy from Greg Garcia of “My Name is Earl.” Called “The Millers,” it stars Mr. Arnett as a recently divorced man with parent problems; J.B. Smoove and Beau Bridges are also in the cast.

A fourth new comedy â€" CBS is clearly looking to expand its strength in comedy â€" is called “We Are Men” and it’s about a young guy learning the ropes from older male friends in a rental complex. It stars Kal Penn (“House”) and Tony Shalhoub (“Monk”).

Mr. Holloway of “Lost” returns in a new drama called “Intelligence” about a United States cyberforce that makes use of one man’s special gifts: he has a microchip in his brain that allow him access to the “entire electromagnetic spectrum”; Marg Helgenberger (“C.S.I.”) is co-star.

The other CBS drama, which surely sounds like a serialized show, is “Hostages” which focuses on a family caught in a giant conspiracy. It stars Ms. Collette (“Tara”) and Dylan McDermott (“American Horror Story.”)



In Blow to NBC News, ‘Rock Center’ Is Canceled

In Blow to NBC News, ‘Rock Center’ Is Canceled

Among the cancellations announced this week in anticipation of Monday’s unveiling of a new prime time schedule, surely the hardest to take for NBC News is the closing notice for “Rock Center,” the ambitious newsmagazine program that hoped to stake out new territory for both the news division and its chief anchor, Brian Williams.

NBC announced on Friday afternoon that “Rock Center” would not be back on its schedule in the fall and would have its last program in late June.

The ratings for the program were always at a level that threatened cancellation, though they were not especially lower than those for most of the 10 p.m. dramas the network tried out this season. And, as often is the case, the hourlong show suffered from being moved around the schedule. “Rock Center” was a particular vagabond, suffering through five different time slots on the NBC schedule.

Mr. Williams issued a statement saying: “I’m so proud of the work we did. Our people got shot at for this broadcast. They pulled countless all-nighters. They investigated, cajoled, hustled and cared deeply. They won awards, won the respect of their colleagues and produced great television journalism.”

One of the awards went to Bob Costas for his telephone interview with Jerry Sandusky, the Penn State football coach later convicted in a child-molesting case.

“Rock Center” was partly an effort to find a second outlet for Mr. Williams, who the NBC management felt was underused as just the anchor of the “Nightly News.” The show assembled a prominent group of reporters that included Ted Koppel, Richard Engel, Harry Smith, Meredith Vieira, Ann Curry, Kate Snow and Matt Lauer.

The decision leaves NBC with one newsmagazine, “Dateline,” which is devoted heavily to crime stories.



NBC Adds 3 More Shows, Including an Updated ‘Ironside’

NBC Adds 3 More Shows, Including an Updated ‘Ironside’

The busy rounds of television shows coming and going continued on Friday as NBC added new series to a growing list for fall, while others found themselves facing a last roundup.

NBC announced three more new shows to add to the five released on Thursday. These include a new comedy from Bill Lawrence (“Scrubs”), who will be especially busy in the fall because Fox has already ordered a comedy from him. His NBC show is called “Undateable.” It stars Chris D’Elia (the best thing in “Whitney”) as a hip guy who suddenly has to teach the unsophisticated friends of his roommate the ways of women.

NBC is also bringing back a blast from its distant past with the return of “Ironside,” the old Raymond Burr series, with Blair Underwood now the tough cop running a special unit and proving he really has no handicap.

The third new NBC show is a spinoff of the somewhat successful new drama “Chicago Fire.” This one, “Chicago P.D.,” takes the creator Dick Wolf back to his crime-oriented turf with stories about the many units of the city’s department, like street cops or the intelligence unit.

On the other hand, one of NBCUniversal’s cable units, USA Network, announced on Friday that its hit drama “Burn Notice” would end after its latest season, which begins on June 6.

However, the NBC comedy “Community,” long thought to be headed for cancellation, is now in negotiations to continue, after posting a much improved rating on Thursday night.



Network TV Is Broken. So How Does Shonda Rhimes Keep Making Hits?

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Media Decoder: New Cooking Show on Fox to Feature Children as Chefs

New Cooking Show on Fox to Feature Children as Chefs

How else to tinker with cooking reality shows? How about putting children in the kitchen?

Fox announced on Friday that it had ordered a new reality series called “Junior Masterchef,” which will create a cooking competition for would-be chefs ages 8 to 13.

The show is part of an extended deal Fox is announcing with Gordon Ramsay, the star of many of its cooking franchises, who with this new series will have five reality shows on the network.

At the same time it announced “Junior Masterchef,” Fox said it would extend Mr. Ramsay’s “Hell’s Kitchen” for another season and “Masterchef” (the grown-up version) for two more seasons.

Mr. Ramsay will appear as a judge on “Junior.” His other shows for Fox are “Hotel Hell” and “Kitchen Nightmares.” He will next be seen in the new season of “Hell’s Kitchen,” starting on Monday, and on “Masterchef” starting May 22.



NBC Said to Settle on New Head of News Division

NBC Said to Settle on New Head of News Division

NBC News is on the verge of naming Deborah Turness, the head of Britain’s ITV News, as its next president, according to several people with knowledge of the appointment.

Ms. Turness, if appointed, will be the first woman president of a network television news division in the United States. She will succeed Steve Capus, who stepped down from the position in February after a tenure of nearly eight years.

A spokeswoman for NBC News, a unit of Comcast’s NBCUniversal, declined to comment. Ms. Turness also declined to comment. But others with knowledge of the appointment said that her promotion would be announced as early as Monday. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the appointment publicly.

Ms. Turness’s name first surfaced last month in a Los Angeles Times article that identified her as a candidate. Though she is not widely known in the television news industry in the United States, Ms. Turness has strong credentials; she has worked at ITN, one of the BBC’s main rivals in Britain, for 25 years, and has been the head of ITV News since 2004. Her current title there, editor, is analogous to the title of presidentat the American networks.

When asked about Ms. Turness’s departure, a spokeswoman for ITV News said, “We don’t comment on speculation.”

ITV and NBC News have had a content-sharing relationship for several years; NBC sometimes televises reports from ITV correspondents in Africa and the Middle East.

NBC News, founded in 1940, was the nation’s first producer of television news; it was joined later by ABC and CBS. The news division has had nine presidents in the 73 years since its founding.

Mr. Capus’s departure in February was spurred partly by his frustration with a new management structure set up by Stephen B. Burke, the chief executive of NBCUniversal. That structure, imposed last July, folded NBC News and two cable news channels, MSNBC and CNBC, into a new unit called the NBCUniversal News Group, led by one of Mr. Burke’s top lieutenants, Pat Fili-Krushel. Ms. Turness will report to Ms. Fili-Krushel, according to the people with knowledge of the appointment.