Articles tagged "margaret cho"![]() NewsHaving survived her initial success, Margaret Cho is ready to go back on TVby Luaine Lee [McClatchy-Tribune News Service (MCT)][7.Jul.09] :. GLENDALE, Calif. — Standup comedian Margaret Cho was never the polite, little Asian girl who covered her mouth when she laughed and made straight As. In fact, she was always the opposite. A... Sound AffectsSXSW 2009: Interview with Margaret Cho and Amanda Palmer (video)by Robin Cook[27.Mar.09] :. Weirder things have happened. Thursday night at SXSW, the stage at Austin’s Central Presbyterian Church was shared by a Dresden Doll and a legendarily raunchy comedienne. Of course, this being... ![]() Film DVD ReviewThe Best Of Dr. Katzby Marc Calderaro[15.Jan.09] :. There aren’t many DVDs that can offer such a variety of established comics doing what they do best. ![]() PopMatters Picks: The Best TV, Film, and DVD of 2008 FeatureOMG - The 20 Worst Films of 2008by PopMatters Staff[15.Jan.09] :. There's bad, and then there's 2008 level bad. You know this list is looking down into a deep dark bottomless pit of cinematic despair when Mike Myers' shameful Love Guru didn't even make the Top 20! PopMatters Picks: The Best TV, Film, and DVD of 2008 NewsMargaret Cho assists Lifetime’s ‘Diva’by Zap2it.com [(MCT)][5.Aug.08] :. Margaret Cho has booked a scripted TV job in addition to her upcoming reality show. The comedian has joined the cast of Lifetime’s “Drop Dead Diva,” a pilot about a dead... ![]() 20 Questions FeatureMargaret Choby PopMatters Staff[3.Mar.08] :. Margaret Cho's "Beautiful" tour, launched in Australia, hits the States March 6th. But first she pauses to braid a big beasty boy's hair, do a little shimmy, and answer PopMatters 20 Questions. Rick and Steve: The Happiest Gay Couple in All the World: The Complete First Seasonby Todd R. Ramlow[20.Nov.07] :. The show reasserts the dominant logic of recent lesbian and gay politics that idealizes hetero-style domesticity. I’m the One That I Want (2000)by Stephen TropianoIn the film's most heart-wrenching moment, Cho describes how she lost all sense of her own identity in being so transformed into a commodity for public consumption. |
|