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Everything You Need To Know Before Watching 'House Of Cards' Season 2

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kevin spacey house of cards season 2

Netflix will release season 2 of "House of Cards" Friday.

If you've never watched the Emmy-winning political thriller or haven't had time to catch up, here's a refresher course before all 13 episodes are released.

Warning: Major spoilers ahead.

Kevin Spacey plays House majority Whip Frank Underwood, a manipulative, conniving force in Washington you don’t want to double cross.



After getting the president elected, he’s expecting a big nomination for Secretary of State in return.



Only, it doesn't happen! President Garrett Walker (Michael Gill) elects someone else and Frank takes the betrayal very personal.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How To Block Spoilers For 'House Of Cards' On Facebook And Twitter

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Netflix released the entire second season of "House of Cards" today. The upcoming three-day weekend gives viewers the best opportunity to stream all 13 episodes of Kevin Spacey's vile congressman's continued rise to power.

However, there is one downside to Netflix's binge-watching model. Facebook and Twitter could be rife with spoilers ruining an entire season before eager streamers can sit down and watch the show.

Fortunately, an app called Spoiler Shield helps you block this harmful information that could ruin your weekend.

Here's how you use it.

Download the app and sync it with your Facebook and Twitter accounts.

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Here's the main menu. Click "Set Shields."

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Click on Television. You can also use this app to block spoilers of sports events.

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Scroll down until you see "House of Cards." Swipe to the right.

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Now, go back to Shields and then swipe over to the right. Tap on Twitter.

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This is what a blocked "House of Cards" spoiler will look like. Spoiler Shield lets you surf Twitter and Facebook without having to worry about "House of Cards" getting ruined.

Photo Feb 14, 11 29 11 AM

SEE ALSO: Everything you need to know before you watch the second season of "House of Cards"

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Here's The Gigantic 'House Of Cards' Spoiler That Everyone Is Talking About [WARNING: MASSIVE SPOILERS]

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House of Cards

Warning: This piece contains major spoilers. If you have not yet watched the first episode of the second season of "House of Cards," do NOT read on.


"Did you think I'd forgotten you?" Vice President Frank Underwood says directly to the viewer at the end of Episode 1 of the second season of the Netflix hit "House of Cards."

"Perhaps you hoped I had. Don't waste a breath mourning Ms. Barnes — every kitten grows up to be a cat. They seem so harmless at first — small, quiet, lapping up their saucer of milk. But once their claws get long enough, they draw blood — sometimes, from the hands that feeds them. For those of us climbing to the top of the food chain, there can be no mercy. There is but one rule — hunt, or be hunted."

He smiles.

"Welcome back."

Underwood has just killed Zoe Barnes, the enthusiastic, over-her-head journalist who served as one of the main protagonists in Season 1 of the show. Just like that, Zoe Barnes — who ended up asking one question too many — is gone.

It happens little more than a half-hour into the new season. Underwood meets Barnes in a Metro station, where he is wearing a fedora and glasses to mask his appearance. Barnes asks him if she had unknowingly participated in the murder of Peter Russo. Indeed, she helped contribute — it was Underwood who murdered Russo at the end of Season 1, making it appear as if the troubled former congressman had committed suicide.

But Underwood does not reveal this fact.

"Jesus," he says, dismissively. 

"I want to believe you, Francis—" Barnes starts, chasing him back behind a barrier. But before she can finish her thought, Underwood is there, waiting for her, ready to push her in front of an oncoming train. It's his second cold-blooded murder in a pretty short span.

Those who have seen the British version of "House of Cards" weren't necessarily surprised by this. Francis Urquhart, the "Underwood" character, confesses to a murder in front of the reporter, then throws her off the roof.

Still, it was a daring move for a television series — albeit one that can break a lot of the traditional boundaries because of its unusual, release-all-13-episodes-at-once formula. Mara is popular, and Zoe Barnes was an important — albeit divisive — character.

But her death makes it clear — Frank is in charge, and he'll do anything necessary to get someone out of his way.

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Some Of China's Top Leaders Are Apparently Obsessed With 'House Of Cards'

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The country of China, including some of its top leaders, can't get enough of the Netflix drama "House of Cards,"The Washington Post's William Wan reports.

On Sohu, the Chinese equivalent of Netflix, "House of Cards"has been the No. 1-streamed show since the debut of Season 2 last Friday. Streams of both seasons top Sohu's rankings, ahead of "The Big Bang Theory."

And according to Sohu (via the Post), most of China's 24.5 million views of Season 1 of House of Cards came from government-sector employees and residents of Beijing. The state-run Xinhua News Agency wrote last week that "a large number of government and enterprise executives and opinion leaders also strongly recommend" the show.

One top government official who is reportedly a huge fan of the show is Wang Qishan, the Secretary of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and considered one of the top seven leaders in China. 

From the Post: 

Wang Qishan, one of the seven most powerful leaders in China, is said to be particularly captivated, according to reports in Chinese media and officials with ties to his department, who asked to speak anonymously.

As head of China’s disciplinary committee, Wang is charged with keeping cadres in line and instilling discipline throughout party ranks — a portfolio somewhat similar to that of Underwood, the majority whip in “House of Cards.”

Much of the second season of "House of Cards" revolves around China-heavy plot lines, featuring tension among Vice President Frank Underwood, President Garrett Walker, the Chinese government, and a corrupt Chinese businessman trying to influence the White House.

SEE ALSO: The Gigantic 'House Of Cards' Spoiler That Everyone Is Talking About [WARNING: MASSIVE SPOILERS]

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Kevin Spacey Slams Politicians As 'Bad Actors,' Praises Netflix For 'House Of Cards' Risk

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Kevin Spacey Jon Stewart

Kevin Spacey dropped by "The Daily Show" Tuesday to talk "House of Cards" with Jon Stewart.

While the popular Netflix show debuted its second season last week, Spacey says that most networks initially passed on the show  but he's glad they did.

"It has been a fantastic partnership, Netflix has been great to work with, and I've had the time of my life," Spacey told Stewart, adding that he's always been a believer in streaming media services.

"I've been talking about this happening for about eight years, that one of the companies  it was either going to be Netflix or Hulu or Google or somebody who made zillions of dollars as a portal for entertainment  was going to want to get into the original content business."

Spacey explains that "it made sense to me when we went out with 'House of Cards' — and by the way, we went out to all of the networks  and Netflix was the only one that said 'We believe in you, we believe in Fincher, we like the original British series, and we don't need you to do a pilot, go ahead and do however many you want to do.'"

26 episodes later, Spacey has mastered his role as House majority whip, Frank Underwood, in part thanks to the time he spent researching on Capitol Hill.

Stewart, a fan of the Netflix show, asked Spacey: "When you're that close to the power center of the country, do you feel the darkness?"

"It feels like you're watching performance art a lot of the time," Spacey admitted. "I don't believe them [politicians]. I don't believe what they say. I don't think they are being absolutely sincere. I think it's performance art. And most of them are bad actors ... I think the delusion is often very deep."

Watch the full interview below:

SEE ALSO: Everything You Need To Know Before Watching 'House Of Cards' Season 2

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A Quiet Scandal In ‘House Of Cards’ Could Become A Huge Issue [SPOILERS]

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frank underwood watching porn house of cards season 2Warning: There are some spoilers ahead if you haven't watched season 2 of "House of Cards." 

We need to discuss something huge that happened on the second season of "House of Cards."

I'm not talking about the giant spoiler from episode 1

Near the end of season 2 — in Episode 11 — Vice President Frank Underwood (Kevin Spacey) engages in a threesome with his wife Claire (Robin Wright) and their Secret Service agent, Edward Meechum (Nathan Darrow).

frank underwood meechum house of cardshouse of cards meechum season 2claire house of cards season 2house of cards threesomehouse of cards frank claire season 2

The scene kind of comes out of nowhere. And as quickly as the subject is broached, it gets swept under the rug as if it never occurred.

I bring it up because it isn't the first time the subject of Frank's sexuality has come up on the series. 

During season 1, Episode 8, it was suggested Frank had a relationship of some sort with a former male college classmate, Tim Corbet, at a military college. While Corbet obviously tries to keep the conversation platonic, an intoxicated Underwood tells his old classmate, "I was so drawn to you. ... You meant something to me."

frank and tim house of cards season 1kevin spacey house of cards season 1house of cards season 1 frank and timhouse of cards season 1 tim and frank

It's probably one of the few genuine, tender moments we ever see between Underwood and another character.

The Guardian perceived it as a one-off that we wouldn't see againSlate suggested it was something that could be used against him in the future.

We couldn't agree more with the latter. 

The question of Frank's sexuality feels like so much more than a tangential plot device. The only reason I can imagine it's being brought up again is that it must have a greater significance in the grand scheme of "House of Cards." 

The series is already very open about sexuality. Between its same-sex (Rachel and new character Lisa) and interracial relationships (Jackie and Remy), the show isn't lacking in sexual diversity.

However, Frank's sexuality feels like something bigger.

As a viewer, you're compelled to believe Underwood's undoing will be his two murders. While he's quite meticulous covering them up, he's only casually discreet about frivolous relationships. Texts with Zoe Barnes carelessly floated around even after Underwood became Vice President. Now, this thing with Meechum could easily turn sour in the long run.

Those who have finished the series know that by the season's end Underwood takes over as president of the United States.

Does "House of Cards" want to broach the topic of a gay (or bisexual) commander in chief? Is this where we're going heading into season 3? It seems so. 

frank underwood president house of cards

SEE ALSO: Meet Margot Robbie: The actress whose career has exploded since starring in "The Wolf of Wall Street"

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A Lot Of People Have Already Binge Watched The Entire Season Of 'House Of Cards'

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Did you spend your Presidents' Weekend glued to Netflix, watching the entire 13-episode second season of "House of Cards?" If you did, you're one of about 670,000.

According to data from the firm Procera, about 2% of U.S. subscribers finished the entire second season by the end of last weekend. That works out to about 668,000 people, since Netflix had about 33.4 million subscribers as of last month

"This was for an hour-long show (compared to the shorter form Arrested Development), so that is a huge number," Procera's Vice President of Global Marketing Cam Cullen said of the firm's findings.

More stats:

  • Between 6% and 10% of U.S. subscribers finished at least one episode of the second season last weekend.
  • In Europe, the numbers were similar. Between 7% and 10% of European subscribers finished an episode, with about 1% finishing the entire second season. 
  • In the U.S., subscribers watched an average of three episodes. In Europe, it was five episodes.
  • Four times as many subscribers binge-watched the entire second season when compared to Season 1. 

SEE ALSO: Some Of China's Top Leaders Are Apparently Obsessed With 'House Of Cards'

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'House Of Cards' Puts Season 3 Production On Hold In Hopes Of Snagging Lucrative Maryland Tax Breaks

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House of Cards

Season 3 of Netflix’s "House Of Cards" is holding off on beginning production until mid-June, pending the outcome of two separate bills in the Maryland Legislature that would ensure another season of lucrative state tax breaks for the political drama, which just launched its Season 2 on the streaming service last week.

The Emmy-nominated series, set in Washington, D.C., was officially renewed for a third season earlier this month.

Series producer Media Rights Capital, which planned to start shooting Season 3 in early spring, received more than $11 million in Maryland tax credits for Season 1, and Season 2′s incentives could reach $15 million, the Wall Street Journal reported today.

We hear that MRC is seeking a tax credit for Season 3 in line with Season 2′s $15 million, which as of now is impossible as Maryland’s current cap is $7.5 million. The two bills, which are languishing in committee, would raise the ceiling to $11 million or $18.5 million.

Deadline has confirmed that MRC has sent a letter to several politicians, including Gov. Martin O’Malley, regarding the bills. The letter (read it in full below) pulls no punches in saying that the incentives must be approved if the production were to stay in the state. “In the event sufficient incentives do not become available, we will have to break down our stage, sets and offices and set up in another state,” said the letter, signed by Charlie Goldstein, MRC’s SVP Television Production. The issue has been stirring a heated debate in the Maryland Legislature. “Is it possible that they would just leave after we gave them $31 million?” Del. C. William Frick, D-Montgomery, said during a contentious hearing last week, according to WSJ.

According to the Maryland Film Office, the 130 days of production on Season 1 and Season 2 of "House Of Cards" helped contribute to film and TV’s estimated $197.2 million in economic impact in fiscal year 2013. Season 1 “resulted in the local hiring of 2,193 Maryland crew, cast and extras, and the production purchased or rented goods or services from 1,814 Maryland vendors,” the office says on its website. Maryland also hosts the production of HBO’s White House comedy "Veep."

Here’s the full letter from MRC:

Honorable Governor Martin O’Malley 
State House 
100 State Circle 
Annapolis, MD 21401 

Dear Governor O’Malley,

Thank you again for taking the time to visit the "House of Cards" set last spring to announce the enhancement of the Maryland Film Production Employment Act. The passage of the legislation allowed MRC and the production to remain in Maryland. We appreciate your strong support for our business and for recognizing the jobs and economic impact it brings to the State of Maryland.

We know that the General Assembly is in session, and understand legislation must be introduced to increase the program’s funding. MRC and "House of Cards" had a wonderful experience over the past two seasons and we want to stay in Maryland. We are ready to assist in any way possible to help with the passage of the bill.

In the meantime I wanted you to be aware that we are required to look at other states in which to film on the off chance that the legislation does not pass, or does not cover the amount of tax credits for which we would qualify. I am sure you can understand that we would not be responsible financiers and a successful production company if we did not have viable options available.

We wanted you to be aware that while we had planned to begin filming in early spring, we have decided to push back the start date for filming until June to ensure there has been a positive outcome of the legislation. In the event sufficient incentives do not become available, we will have to break down our stage, sets and offices and set up in another state.

Thank you again for the support and assistance that "House of Cards" has received from the State of Maryland and your agencies, Baltimore City, as well as Harford County, the Maryland Film Industry Coalition, the unions, and Maryland’s citizens and thousands of small businesses, I hope this legislative session will be successful and that you will be able to visit "House of Cards" and spend time with our cast and crew once again.

Charlie Goldstein 
Senior Vice President, Television Production

Cc:
Dominick Murray, Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development 
Hannah Byron, Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development 
Jack Gerbes, Maryland Film Office 
Debbie Dorsey, Baltimore Film Office 

SEE ALSO: A Lot Of People Have Already Binge Watched The Entire Season Of 'House Of Cards'

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Networks, Netflix, And What Makes 'House Of Cards' A 'Hit' Show In Today's TV Landscape

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If you live somewhere with easy access to Variety or an I-95 exit, it might be impossible to imagine finding somebody who hasn't heard of (or hasn't sat, bleary-eyed, ingesting the entirety of) House of Cards, the sleek and entertaining political drama on Netflix. According to YouGov's Brand Index, a rough measurement of pop culture attention, the quantifiable buzz around Netflix reached an all-time high last weekend, when the second season premiered.

But how many people actually watched the show?

Netflix doesn't share (and doesn't care about) live audiences, and neither do its advertisers, because there aren't any. So rather than rough Nielsen figures, we have to go by even rougher broadband analytics. But here's our best guess: "Anywhere from 6-10% of subscribers watched at least one episode of House of Cards," Procera Networks found, and in the U.S., "the average number of episodes watched during the weekend was three." Fascinatingly: There was no appreciable increase in Netflix’s overall traffic. 

Given that Netflix has just under 30 million domestic subscribers, that means that two to three million people watched House of Cards in its opening weekend. (A previous Procera estimate went as high as 16 percent of Netflix subs, or nearly 5 million.)

Two million, three million, five million people. Whatever the real number is, that's an impressive audience for a streaming network supposedly cultivating a long tail of entertainment. But is it an enormous audience for a supposed "hit" show? 

Approximately 115 million households own a TV and about 100 million pay for a cable subscription. So we should expect typical TV audiences to be higher than Netflix. NCIS, the Navy-police juggernaut that attracts its gray viewership like boomer catnip, draws an absurd 17 million viewers a week. But compareHouse of Cards to an average show on a broadcast network. According to Nielsen, CBS ended last year with an average prime-time delivery of 12 million nightly viewers. 

It's awkward to compare streaming estimates to Nielsen estimates, but it seems safe to say the average CBS program has at least twice times as many viewers as House of Cards.

There are a couple interesting points to make off this observation:

1. Popularity is weird. 

Popularity has become both easier to measure and harder to measure at the same time precisely because there are so many metrics. The most essayed-about show might be Girls. The most tweeted-about show is, statistically, Pretty Little Liars. The most talked-about, right now, is House of Cards. But the most popular show (which is barely essayed-about, rarely tweeted-about, and hardly talked-about) is NCIS, whose audience is literally as big as those three other shows—combined ... times two.

In a wonderful essay on this, our age of pluralist popularity, Adam Sternbergh wrote, "we’ve turned off Top 40 and loaded up Spotify; we’ve clicked away from NBC and fired up Netflix." Yes and no. "We"—Sternbergh, me, and everyone we know—might have clicked away from broadcast. But even stuck in what appears to be structural audience decline, CBS still pulls down ratings that make Netflix hits seem like quaint Acela-corridor niche series. The sliver of pop culture we've slid under the media microscope bears little relation to what's sampled by the rest of the country. 

2. Netflix and HBO are lucky...

Netflix and HBO need original programs, because their catalogue of movies and TV shows doesn't differentiate them sufficiently from Showtime or Amazon. But on a show-by-show basis, it actually does not matter how many people watch House of Cards (or True Detective). And, indeed, far fewer people do watch them than we'd imagine.

Broadcast networks, however, need massive audiences to watch their shows because they live and die off adjacent advertising, which is priced in viewers. Netflix and HBO aren't selling eyeballs. They're selling subscriptions. They don't need to obsessively target the throng assembling daily to gobble up crime procedurals and zombies, and it's no coincidence that the programs selected to please a small, educated audiences are celebrated by the small, educated TV writers who ignore what everybody else is watching.

3. ... broadcast is not lucky. 

The mega-cable bundle—that is, the regular cable package plus premium channels like HBO plus over-the-top services like Netflix—supports a pluralistic audience by allowing different channels to specialize in different audiences. According to conversations I've had with network executives, this has a trickle-down effect, as networks seeking specific audiences build specific reputations that become crystallized within the artistic community. Showrunners selling boomer-candy crime procedurals go straight to CBS; writers of juicy romantic dramas go directly to ABC; complex story-lines attract bids from AMC, HBO, and Netflix.

The outcome is sort of weird. Pop culture critics, who tend to be attracted to the thing that's most popular, mostly ignore the most popular shows on TV, which are lower-brow fare crafted to get high ratings. Meanwhile, a handful of networks whose business models rely on subscriptions rather than advertising amass all the most-talked-about shows on television. And that's how the people reading about TV and the people watching TV live in two separate worlds. 

SEE ALSO: A Lot Of People Have Already Binge Watched The Entire Season Of 'House Of Cards'

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15 Midseason TV Shows You Should Be Watching

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Mad Men

The Olympics and Oscars are over. 

Now, a handful of new and returning TV shows are competing for your attention. 

If you're wondering what to watch, we've looked over both the new and returning midseason series.

From comedies to dark, gritty thrillers and returning favorites, here's what is worth your time.

15. "Review" (Comedy Central)

Premieres: Thursday, March 6 at 10 p.m.

What it's about: Andy Daly ("Eastbound & Down") stars as critic Forrest MacNeil, who is out to review life itself from hot-button topics like racism to sleeping with a celebrity.

Why you should watch: The half-hour comedy (co-created by Daly) not only looks hilarious with its mock-u-mentary feel and absentminded host, but could also be a great satire of life's absurdities.

Watch the trailer



14. "About A Boy" (NBC)

Air dates: Tuesdays at 9 p.m.

What it's about: Based on the Nick Hornby book, "About A Boy" tells the story of Will Freeman (David Walton), a single guy without a care in the world. That is until a single mom (Minnie Driver) and her young son (Benjamin Stockham) move in next door, possibly forcing Will into adulthood (or possibly even further back into childhood).

Why you should watch: The sitcom has a wonderful cast (you may remember Walton as Dr. Sam from his stint on Fox's "New Girl"), is from executive producer Jason Katims ("Parenthood,""Friday Night Lights"), and if the series is anything like the book, it's bound to have as much heart as it does laughs. 

Watch the trailer



13. "Hannibal" (NBC)

Air dates: Fridays at 10 p.m.

Where we left off: Things aren't going well for criminal profiler Will Graham (Hugh Dancy) who is locked away for crimes committed by psychiatrist Hannibal Lector (Mads Mikkelsen). The only problem? No one knows Lector's the one behind a bunch of grisly murders. The ones who do get close enough to the truth don't live long enough to bring Hannibal to justice.

Why you should watch: The Internet goes absolutely crazy for Mikkelsen and Dancy, and it's not difficult to see why. The chemistry between the two is fantastic, and the two are friends off screen as well. We have to mention the team who is running the show's social media — and Tumblr. They do a phenomenal job of knowing their audience and making them hunger for more.

If you're not convinced, "Hannibal" has also been called "the best drama on network TV."

Watch the trailer



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Serial TV Shows May Be The Best 'Movies' Of The Future

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There were two McConaugheys broadcast on Sunday night.

One was the McConaughey honored for his portrayal of a real-life AIDS victim turned treatment advocate, for which he shed fifty pounds and (symbolically) years of critical bad will.

It was a comeback story as predictable as any Hollywood ending.

The other, far more interesting and less predictable McConaughey was tucked into the premium world of HBO in the form of True Detective’s Rust Cohle, where each week he delivers free-form philosophical jargon at just above a whisper and performs oh-so-calculated-yet-mesmerizing actorly business with only the end of a cigarette and a six pack of beer.

The hive mind has credited True Detective for making an invisible supporting push toward McConaughey’s win in the form of a “reverse Norbit effect,” legitimizing him as a strong performer outside the clichéd obviousness of a recognition like this. But as critical and fan communities show a much stronger collective love for True Detective than they did for the supposed apex of McConaughey’s well-heeled comeback, I’m not convinced that True Detective and work like it is simply another gear in the machine of an industry’s collective good will for a once-dismissed actor.

Even with a forecast of movies that promise inventiveness and risk, serial television looks to dominate the efforts and imagination of filmmakers for the near future.

There’s been plenty written about this supposed golden age of television (even, regrettably, by myself). Although we hesitate to admit so in a hyperbolic, Netflix-binge-enabling TV culture that sees Breaking Bad’s lionized status as an opinion-of-fact, quality television has been growing tiresome.

Quality TV has become exactly what it formerly relieved us from: formula. You can choose one of the following: stories of morally ambiguous to morally vacant men easily emasculated in their regionally-and/or historically specific environments, an elaborate supernatural world that extends and reinvents a familiar fantastic genre, or an initially engrossing mystery that quickly runs out of steam as showrunners sheepishly admit they never had answers in mind to the compelling questions they posed.

Organized as miniseries or a threaded high concept not beholden to a season-spanning narrative arc, programs like True DetectiveTop of the Lake, and American Horror Story instead reside comfortably somewhere between a feature film and a television series, allowing their narratives to expand outward while remaining selective in scope. This prevents such shows from falling into a great many traps that befall seasons-long series, like the pressure to always amplify the stakes or tell a story well past its natural conclusion. In regards to the mystery arc alone, True Detective is poised to avoid wholesale the problems of The Killing by admitting that, yeah, perhaps a single mystery shouldn’t last past one season.

This would mean nothing to cinema or cinephiles if so many new serial programs weren’t helmed from start to finish by notable filmmakers. Under the gaze of Sin Nombre and Jane Eyre-helmer Cary Fukunaga for all eight of its first season episodes, True Detective has already been credited as the most cinematic show on TV, employing stunning aerial shots and other complex technical maneuvers like anambitious long take, all typically alien to the more streamlined economic schedule of television shooting. (The show has even been labeled too cinematic.)

frank underwood president house of cards

While House of Cards staged a prestigious coming out of television after television, inaugurated with David Fincher’s legitimizing presence for its first two episodes, True Detective devotes its entire season to the co-authorship of one director and one writer (creator Nic Pizzolatto). And the serial format itself makes room for the film actors’ schedules, allowing the occasional movie star or character actor to see a narrative through without worrying about the potential 100-episode prison of success.

It sounds cliché, but serial TV can often feel like long-form cinema. Jane Campion’s 7-part miniseries Top of the Lake, for instance, is an unmistakably Campion work, complete with a complex female lead slyly laboring opposite a labyrinthine male dominated system. Set in her native New Zealand, Top of the Lake is arguably Campion’s best work since the Oscar-nominated The Piano, an accomplishment complete with a strange, beguiling performance from Holly Hunter as the esoteric overseer of an idyllic women-only camp.

One thing is certain about Top of the Lake that distinguishes it from the TV landscape around it: it sports the authorial signature of a movie director, not a showrunner. This is not a qualitative distinction, but an observation about how Campion uses the medium of television differently from, say, Vince Gilligan and Matthew Weiner. Top of the Lake is unquestionably the best film of last year that never screened in theaters.

Kevin Spacey, whose career accompanied so many great movies of the 1990s, struggled in the 21st century until he found a renewed, revitalized home on a show meant for your computer.

While not embracing series, perhaps talented filmmakers are likewise moving to serial television because therein lie possibilities that they can’t—or can no longer—achieve in film. Such certainly seems to be the case with the extended retirement of Steven Soderbergh, whose forthcoming 10-episode Cinemax miniseries The Knick sports Clive Owen, a score by Cliff Martinez, and more than enough blood from early 20th century medical care to make any movie studio head wince.

Awards make a lot of arbitrary distinctions in terms of what does and does not qualify for consideration. The Oscar’s Foreign Language category is a paradigm for the bureaucracy of accolade season. But perhaps in future years, it might even seem that by defining movies as self-contained projects that show in theaters, we’re missing some of the best work of cinematic imaginations. This isn’t without precedent. Ingmar Bergman’s Fanny and Alexander, whose three-hour US release took home four Oscars thirty years ago, originally aired as a four-part, six-hour production for Swedish television.

And with titles like The Perils of PaulineFantomas, and Les Vampires that had audiences returning to the edges of their seats each week, serial filmmaking itself predated the existence of feature films, much less television. It was simply no longer quite so central to the filmmaking experience by the time awards ceremonies became an established annual custom.

Perhaps it’s time we make room for the fact that, occasionally, the best movies come in parts.

SEE ALSO: Matthew McConaughey Confirms He Won't Return For 'True Detective' Season 2

MORE: 15 Midseason TV Shows You Should Be Watching

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This Maryland Politician Pulled A Frank Underwood Move On 'House Of Cards'

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The battle between the production company behind the Netflix original series "House of Cards" and the state of Maryland finally came to a head last week, when Maryland's House of Delegates pulled a move that would make Frank Underwood proud.

It began late last month when Charlie Goldstein, the senior vice president of Media Rights Capital, sent a letter to Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, threatening to leave the state if the show was not provided with millions of dollars more in tax credits for which it believes it should qualify. 

In the letter, Goldstein wrote that the company would "break down [their] stage, sets and offices and set up in another state."

However, one Maryland delegate came up with a drastic plan to keep that from happening. Delegate Bill Frick introduced an amendment to a budget bill that would allow Maryland to seize the production company's property under eminent domain in the event it leaves the state.

Frick said the move was inspired by the style of politics depicted on "House of Cards" and by the show's ruthless protagonist, Frank Underwood, who is played by Kevin Spacey. He told Business Insider, he thought, "How would Frank Underwood respond?" Frick said his eminent domain plan was the "most dramatic" thing he could think of to counter MRC's threat.

Frick's amendment does not specifically target the show in its language, but "House of Cards" would be the only production to which it would apply. The amendment would only permit the state to use eminent domain powers to buy or condemn property owned by a film company that received more than $10 million in tax credits if it leaves the state. According to The Washington Post, "House of Cards" has been given $26.6 million in tax credits, which would make it the only show filmed in Maryland that would qualify.

For now, the future of Frick's amendment is unclear. Though the House of Delegates approved Frick's amendment by voice vote, Maryland's Senate doesn't seem to be on the same page. In fact, the Senate recently voted 45-1 to increase the tax credits available to production companies to $18.5 million annually. The House's Ways and Means Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing on that provision this Wednesday.

For his part, Frick said his objective is simply to keep "House of Cards" in Maryland — at a minimal cost to taxpayers. 

"Some people have told me it's a 'gangster move,'" Frick told Business Insider. "I don't know about that. But I think it was definitely a bit of hardball" to an original threat he said was done in "extremely bad faith."

Frick also said he's not worried about facing the kind of deadly retaliation Underwood has used on his enemies as a result of this move

"Fortunately, Mr. Underwood is a fictional character," Frick said.

The production company did not respond to a request for comment on Friday.


NOW WATCH: The Truth About 'The Most Interesting Man In The World' 

 

SEE ALSO: How To Drive A $300,000 Ferrari

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Here's How To Calculate The Amount Of Time You've Wasted Watching TV

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Final TV calculator

If you've ever wondered how much time you've wasted watching your favorite TV shows, a new website can calculate just how long you've spent in front of the tube.

"Tiii.me" allows you to not just figure out how much time you spend binge-watching, say, over a weekend, but rather over your entire life.

It does this by calculating the running-time of your favorite shows, from "House of Cards" to "SportsCenter," and adding the collective time of each via the amount of seasons.

This is how it works:

Input one of your favorite shows on the site. It can be anything from "Jeopardy" to "Community."

TV calculator input

Once you've entered a show, choose how many seasons you've watched. If you gave up on "The Simpsons" after season 10, you can adjust back.TV Calculator   The Simpsons

Once the show and season are input, the website calculates the time "wasted." All 26 seasons of "The Simpsons" account for nearly 12 days. TV amount   TV calculator

The more shows you add, the larger your number grows.TV calculator Curb

You can add as many shows as you like until you find out just how much time you've spent watching TV (for me, it's 3 full months).Final TV calculator

Once you've figured out just how much time you've actually wasted, you can share with your friends.Twitter TV calculator

You can find out how much time you've wasted watching your favorite TV shows here.

SEE ALSO: Amazon Just Green-Lighted These 6 Shows

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The Director Of The NSA Will Be A Character In The Next Season Of 'House Of Cards'

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House of CardsHouse of Cards Season Three will involve the NSA — or at least an NSA director — according to a casting notice sent to SAG-AFTRA actors in the Baltimore area, where the show is shot. According to the Baltimore Sun, the show is looking for a male or female aged 45-55 years old of any ethnicity. 

Of course, the real NSA chief position was recently vacated by Gen. Keith Alexander, who stepped down in March (and replaced by Michael Rogers) after what was a pretty tough year of defending the spy agency against a series of revelations based on documents from whistleblower Edward Snowden. 

For instance: did you know that the NSA has been collecting the audio of virtually every phone conversation going through the Bahamas? It's true! That's a new revelation from earlier on Monday, over at the Intercept. 

Anyway, here's the full listing, via the Baltimore Sun. You'll notice that the show is also casting for a series of reporters and editors, which means we have even more of the show's trademark highly-accurate depictions of life as a DC journalist to look forward to: 
 

Kimberly Skyrme Casting (email address at end of post) is seeking talent for House of Cards Season 3


When: Shooting availability: June 12 -July 15, 2014

Audition Availability: Please select top 3 choices to Kimberly Skyrme Casting.

10:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Monday, May 19 (every 20 minutes)

10 a.m.-6 p.m., Tuesday, May 20 (every 15 minutes)

10 a.m.-4 p.m., Wednesday, May 21 (every 15 minutes)

Seeking performers able to portray the following:

· ER DOCTOR: MALE or FEMALE: 38-43, harried and tired

· REPORTER-SUSAN: FEMALE: 35-55 years old, open ethnicity

· REPORTER-GEOFF: MALE: 35-55 years old, open ethnicity

· PHOTOGRAPHER: MALE: 42-48 years old, open ethnicity. Photography experience essential.

· COLONEL: MALE: 50-60 years old, open ethnicity, military

· NSA DIRECTOR: MALE or FEMALE: 45-55 years old, open ethnicity

· CHAIRMAN: MALE: 50-60 years old, part of senate

· SENATOR TORN: MALE: 58-62 years old, Southern senator

· SENATOR EVERETT: FEMALE: 45-55 years old, academic

· DETECTIVE SMITH: MALE: 35-48 years old, open ethnicity, blue collar.

· BETTE: FEMALE: 32-36 years old , open ethnicity, good with hands, smart, pretty, capable

Submission/Audition Instructions:

Please be selective and submit for each role that you feel you are suitable for. You must send one submission per role. Include the following subject line for your email: “HOC3: 301 & 302 - ROLE: insert role TALENT NAME: insert name”

Kimberly Skyrme Casting will search the e-mails submissions based on the subject line so PLEASE follow the instructions properly. For consideration, please email --------@gmail.com.

SEE ALSO: This Maryland politician pulled a Frank Underwood move on 'House Of Cards'

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Hillary Clinton Would Rather Talk About 'House Of Cards' Than Monica Lewinsky

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hillary clinton people

In a new interview with "People" magazine, Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton opened up — sort of.

For example, when it came to the dark political drama "House of Cards," Clinton excitedly exclaimed that she and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, "totally binge-watched the first season." 

Part of the Netflix series' appeal, she said, was "a little bit of the, 'Oh, my gosh, I can't believe we can just sit here and do this' and 'We're only going to watch one episode, oh, let's watch another. Okay, well, we have time, we're not going anywhere, let's watch a third.' I know that sounds kind of devoid of content."

However, Clinton was far less forthcoming when she was asked about Monica Lewinsky, who recently wrote about her affair with Clinton's husband. Clinton was quoted telling "People" it is time to "move on" from the issue. The magazine pressed and asked Clinton about her reported "narcissistic loony toon" insult of Lewinsky after the affair became public.

"I'm not going to comment on what did and didn't happen," Clinton said, adding, "I think everybody needs to look to the future."

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Russia Refused To Let 'House Of Cards' Film In The UN Security Council Chamber

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house of cards kevin spacey

Vladimir Putin's Russian government has been busy with international affairs lately. I don't mean large-scale issues like the sudden invasion of Crimea or pulling natural gas pipelines into China. These are smaller, more-focused interventions with specific companies in Putin's crosshairs. Russia's latest target? Digital video maven Netflix.

Only a few weeks ago, Russia condemned American agriculture giants Monsanto and Dow Chemical as terrorist organizations. In fact, when Russia banned genetically modified crops from being exported into Russia, that bill's co-author, Kirill Cherkasov, said that GMO producers like Monsanto are worse than terrorists: "The consequences are much worse. And punishment should be proportionate to the crime."

Not that investors are taking the Russian posturing too seriously. Dow Chemical shares have handily beaten the market in 2014, and Monsanto has posted a recent surge, Russian protests notwithstanding.

Shutting down the House

To follow up on these GMO objections, Russian diplomats just meddled in Netflix's affairs. In the third season of Netflix original series House of Cards, the producers wanted to shoot a few key scenes on location in the U.N. Security Council's chambers. The Secretary General's office had already approved the request, with the caveat that filming must take place in the middle of summer, the dead of night, and only on weekends, to boot. This way, the normal operations of the Security Council would most likely not be affected.

But "most likely" wasn't good enough for the Russians. According to Foreign Policy, the Russian U.N. delegation put the kibosh on Netflix's production plans. Citing the need to have this chamber available at all times in case of an emergency meeting, permanent Council member Russia simply vetoed the approval.

Netflix and production partner Media Rights Capital may still be able to shoot some scenes in other parts of the iconic U.N. complex, but the Security Council's famed horseshoe table is off limits for series lead Kevin Spacey and friends.

The political cynic in me wonders why Putin's crew is so worried about a global conflict erupting in August. What do they know that I don't? But there's also a perfectly reasonable rationale for this veto.

Sure, letting Netflix into these hallowed chambers might raise the United Nations' public profile a bit. Any exposure is good exposure, right? And it's possible that Media Rights and Netflix might be willing to pay good money for access to this premium location. So that's the upside.

Not a flattering picture

On the downside, House of Cards has a tendency to make everyone in it look bad. Spacey's purported hero is downright evil sometimes, and creepily selfish, even at his best. There's a good chance that fictional Council representatives and, therefore, the office itself, would come out dirty on the other side of the suggested pseudo-marketing move.

Moreover, it could be the start of a slippery slope. If Cards were allowed to shoot an episode or two at the horseshoe, what's stopping the Homeland or Newsroom crews from asking for the same consideration? Worse, maybe Scandal 's producers would come knocking next. Heck, why not put the apocalyptic season finale of The Walking Dead in the Security Council?

I'm reaching here, of course, but you get my point. Let's say that House of Cards broke the ice, making the Council a fairly regular location for high-budget drama productions. Sooner or later, some unlucky TV crew will bump into a real Council-worthy disaster, and make more political waves than entertainment history. And even if that doesn't happen, a gradual media invasion would surely undermine the stature of this influential office.

Besides, it isn't hard to work around the lack of real locations in this digital era. Netflix is just losing a fancy feather in its cap, on its way back to the green screen for another mostly digital composition scene. What... you thought the Oval Office scenes were shot in the actual White House? Nope -- try a studio space in Baltimore. Doing the same for the third season's Security Council scenes will just be another minor hassle, not a deal breaker.

House of Cards will work around this minor setback, Putin gets another turn in the global spotlight (albeit in a strange light), and the Security Council's integrity is intact. Everybody wins.

So Putin and his administration may get a lot of things wrong. This time, the seemingly draconian veto of an American company's business request simply makes sense. And I say that as a Netflix shareholder myself.

Anders Bylund owns shares of Netflix. The Motley Fool recommends and owns shares of Netflix. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days.

We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

SEE ALSO: The Director Of The NSA Will Be A Character In The Next Season Of 'House Of Cards'

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Netflix Nominated For 31 Emmys — More Than Twice As Many As Last Year

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house of cards

The complete list of nominations for the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards were just announced, and streaming studio Netflix is leading the charge with 31 total nominations.

Netflix was nominated for 14 Emmys last year and won three, including David Fincher's Best Director win for "House of Cards."

A majority of the nominations come from Netflix originals "House of Cards" and "Orange Is The New Black."

"House of Cards" is up for 13 Emmys, with nominations for Outstanding Drama Series in addition to Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright's nominations for Outstanding Actor and Actress In A Drama Series.

Director David Fincher is again up for Outstanding Directing In A Drama Series, and writer Beau Willimon is up for Outstanding Writing For A Drama Series.

"Orange Is The New Black" is close behind with 12 total Emmy nominations, including nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series, Outstanding Writing For A Comedy Series and Outstanding Directing For A Comedy Series.

"Orange Is The New Black" star Taylor Schilling is also nominated for Outstanding Lead Actress In A Comedy Series.

The winners of the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards will be announced August 25 during the live broadcast on NBC.

You can check out the complete list of nominations over at the official website here.

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Congressman Paul Ryan Hates 'House Of Cards'

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AP338927513773Washington, D.C. may be obsessed with the political drama "House of Cards" on Netflix, but Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) is not one of them.

"I watched the first couple of episodes until he cheated on his wife with that reporter. It turned my stomach so much that I just couldn’t watch it anymore," Ryan told Parade Magazine in an interview published Friday.

Ryan was of course referring to the character of Frank Underwood, an ambitious Washington insider played by actor Kevin Spacey. In the series, now in its second season, Underwood gets romantically involved with reporter Zoe Barnes, among many other diversions from ethical behavior.

"His behavior was so reprehensible, and it hit too close to home because he was a House member, that it just bothered me too much. And what I thought is, it makes us all look like we’re like that," Ryan said in the interview.

While Ryan may be bothered by the show, a large number of Americans have continued watching. Soon after the second season of the show came out, a huge amount of people binge-watched the 13 new episodes over President's Day weekend in February.

A number of congressmen even starred in a parody video that month, where they delivered lines straight from Underwood's mouth.

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Kevin Spacey Is Making $500,000 Per Episode For 'House Of Cards'

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frank underwood president house of cards

There's a big reason Kevin Spacey made the jump to Netflix.

According to a new salary report from TV Guide, Spacey is making $500,000 an episode for his lead role on the Emmy-winning political thriller "House of Cards."

TV Guide reports that number includes producer fees and profit participation.

Season 2 of the series, which launched in February, had 13 episodes. That puts the actor's salary at $6.5 million. 

The figure places Spacey into an elite club of network stars who make over $500,000 per episode. According to TV Guide, it includes Mark Harmon for "NCIS" ($525,000), "Two and a Half Men" actors Jon Cryer ($650,000) and Ashton Kutcher ($750,000), and "The Big Bang Theory" stars Jim Parsons, Kaley Cuoco, and Johnny Galecki, who netted $1 million per-episode salaries. 

Spacey plays a ruthless democratic house whip, Frank Underwood, who strategizes his way to the top of the White House.

"House of Cards" received 13 Emmy nods for Season 2, including Outstanding Lead Actor (Spacey), Outstanding Lead Actress (Robin Wright), and Outstanding Drama Series.

TV Guide predicts the streaming service could eventually pay Spacey a $1 million salary for his role.

"House of Cards" has been renewed for Season 3, which is expected to air on Netflix in 2015.

SEE ALSO: Chelsea Handler is reportedly making $10 million for her new Netflix deal

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'House Of Cards' Had The Perfect Response To Its Emmy Loss

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If you were watching the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards tonight, you already know that Netflix's House of Cards didn't win. Not long after the broadcast wrapped up, Netflix posted this video, which has House of Cards character Doug Stamper making a phone call...

 "Jim, it's Doug Stamper. I thought we had a deal." 

While some channels might like to follow up a string of award wins with a fun celebratory video that acknowledges their series' victories, Netflix has always been all about doing things their own way, and that includes having a funny video on deck to point out their non-win for Outstanding Drama Series this year. While House of Cards certainly deserved the spot it earned among the nominees, the excellent political drama had some tough competition and it didn't win the big prize. As you can see, Stamper is not happy about it. 

Played by Michael Kelly, House of Cards' Doug Stamper is a character who gets stuff done. And in Netflix's video, it's implied that he had House of Cards' Emmy situation locked down. Apparently not, as House of Cards didn't manage to beat out Breaking Bad for Outstanding Drama Series. 

Doug Stamper House of CardsHouse of Cards was nominated a total of 13 times this year, beating out the 9 nominations it earned in 2013. But it came up short in the wins. Last year, the Netflix drama won three Emmys. This year, it secured just one, for Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series at the Creative Arts Emmy Awards. Among the nominations it earned in 2014 but didn't win: Outstanding Drama Series, Lead Actor (Kevin Spacey), Lead Actress (Robin Wright), Guest Actor (Reg E. Cathey) and Guest Actress (Kate Mara). It was also up for Writing, Directing and Casting, among other categories. You can view the list of Primetime Emmy winners here

While House of Cards may not have come out on top this year, Netflix has more than proven to be a worthy contender at the awards shows. Not only did House of Cards make the list of nominees numerous times, Orange is the New Black scored nearly as many nominations in the comedy categories. The prison-set dramedy missed the Outstanding Comedy Series award -- losing out to Modern Family -- but it did win for Outstanding Casting, as well as Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy (Uzo Aduba) and Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy series. Those three awards were handed out at the Creative Arts Emmy Awards. View that list of winners here

House of Cards was renewed for a third season earlier this year, and we expect to see Season 3 on Netflix next year. 

SEE ALSO: Jimmy Fallon Steals Stephen Colbert's Emmy After Gwen Stefani Flubs 'The Colbore Report'

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