Kelly Osbourne is no Heidi Klum, that's for damn sure


Project Catwalk, the British answer to Bravo's highly successful designer show Project Runway, has been cancelled before the start of its fourth season on the overseas channel Sky1. Might have something to do with Kelly Osbourne taking over the role of host from Elizabeth frikkin' Hurley after the first season (now there's a culture shock for you). What's going to fill the time slot? According to the Sky1 people, "What we really need are some more female-friendly formatted shows." It's the end of the day, so feel free to make your own jokes about Kelly Osbourne's face scaring women.

Aug 26, 2008 · Link · 1 Response

It comes down to this: Nina Garcia and Anne Slowey played for separate teams under the same owner. Garcia, the former Elle fashion director who's now connected to the magazine in name only, was a protege of creative director Gilles Bensimon, who did not time to check his wristwatch for incoming Elle editor Robbie Myers, who arrived in 2000. Slowey, the fashion news editor and star of Elle's new fall reality show Stylista, is in the Myers camp, though perhaps only because she wasn't in the Bensimon camp.

Which isn't to say these two never got along — they did — but in the end, it explains why we've heard handfuls of stories, about both sides, trading gossip about each other.

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Aug 18, 2008 · Link · 1 Response

While Nina Garcia is said to be paid upwards of $70,000 per public appearance, Liz Claiborne chief creative office Tim Gunn — who always has more screen time on the show than Garcia — is paid a measly $30,000 per stint.

Aug 7, 2008 · Link · 5 Responses
Plus: Jeff Zucker's plans to sabotage Lifetime

Every time Tim Gunn uttered the words "make it work" during the first season of Project Runway, he was paid precisely this amount: $0. And during the second season? Just $2,500 per episode. That's according to his testimony in New York State Supreme Court, where proceedings are underway between NBC Universal and The Weinstein Company, which ripped Runway away from NBC's Bravo for Lifetime. Other tidbits from the ongoing trial? NBC chief Jeff Zucker has instructed Bravo to air marathon repeats of Runway during the same timeslot Lifetime will air new episodes of the show's sixth season. Did we mention Zucker is BFF's with Harvey Weinstein?

Jul 30, 2008 · Link · Respond
Project Get Out of My Way

Nina Garcia, currently appearing on Project Runway's fifth season as Elle's "editor-at-large," is, as you already know, totally done with Robbie Myers' mag and has not-so-quietly moved on to Marie Claire. And though she doesn't officially start there until Sept. 2, she's already moved into her office — perhaps because the one Elle was keeping for her is lined with glass shards. (Marie Claire denies she's started working there, citing Garcia's contract with Elle; they insist she's only been in the office to coordinate fashion show travel.)

And while Garcia is definitely a commodity worth grabbing for Marie Claire — which is expected to scoop up Project Runway when it moves to Lifetime — it turns out the relationship might not be a match made in couture heaven.

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Jul 30, 2008 · Link · 14 Responses

While Project Runway 4 winner Christian Siriano takes shots at the over-tanned contestant currently trying to out-tagline him on season five, none other than Harvey Weinstein comes out looking like the good guy in this week's round up of Runway gossip. Weinstein, supposedly, was willing to take his name off the Emmy application for the show, since only fifteen producers get to be attached to any single nomination. And since Weinstein has done little for the brand except milk its revenue potential for all the hair and makeup sponsorship deals it's worth, he so graciously agreed not to have his efforts acknowledged with the possibility of winning a silly little statute. How generous, and nicely spun, of him.

Jul 25, 2008 · Link · 1 Response

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Though it's pretty clear that Project Runway is headed to Lifetime for the show's sixth season, NBC Universal isn't taking Harvey Weinstein's bull sitting down, which explains why Jeff Zucker was in a New York court yesterday trying to convince a judge that they lost the show on Bravo because of the Hollywood mogul's shadowy ways. The Weinstein Company wants NBC's breach of contract suit — which claims Weinstein didn't give NBC right of the first refusal option that was promised — dismissed, while 30 Rock wants an injunction to keep the series from going to Lifetime until the trial is over with. Us? We just want this trial to continue forever and ever! Also, photographers in the courtroom.

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Jul 18, 2008 · Link · 2 Responses
Crime Blotter

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We will miss Portfolio's napkin math sessions when the magazine eventually closes. Last month, they calculated the net worth of Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven," supposedly the most profitable song ever recorded, which earned an estimated $572 million. Now, they've moved on to other pop culture fare: Project Runway. Just how much is the fashion reality show franchise worth? Well, The Weinstein Company's new deal with Lifetime pits the show at $150 million over the next five years. But if they were to sell the show? $243.5 million — the insurance policy on Heidi Klum's legs not included.

Jul 16, 2008 · Link · 1 Response
Sour grapes? Sour publicity

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Ever since NBC Universal execs learned they would officially be losing Project Runway on Bravo, they've been working overtime to tear the brand apart. Why should they bother promoting a show that Harvey Weinstein ripped away from them to take to Lifetime, where he's set to bag a bigger payday from production and product placement fees?

At first, the negativity was subtle. Bravo execs kept quiet as they stole Runway's brilliant production team, Magical Elves, away from the show in an exclusive deal. And then the more obvious signs arrived.

Project Runway's fifth season, and the last for Bravo, premieres on Wednesday. And by the time it arrives, and certainly by the time it wraps, its varnish will be worn, damaged, or gone altogether.

So just how is Bravo systematically sabotaging the Project Runway brand?

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Jul 14, 2008 · Link · 11 Responses

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Of the 16 contestants on the fifth season of Project Runway, eight are men, and six of them are out gays. This compares to last season's four openly gay contestants and, when the show moves to the network for women and gay men, Lifetime, next season's 100 percent homo roster.

Jul 14, 2008 · Link · 1 Response

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How do you let the execs behind your show know that you're pissed about all the sweeping changes that they're making? If you're Cindy McCain critic Tim Gunn and have the uncertainty of what lies ahead for Project Runway, you start sniping away at the brand any opportunity you get.

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Jul 14, 2008 · Link · 1 Response

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You might not be aware, but the fifth season of Project Runway, and the last for Bravo, kicks off just one short week from today. Even we, usually so adept at knowing when these sorts of cultural phenomenon are making their return to the horizon, have been caught off guard. So too, television critics — because Bravo hasn't sent out any screeners of the upcoming season, nor do they plan to. And they haven't even unveiled the upcoming cast of contestants, and won't do so until Monday, just 48 hours before the season premieres, even though it's been the network's practice to tell all weeks in advance.

"A representative for the network said it was part of an effort to 'protect the secrecy' of the fifth season," blogs Maureen Ryan. HAHAHAHA, please. You know the reason.

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Jul 9, 2008 · Link · 1 Response

Harvey Weinstein's brilliant, and inevitable, business model for Project Runway now includes a new cash infusion: dollars from the magazine. When he was first shopping the show around in the early 200s, most magazines passed on the opportunity to be attached, and Elle was the only taker. It's been a brand boon for the Hachette fashion book, but after the fifth season, they're gonna lose it. And whoever wants the opportunity to work with Runway, now on Lifetime, will have to pay for the privilege. Seven figures, anyone?

Jun 10, 2008 · Link · Respond

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Sad news, gays. Project Runway season four contestant Jack Mackenroth, who had to leave the show after a staph infection, will not be auditioning for the show's fifth season. "During my short stint on season 4, I was never in the bottom three and I won the menswear challenge, which is my field of expertise, so I feel like I accomplished most of what I started."

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May 19, 2008 · Link · 4 Responses

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Earlier today we brought you news that Nina Garcia had signed an editor-at-large contract with Elle that would keep her there through Sept 1, just long enough to shoot the fifth (and Bravo's final) season of Project Runway. Interesting that the announcement came with an expiration date, we noted.

And here's why: We were just told Nina is heading to Marie Claire as fashion director, effective .. Sept. 2.

May 15, 2008 · Link · Respond
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