‘Scream Queens’: Kirstie Alley, Taylor Lautner and a Nude John Stamos Scrub In on Season 2 Premiere

September 20, 2016 9:23pm PT by Jackie Strause

The sophomore season of the horror-comedy anthology moved off sorority row and into a hospital, where the trio of newcomers play doctors.

Michael Becker/FOX

‘Scream Queens’ season 2

The sophomore season of the horror-comedy anthology moved off sorority row and into a hospital, where the trio of newcomers play doctors.

[Warning: This story contains spoilers from the premiere of the second season of Scream Queens.]

Scream Queens 2.0 debuted Tuesday night.

Viewers tuning into the second season of the Fox horror-comedy anthology series had been promised a reboot of sorts by creators Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk, and Ian Brennan ahead of the Sept. 20 premiere. A three-year time jump, new hospital setting and cast additions, including John Stamos, Taylor Lautner and Kirstie Alley, had all been teased for the returning second cycle, which did not screen its premiere ahead of time to press.

A show that Murphy once described as “bubble gum splashed with blood,” Brennan assured the second season would be bloodier and funnier than the first: “I think we’re leaning into the creepiness a little more and a little bit more into the comedy as well.” Falchuk added, “We looked at the horror movie model and saw this season as a sequel.”

By graduating from the Kappa Sorority House and moving to a hospital backdrop, the trio was able to cast more age groups while keeping many of the season-one survivors. The new murder mystery will play out amid bizarre medical cases, a familiar-sounding nod to Murphy and Falchuk’s days of Nip/Tuck. Murphy told The Hollywood Reporter that his initial pitch for the horror-comedy included the ability to reboot the show each season.

The changes also come in an attempt to broaden the audience for season two. Dubbed a “model for contemporary viewership” after season one, the younger-skewing audience watching on-demand and online contributed to the series becoming the No. 1 new show on VOD and social media last fall. Live viewership, however, struggled. “Before the show did seem very young,” admitted Murphy, “but now I hope there’s something for everybody.”

Here’s what the series laid out on its operating table during the second-season premiere. Did it deliver on its promises? Tell THR in the comments below.

Haunted Hospital 

With an agenda sure to be revealed at a later date, Dean Munsch (Jamie Lee Curtis) lures the surviving gaggle of Kappas, Zayday (Keke Palmer) and the Chanels — played by Emma Roberts, Abigail Breslin (No. 5) and Billie Lourd (No. 3) — to be med students at her new teaching hospital. Munsch now has the doctorate that the University of Pittsburg “stripped from Bill Cosby.” From a flashback to Oct. 31, 1985 that played out similarly to the opening flashback of the first season, viewers learn that the likely new Red Devil was birthed in the bacteria-eating swamp neighboring the now-Cure Institute Hospital. 

John “Dr. Hot” Stamos and That Steamy Shower Scene

Dr. Brock Holt (John Stamos) and Dr. Cassidy Cascade (Taylor Lautner) are the cocky, dark and eligible doctors of Cure. “I’m basically female Viagra,” is how Cascade introduces himself, while Holt, dubbed “Dr. Hot” by Chanel, lathers himself up for the new med students in a steamy shower scene that has her stripping down to her underwear. (Preview scenes show Glen Powell returning to have a shower-off with Holt.) The pair also bond over how to solve the bizarre case of the episode — which saw Saturday Night Live‘s Cecily Strong suffering from Hirsutism — and nearly kiss. But both men have their secrets. Holt, who has a mysterious back tattoo, was a prodigy until the head surgeon had to undergo a hand transplant after a garbage-disposal incident. Cascade boasts a peculiar ice-cold body temperature.

But the most ominous of Scream Queens music is saved for the moments when Kirstie Alley’s “advanced practiced registered nurse” appears. She runs the hospital and tells Chanel she’s going to “eat her for lunch.” 

Scream Queens Gets the Making a Murderer Treatment

It’s no surprise that Murphy, the man responsible for The People V. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story, is a fan of true-crime docu-series. Last season left off with Lea Michele’s Hester getting away with murder while the Chanels were framed and locked up for her crimes in a mental hospital. And season two reveals that a Netflix docu-series titled “Entrap a Kappa Kappa: Murder on Sorority Row” turned the Chanels into a phenomenon and ultimately proved their innocence.

The Making a Murder-riff featured Hester in a Brendan Dassey-like confession tape (Michele’s only appearance on the episode, though she’s poised to return for more) and an update that Hester had been locked up instead. Though the Chanels were exonerated, Chanel and her two “idiot hookers” were now broke, poor and exhausted — which is why they jump at Dean Munsch’s offer, thinking they are already doctors. Their new career aspirations? Special medical correspondents for Fox News.

The Green Meanie

Ending the episode full circle, the new killer arrives in the final moments. Seemingly reborn from the flesh-eating swamp shown in the opening flashback, the mysterious Green Meanie is donning the Halloween costume Jerry O’Connell’s character threw into the water with the dead body. He/she slices off Cecily Strong’s character’s head and appears to bring the knife down on Chanel #5, leaving Abigail Breslin’s fate to be continued. Could the green swamp killer be the husband rising from the dead, or his surviving pregnant wife seeking revenge? Or, perhaps, Scream Queens has another Hester on its bloody hands. 

And with that, a new murder mystery is born and everyone is a suspect. Keep up with THR‘s coverage throughout the season and share your thoughts in the comments. Scream Queens airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on Fox.

Scream Queens

Jackie Strause

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‘American Horror Story’: FX Marketing Boss Talks Misdirecting Promos and “Twisty-Turny” Season 6

September 13, 2016 9:00am PT by Jackie Strause

How does a network promote a show that has no theme or cast? FX's Stephanie Gibbons takes THR through the unique campaign (and its desired results) for Wednesday's premiere of the Ryan Murphy anthology series.

Screengrab/FX

‘AHS’ Season 6 promo

How does a network promote a show that has no theme or cast? FX’s Stephanie Gibbons takes THR through the unique campaign (and its desired results) for Wednesday’s premiere of the Ryan Murphy anthology series.

Everything about American Horror Story season six is one big secret.

Aside from a Sept. 14 premiere date for the anthology series, showrunner Ryan Murphy and FX decided to keep everything else under wraps. No subtitle, no plot and no cast.

“The show is in its sixth season, and we’ve always done everything by the book,” Murphy told The Hollywood Reporter about the series, co-created by Brad Falchuk. “We wanted to [create a] different experience for the fans this year.”

Indeed, the untitled sixth season follows Murder House, Asylum, Coven, Freak Show and Hotel, the latter of which saw Lady Gaga filling in for series staple Jessica Lange.

The desire for a different experience this time around resulted in a collaborative effort with Murphy and FX head of marketing Stephanie Gibbons to launch a slew of “misdirect” promos for the series. The five-, 10- and 30-second spots have sent the devoted AHS fanbase into a tailspin after FX CEO John Landgraf confirmed that one of the trailers is, in fact, the real one. 

Gibbons, who joined the network in 2004, has won multiple awards for her AHS campaigns, but she tells THR that this particular campaign marked uncharted territory. Not only is the plot a mystery, but FX hasn’t officially confirmed any of the cast (though most of the ensemble is expected to return, including Gaga), which means Gibbons couldn’t use any of the big stars to her benefit.

Here, Gibbons takes THR through the process of creating and pulling off such a campaign, muses about the “leaks” and reveals what viewers will know come premiere night.

Have you ever done a campaign like this before, where you have to promote a show but can’t reveal the plot or cast?

No, I never have. Not in my career.

Why shroud the season in so much secrecy?

We were going into the sixth season and that number has a particular meaning in the horror realm. In the past, our strategy for the fanbase has always been to reveal and build excitement through transparency and inclusion. We would put out these teasers that are amalgams of themes that are sometimes underpinning themes that feed into the show and don’t come into realization until the very end, or that are obvious themes and play on the stereotypes of the genre but that we twist into a new way. And that’s been very successful for us, because we drop these breadcrumbs along the way, but they very much lead to a full sandwich at the end of the trail.

This time, the breadcrumbs are in the form of misdirect teasers, where only one is real. How many are there total?

There are 24 teasers. Then there’s the anthology spot that brings it all together, as well as the other anthology spot which we released with Lady Gaga’s single, “Perfect Illusion.” Her song is very much up the alley so we played with that. There are also 17 different print finishes, so the outdoor and the print campaign mirror. And then there are another eight teasers that are social-based only. We have peaked and now it’s about the campaign. We will release a few more things socially, but now it’s about letting it sit and having the breadcrumbs become, I hope, a gourmet meal.

Was this campaign the most robust you’ve ever done for the series, or does it just seem that way?

This was equal robustness to past seasons. Every season for AHS we give it the same amount of support, because we’re launching it fresh. We have to give it a lot of resources because we have to take it from the ground up. This one has as many resources, but that is awesome that you think it was more. We did want to ignite discussion and I can tell you we have always had an incredibly robust social community with AHS because it’s that kind of show, but this year, the fans did share and exchange and debate more and there was a lot more social activity.

Ryan Murphy spoke about a desire to switch things up for season six. Was the idea a collaborative effort?

It was something I pitched to John [Landgraf] and then to Ryan and then we worked together in a collaboration to pull it off. In terms of locking the set down, making sure that PR was right there with us — everything had to be hermetically sealed. We had a strategy as to how we wanted to pursue the season, in terms of reaching out to talent, the actual production and the marketing. So in that regard, we were sutured together so that we could create a campaign that could actually realize this goal, which was difficult to say the least.

Take me through the method to your madness for the campaign.

I felt we would play on two aspects of the human helix: Desire to know, the curiosity to find out what you don’t know; and perhaps more importantly, the notion of how powerful withholding is to the human psyche. Often wanting is more fulfilling than having. So it plays upon that supply and demand aspect, and that wanting and needing and not having aspect that drives so much of human endeavor. For us, it was about saying, we’re going to celebrate the horror genre: “Question-mark six — what will it be? This time it will be about seeking, not having.”

We researched horror and the subgenres and decided to wreak havoc upon some of those really dominant tropes that have pervaded horror for decades, and put little twists on them through a modern lens: gothic horror and its subgenres, sci-fi horror, evil children — all of those things that are nightmares. Horror is so fascinating because it plays on our fears in a safe way and so everything with American Horror Story has a twist of fun to it. It’s not meant to really invade your psyche to the point where you can’t function for the rest of your life! It’s meant to give you a brief start and a jolt, but also kind of make you smile.

Were you worried about alienating the audience or damaging the brand by taking this risk? [Seasons seven and eight aren’t officially picked up, but Ryan has spoken about them.]

I don’t feel like we thought we would damage the brand. I think the power of the program can precede a marketing campaign. A marketing campaign, by being at the point of entry, we are the privileged babysitter to the primary relationship with the program itself and the viewers. What we try to do is open the door and let people know that there’s something of value to experience. So I don’t think we worried about damaging the brand. 

What we did worry about is that we didn’t want to do anything that didn’t bring the viewers a thrill, happiness, a twist and a turn that was a positive and thrilling experience; versus a frustrating experience. And I don’t meant to say that there weren’t viewers out there who were frustrated, I’m sure there were, but overall, there’s a thrill to the hunt and that’s what we were celebrating. AHS was coming whether we told you or not, so there wasn’t a risk of the marketing campaign saying, “Aha!” And that there wasn’t even a show at the end of the tunnel. After all the breadcrumbs, you are definitely going to get the sandwich. There’s no bait and switch here. It was about celebrating the building and worshiping the anticipation.

Why do you think a risky campaign like this works on the AHS fanbase and FX audience? I can’t imagine it working for every network.

We haven’t pulled it off just yet! I spend a lot of nights wondering if someone is going to walk out and say, “Ok, here’s everything it’s about,” and sort of deflate the balloon. But, I think of FX’s audience as a psychographic, rather than a demographic. I’m going to be overly simplistic here, but if you were to think about there being two different types of people: From an age when we are very young and we start to get a sense of self, we tend to realize if we prefer patterns. If we have discovered what we want and we decide to relive that over and over again. There is the type of person who asks for a tasting spoon of vanilla. Vanilla is one of the most awesome flavors in the universe, it’s a classic for a reason, but they know what they like and they like to repeat it. Then there are people who from a very early age realize that it takes more than that to get them out of bed in the morning. That they want and desire new experiences and aren’t afraid to feel put off or to see something that’s polarizing, or experience the stress of uncertainty. They actually prefer this place with tectonic movement underneath them. They like to feel that they don’t know what’s coming next.

For people that like our programming, it’s not for everyone, but it’s for a lot of someones who want that type of satisfaction and experience of the new and the different, and the untried and the unknown. So for us, it’s playing to the unknown and the thrill of wanting. Marketing is inherently about building desire so that’s what we’ve set out to pursue. That’s what we desired, if you will.

Ryan also said this season begins to tie together the mythology of the series. Did that prompt you to want to market it differently?

No, in fact, you know more than I do. I work off of themes, I don’t have the whole bible to the series. I have the honor of having access to his neurons and him sharing with me the themes that he’s thinking about, the themes that I would call the subconscious things on the writers’ wall that lead them to build something else, which helps infuse the landscape we explore. But I don’t know the end of the show anymore than you do, which makes my life as a civilian and a fan much more exciting. 

To creators like Ryan, the show is their baby. I adopt it to the heart and know what they want for this baby and what this baby is, but I’m the babysitter, not the parent. I guess that’s the best way to put it. No one can understand their baby the way that the showrunners do and if you have 10 minutes with Ryan and he tells you about his show, it’s like a meeting with the Pope. I love it, it’s like my Christmas.

There have been a few theories and leaks, which have led the fanbase to guess that the season could be about the lost colony of Roanoke, an anthology season, or The Mist (TV Guide and Rotten Tomatoes both listed the subtitle.) What do you say to the fans who have landed on The Mist?

I say, hallelujah! I love that they are enjoying the process how we hoped the fans would. Once you’re wondering what something is and anticipating something, your mind takes a very special trip and we very much wanted to give this audience something to share and talk about and something to debate. So I’m praising the powers to be to say, ‘Yes, they did get it. They bought in and had a great time wondering.’ Because the truth is in there, we made absolutely certain. It’s like the needle in the haystack or the pebble in your shoe: It’s tiny but boy, do you notice it and that’s what we wanted. I love saying no comment because you all shall see together. 

Spike TV started production on their Mist adaptation, which is set to air in 2017. Was that on your radar?

No, I didn’t know that. I had no idea.

How does this campaign raise the stakes when it comes to premiere ratings? Are you expecting higher live ratings, versus delayed viewing, because people are dying to know the plot?

That’s an interesting question. Yes, I worry day and night. I’m not clairvoyant and I don’t know what the ratings will be. I won’t disagree with the fact that we are wondering, along with you, if this does increase live. But long ago, we adjusted to the fact that a view is a view, and live versus eight hours later, three hours later, three minutes later or seven days later. The way I look at my job now is that a launch is truly a launch. I’m in general trying to build anticipation for season six versus build live viewership for that particular slot. However, that said, I do think that when you create anticipation for an event, it might, for a portion of the audience, create a bigger degree of urgency. But I don’t know what percentage of the audience it will affect. That’s speculation. So for us, this is an interesting case study to see what drives live viewership.

After the premiere airs, will fans have a solid understanding of the theme and main cast?

I think that’s a question for Ryan. They’ll certainly know a lot more, related to the marketing. They’ll certainly understand. But I think one of the thrills of this season is that it’s very different — and I mean that in the most thrilling and awesome way — than anything that’s come before it. They will understand definitely from the marketing and they will have a better understanding of the landscape, but I won’t promise that they’ll know everything that lies ahead, because it is one awesome, twisty-turny season and I’m not kidding. When I watched it, I was running around the halls saying, “Oh my God, oh my God!”

How will the campaign change once the premiere has aired? 

This season has a lot of ongoing mystery, so we will definitely make our ongoing promotion of this season less didactic and less explicit than it has been in previous seasons. The initial mystery will definitely be solved, there will be no bait and switch where they’ll be wondering which spot or theme is true. But as we’ve seen with other seasons, much lies ahead. You know more when you’ve read the first chapter, but it’s far from the end of the book. We want to continue to build anticipation for the next episode, but we will be less didactic than previous seasons so as not to spoil anything.

Ryan and the network have remained silent on  cast confirmations [some, including Gaga, Evan Peters and new addition Cuba Gooding Jr. have confirmed themselves in interviews.] How does the absence of a cast impact the marketing and publicity — when you have such high-wattage stars, don’t they want to promote their show?

The cast was all onboard. Usually I shoot the cast and I make sure that I do the abstract and thematic promos, and then I also do a cast spot that teases out that character’s look and feel and potential role. It’s not a full reveal, but it’s a definite tease placed in the landscape. This year, we knew that we would not be using any of the talent so I did not do the talent part. I always did two full key art initiatives, which I didn’t do this year. We did shoot gallery and right after the show premieres, we will release the imagery of all the characters. 

The premiere is tomorrow. What do you want the audience to have taken away from this campaign?

“I can’t wait.” That’s hopefully what it achieves. 

American Horror Story returns Wednesday, Sept. 14 at 10 p.m. on FX.

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Jackie Strause

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Ryan Lochte Rushed by Audience Members as ‘Dancing With the Stars’ Cuts to Commercial

September 12, 2016 7:16pm PT by Jackie Strause

The Olympian appeared shocked as his debut on the live ABC reality competition show was plagued by protesters: "We had a bit of a scary moment."

Screengrab/ABC

Ryan Lochte, partner Cheryl Burke and host Tom Bergeron on ‘DWTS’

The Olympian appeared shocked as his debut on the live ABC reality competition show was plagued by protesters: “We had a bit of a scary moment.”

Ryan Lochte’s debut on Dancing With the Stars was interrupted when two men rushed the stage during Monday night’s premiere of the ABC reality competition series. The incident occurred off camera, though viewers could hear the chaos as it unfolded.

Several audience members, however, captured the incident on social media. According to the eye witnesses, a row of men and women in the audience revealed anti-Lochte T-shirts and two men then rushed the stage. Video from one Twitter user shows one of the protesters being tackled to the ground. Additional footage shows the audience clapping as the two men are escorted out, and then chanting, “Get out,” to the remaining women. 

After the show, ABC News’ Jason Nathanson shared a photo of two men in handcuffs wearing anti-Lochte shirts. 

Lochte and partner Cheryl Burke were listening to Carrie Ann Inaba critique his performance when the judge’s attention was diverted to the commotion. The cameras stayed on Inaba as sounds of “boos” could be heard, and she began to repeat, “Excuse me, excuse me.”

Host Tom Bergeron was heard saying “easy” before the cameras panned back to Bergeron and a stunned Lochte and Burke. 

“Take a breath,” Bergeron told the audience, before the show abruptly cut to commercial.

When the show returned from the break, Bergeron thanked the security team for their efforts, saying, “We had a little break because we had a little incident.”

“So many feelings are going through my head right now,” Lochte told Bergeron after the break. He then added that he was “a little hurt.” Saying, “I came out here and I wanted to do something I was completely uncomfortable with, and I did.” 

A shaken Burke said, “I’m shocked. I’m hurt for Ryan. He’s an amazing guy.”

Inaba took to her Instagram shortly after the incident to say: “We had a bit of a scary moment during tonight’s live taping of @dancingabc, but thanks to our security team and incredible staff at #DWTS, no one got hurt. Only positive energy here tonight and always. Thank you. #dancingwiththestars #security #grateful #dwtspremiere #dwts23.”

ABC did not respond to a request for comment.

Ahead of his casting on DWTS, the Olympic gold medalist was at the center of a firestorm after fabricating a robbery report while at the Rio Games. The scandal marred the U.S. Olympic team’s performance in Rio de Janeiro and the swimmer subsequently lost his endorsements. Lochte wouldn’t be the first to attempt to rehabilitate his image on the dancing show, which has also featured TV personality Paula Deen.

Watch the moment below:

Dancing with the Stars

Jackie Strause

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