Officially, Vincent d'Onofrio was both working 10 hour days on L&O:CI and also producing and starring in a short film about Orson Wells at the same time. For an actor who avoids the press and who seems to be kind of a jerk, he's gone out of his way to say it was stupid and he's sorry. He and Chris Noth are going to split the next season 11-11. One story has it that the big political arguments were really going on on the L&O: Trial by Jury set.
t just outed herself as a L&O:CI fan
Huh. Just got an official "don't gossip" Powerpoint
presentation
from higher management. Kind of a bummer. I don't gossip, myself, but I do love eavesdropping. I hope it doesn't have an impact on my entertainment.
Just got an official "don't gossip" Powerpoint presentation from higher management.
WTF did they need to do a Powerpoint presentation for? Did it have little cartoon employees gossiping? Maybe with a red circle with a line through it on top of the gossips?
You're not supposed to gossip about work? Or about personal stuff? Either way, weird. And unlikely to have any impact at all.
WTF did they need to do a Powerpoint presentation for?
I'm glad I only got it forwarded to me by my manager. But the CIO actually presented it to upper management. I'd have lost my job for laughing. A management concern ... way too much gossip going on.
Well, yeah. It's a problem when you employ humans and allow them to speak to each other.
It should have had pictures, though.
Dilbert is alive and well in business, it seems.
[Vincent D'Nofrio] and Chris Noth are going to split the next season 11-11.
I actualy enjoy L&O from time to time, but the only way I would watch the CI one is if VDN was guaranteed not to be on. His character bugs me to much.
Where does VM talk happen? I have a theory (that I already posted at WC) that I want to share here.
I think it happens here, just whitefonted.
OK. My new theory is that
Duncan killed his sister accidentally during one of his epileptic fits and his parents (or just his Mom) decided to cover it up by convincing a dying man to take the blame (maybe by providing for his family?). I like this because there are no real bad guys -- it's much more morally complex.