‘Nip/Tuck’ Season 6 Premieres October ’09

Premiere date moved up from January 2010
Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

It would seem that reports of the demise of the FX series Nip/Tuck have been somewhat exaggerated. In June, the LA Times published a report that claimed the 6th (and final?) season of Nip/Tuck had been filmed and wrapped and would be shelved until January 2010 at the earliest, 2011 at the latest. Show creator Ryan Murphy, who’s other show Glee has become a sensation, has been working furiously on making Glee a success and wasn’t even on set when Nip/Tuck filmed its last scenes. Well, today there is good news for fans of the show. The 6th season of Nip/Tuck has been rescheduled and will air on FX beginning this October:


“Nip/Tuck” will start cutting again in mid-October … That news comes courtesy of the FX executive session at the Television Critics Association press tour on Friday (Aug. 7). “Nip/Tuck” will open its sixth season on Wednesday, Oct. 14 and run for 10 episodes, which will take the show into December; the final nine episodes will likely air sometime next year.

I suppose technically the show is still dunzo because this upcoming 6th season is supposedly the last. But, at least we won’t have to wait until 2010 or 2011 to say our farewells. After the jump, check out a short promo vid for the upcoming 6th season of Nip/Tuck which looks very cool — despite the soundtrack by Timbaland

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‘Nip/Tuck’ Is Dunzo!

The show wraps on its final season, won't air for 2 years
Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Nip/Tuck just wrapped its next and final season here in SoCal but don’t get too excited … we won’t be seeing any of the eps for some time now. For a show that started out with a bang and was beloved as one of the coolest shows on TV, Nip/Tuck is going out with a wimper … probably because the show should’ve ended 2 seasons ago. The LA Times has all the deets on the, IMHO, sad end of a once great series:


When “Nip/Tuck” made its debut in 2003, it broke cable-viewing records and instantly distinguished itself with its stylized look, tongue-in-cheek tone, gorgeous stars and fresh take on America’s obsession with beauty and youth. Those qualities earned it a Golden Globe for best drama, critical acclaim and water-cooler buzz that lasted for most of its first four seasons. But when one of FX’s signature series quietly wrapped last week on the Paramount lot, it did so without the usual fanfare associated with the end of a noteworthy show. In part, the silent send-off was because TV viewers won’t see the “Nip/Tuck” finale, which finished shooting on June 12, for a long time, probably as late as 2011, making it tricky to publicize. Behind the scenes too, during the last week of production, there was an awkward sense that the end had already happened, since much of the crew had already moved to creator Ryan Murphy’s new Fox musical, “Glee,” last year, and Murphy himself was out of the country location-scouting for an upcoming movie. “It’s sad because it feels incomplete,” said script supervisor Diana Valentine, who asked the cast to sign her finale script in between takes of shooting the show’s last family dinner scene, which included almost every major character. Valentine, who joined the series in its second season, worked on “Beverly Hills, 90210″ for its entire run. “It’s not the same feeling I had when I was wrapping on ‘90210′. It feels incomplete, kind of separate. It’s very hard.” In truth, the cast of the series that TV Guide asserted during its second season was the “coolest show on television” has been ready to move on for some time. “Nip/Tuck’s” series finale will be the show’s 100th episode, a rare marker in cable television (the only popular cable series that came close was “Sex and the City” with 94 episodes) that FX wanted to reach with its top-rated show. But if the actors had had their way, the show would have ended in the fourth season when it was still the No. 1 cable series among 18- to 49-year-olds, a ranking it held for its first four years, and the critics were still in its corner. Though its overall viewership has been steady and strong over the years — Season 5 drew an average of 3.4 million viewers — it is now less popular in the 18-to-49 demographic than both USA’s “Burn Notice” and TNT’s “The Closer.” “I feel we’ve reached a creative impasse with regards to what we can do with this story,” said John Hensley, who played Matt, one of the most self-destructive characters ever created for TV. “I feel like it was, quite frankly, told a long time ago. I say that trying to be right-sized about this because I am very grateful for this opportunity. I just feel that we were a show that was very good and innovative at one point and we’ve gone the way of so many shows before us. Our moment has passed” … If there is a surprise to the way “Nip/Tuck” ends, it’s in its restrained quality, which several of the actors said they appreciated after seasons of shocking and preposterous story lines. “I’ve always thought the show should have been simpler than it was so, for me, it was nice to have a little less than what we’ve been expanding upon for the last number of years,” McMahon said. “I think you’ll have an emotionally justifiable episode in the end.” In separate interviews, Walsh and McMahon both said that what they’d miss the most about working on the show was each other. “I’ll miss every day sitting in one trailer or another, talking about everything going on with the show and our lives,” Walsh said. “We are what Ryan wanted the show to be. I love him. That’s the best thing I got out of the show — it was him.”

It seemed clear to me, months before the word Glee was ever uttered, that Ryan Murphy’s heart was no longer in making Nip/Tuck a great show. I’ve stayed loyal to the series even tho the quality hasn’t been there for some time … it’s just sad because I keep hoping it will get better. I was really unimpressed with the last season and, from what I gather, the coming season ain’t all that great either. I guess all good things must eventually come to an end … it’s just a shame that Nip/Tuck has to go out like this.

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Mario Lopez Loses His Shirt For ‘Nip/Tuck’

... after vowing, "My shirtless photo-shoot days are behind me."
Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Mario Lopez, People magazine’s Hottest Bachelor of 2008 and new host of Extra!, famously told People that his days of shirtless photoshoots were over … but, by the look of these new photos of Mario at the beach this week filming new scenes for the FX series Nip/Tuck, that declaration does not hold true in all instances. Fortunately for us, Mario has not enacted a shirtless ban on all of his television projects:


My shirtless photo-shoot days are behind me,” Mario Lopez tells PEOPLE in a bitter blow to beefcake. Not that the buff new Extra host has anything to hide. “Obviously, being healthy and staying fit are important to me,” says the 34-year-old, who in the past seemed like the only serious rival to Matthew McConaughey in the bare-chest sweepstakes … “My TV projects are my main priority,” he says. “And no, you will never see me host Extra without a shirt.” Still, to every rule there’s an exception – in this case, Nip/Tuck. Lopez says he is “thrilled” to be reprising the role of Dr. Mike Hamoui on the cable series, with Dr. Mike moving to Los Angeles – where he can once again gain the attention of the ab-admiring Dr. Christian Troy (Julian McMahon) in the locker room. “A small spoiler,” says Lopez. “Dr. Mike might not be taking anymore showers at the gym with Christian, but he will lose his shirt.”

Yes, indeed … he does lose his shirt. After the jump, check out a few more pics of Mario along with his Nip/Tuck co-stars Julian McMahon and Dylan Walsh on the beachy set of of the show in Long Beach, CA yesterday afternoon …

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