Like 'Vinyl' before it, Cameron Crowe's 'Roadies' is another music series that frustratingly gets most of the notes wrong. By Tim Goodman Cameron Crowe has all the bona fides — let’s get that out of ...
Ahead of next weekend’s series debut, Showtime has made the premiere episode of the Cameron Crowe-created comedy Roadies available to non-subscribers. The episode can be seen on Youtube, Facebook, Sho ...
that the show is premiering on Showtime shortly after news broke that HBO abruptly pulled the plug on Season 2 -- after earlier announcing "Vinyl" would be back. That slap in the face to "Vinyl" is ...
Update: The video has been removed. It's time for Showtime's summer season, which means we're getting the first episode of the new series Roadies to watch in full (they might do the same for the new ...
In my initial review of this show, I alluded to the dire nature of last week's episode, “The Bryce Newman Letter.” Noel Murray and Mo Ryan did an excellent job of pointing out the many things that ...
This is, of course, so you can spend more time with the titular roadies. The headlining actors, Luke Wilson as road manager Bill and Carla Gugino as production manager Shelli, are the exact kind of ...
Fans of "Almost Famous" are in for a treat. Cameron Crowe‘s classic “Almost Famous” examined the lives of rock stars and groupies, but now he’s taking us behind-the-scenes for a look at the crews that ...
Like HBO's now canceled rock 'n' roll series Vinyl before it, Showtime's Roadies never quite strikes the chord it hopes to hit in the hearts of music and TV lovers. An hourlong comedy about the crew ...
“Roadies” wants to be the “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern” of the rock music world. Or, if your tastes run to Broadway musicals, the “Chorus Line” of pop. It is neither, though. It is a sporadically ...
Meet the men and women who work behind the scenes to make big concerts happen. Showtime‘s new series Roadies comes from the mind of Cameron Crowe, the former ...
Remember concept albums? They still exist, but not quite in the form they took in the ‘70s and ‘80s, when rock musicians made double albums because a single album couldn’t hold all their great ideas.
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