Arts & Entertainment TV Interviews

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  • The man behind the Slayer

    "Buffy" creator Joss Whedon talks about why Buffy and Angel couldn't be together, how Willow might have stayed straight, and the end of the series that redefined cult TV.
  • Why does everybody love "Raymond"?

    Because its stories and cast make it one of the best, and funniest, sitcoms on TV. Creator Phil Rosenthal talks about the success of his show as it nears its final season.
  • Black to the future

    Director Isaac Julien talks about "BaadAsssss Cinema," his Independent Film Channel tribute to the outrageous fashions, foot-high Afros and subversive politics of '70s blaxploitation movies.
  • "What drugs have not destroyed, the war on them has"

    David Simon, creator of the searing new HBO series "The Wire," on why even the best cop shows are phony and our anti-drug mania amounts to a permanent war against the underclass.
  • From public access to network sitcom

    Co-creator Dan Milano talks about the long, exceedingly strange trip of "Greg the Bunny."
  • A day in the life

    Joel Surnow is the man responsible for the thrilling, masochistic television show "24." He has no idea how it's going to end.
  • The men behind the curtain

    Three actors from "Oz" talk about surviving the slammer, prison politics and the brutish force of the most overlooked show on television.
  • The gang's all here

    Four of "The Sopranos'" most memorable character actors have a sit-down on working with James Gandolfini, their favorite lines and where to find the best braciola.
  • "The enemies are capitalists"

    In a comic (sort of) new series, the man who built "The X-Files" on paranoia about government finds something new to worry about.
  • Beyond the fringe

    Louis Theroux, host of "Weird Weekends," talks about cutting across cultural margins, straight into the worlds of porn stars and roller-skating survivalists.
  • The adventures of Sir Peter Ustinov

    The actor, novelist, playwright and director talks about what it was like to follow in Mark Twain's footsteps -- literally.
  • Give Pokimon a chance

    Ten-year-old Sean Levine talks about the limitless potential of Pokimon.
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