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  • Entertainment Weekly
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  • The cover of the 15 November 1991 issue features The Addams Family characters Gomez and Morticia from the 1991 feature film.
  • Entertainment Weekly is a magazine covering film, television, music, books, Broadway theaters and popular culture.
  • Entertainment Weekly (sometimes abbreviated as EW) is a weekly subscription magazine that often publishes articles about Lost in their magazine and on their website. Entertainment Weekly covers mostly film and television stories, usually not covering stories about celebrity life, like magazines similar to People. Occasionally, the magazine may cover an outrageous story about a celebrity. The launch of Entertainment Weekly was very successful. The attracted audiences are usually young readers and women. It addresses TV ratings, ticket sales, the cost of production, and other statistics of the entertainment industry. Entertainment Weekly is indeed published weekly. It was first published in 1990, and in 2003, the average weekly circulation of the magazine was about 1,700,000 copies. In each
  • This page gives you the opportunity to redirect to the wiki covering this topic or stay on the Crossgen Comics Database. Clicking on the link below will redirect you to the Entertainment Weekly Wikipedia article. Take me to the Wikipedia Entertainment Weekly article. Click here to return to the Crossgen Comics Database main page or just hit your browsers back button to return to your previous page. These Redirect pages can be eliminated in either of two ways. Things to think about:
  • The two-page photo includes cast members "Sgt. Floyd Pepper, Animal, Janice, Zoot, Sam the Eagle, the Swedish Chef, Rowlf, Dr. Teeth, Sweetums, Rizzo the Rat, Scooter, Waldorf, Statler, Miss Piggy, Kermit, Beaker, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Gonzo, Fozzie, and two of Gonzo's chicken friends." Also included on the reunion photograph are two characters that have never appeared on The Muppet Show: Bubba the Rat and Yolanda the Rat. Photography credit went to Art Streiber, who shot the Muppets at Walt Disney Studios on August 26, 2010 in Burbank, CA.
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Appearance
  • "A Star is Burns"
Name
  • Entertainment Weekly
Genre
  • Entertainment
abstract
  • The cover of the 15 November 1991 issue features The Addams Family characters Gomez and Morticia from the 1991 feature film.
  • The two-page photo includes cast members "Sgt. Floyd Pepper, Animal, Janice, Zoot, Sam the Eagle, the Swedish Chef, Rowlf, Dr. Teeth, Sweetums, Rizzo the Rat, Scooter, Waldorf, Statler, Miss Piggy, Kermit, Beaker, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Gonzo, Fozzie, and two of Gonzo's chicken friends." Also included on the reunion photograph are two characters that have never appeared on The Muppet Show: Bubba the Rat and Yolanda the Rat. Photography credit went to Art Streiber, who shot the Muppets at Walt Disney Studios on August 26, 2010 in Burbank, CA. The magazine's November 12/19, 2010 issue (out November 4, 2010) featured a two-page spread about the new Muppet movie, now officially simply re-titled "The Muppets". The article featured a summary of the film's concept along with quotes from the movie's co-writer/co-star Jason Segel and director James Bobin. The spread is also notable for featuring the first publicly available images of Walter, posing at a mock table read for the film alongside Segel, Kermit, Piggy, Gonzo, Fozzie, Scooter, Rowlf, Bunsen, Beaker, Animal, Sam Eagle, the Swedish Chef, Statler, Waldorf, Sweetums, two rats and a chicken. The magazine's August 22/29, 2011 issue (out August 14, 2011) featured a Fall Movie Preview featuring a two-page spread for The Muppets. The two-page "Fall Movie Preview" spread includes cast members Jason Segel, Amy Adams, Animal, Fozzie, Kermit, Scooter and Miss Poogy. There's also a picture in this issue where Jason Segel and Walter are seen opening up a soccer ball as one of their Christmas presents. Kermit the Frog graced the cover of a November 2011 issue, with an accompanying article on The Muppets.
  • This page gives you the opportunity to redirect to the wiki covering this topic or stay on the Crossgen Comics Database. Clicking on the link below will redirect you to the Entertainment Weekly Wikipedia article. Take me to the Wikipedia Entertainment Weekly article. Click here to return to the Crossgen Comics Database main page or just hit your browsers back button to return to your previous page. These Redirect pages can be eliminated in either of two ways. * #1 Create a article of our own for this page. * #2 On every page a Entertainment Weekly link exists make a direct link to the original Wikipedia article. Things to think about: * #1 Creating our own page for this article may add a superfluous amount of pages. * #2 Some of these article links may be on hundreds of pages that would need direct links. This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
  • Entertainment Weekly is a magazine covering film, television, music, books, Broadway theaters and popular culture.
  • Entertainment Weekly (sometimes abbreviated as EW) is a weekly subscription magazine that often publishes articles about Lost in their magazine and on their website. Entertainment Weekly covers mostly film and television stories, usually not covering stories about celebrity life, like magazines similar to People. Occasionally, the magazine may cover an outrageous story about a celebrity. The launch of Entertainment Weekly was very successful. The attracted audiences are usually young readers and women. It addresses TV ratings, ticket sales, the cost of production, and other statistics of the entertainment industry. Entertainment Weekly is indeed published weekly. It was first published in 1990, and in 2003, the average weekly circulation of the magazine was about 1,700,000 copies. In each end of the year issue, the Entertainer of the Year, chosen by readers at Entertainment Weekly's website, is put on the front cover.