brothers and sisters

Was Balthazar Getty Fired From ‘Brothers & Sisters’?

3:50AM Kyle Buchanan | Even an impassioned, overwritten monologue from Sally Field may not be enough to save Balthazar Getty if the rumours are true: the straying, Sienna Miller-smooching actor has been fired from Brothers & Sisters.

An Australian Has Been Nominated For An Award, We Repeat, An Australian Has Been Nominated For An Award!

10:08AM Clem Bastow | Long time Defamer Australia readers will know how much we just love seeing the Australian press wet themselves when one of ours is touched by the hands of the gods and gifted with an award nomination on the hallowed shores of America or Britain, so they’ll no doubt be rustling their Thesauruses in glee at the news that Rachel Griffiths has picked up her fourth Emmy Award nomination. Break out the Bolly, sweetchops! Rachel Griffiths has picked up her fourth Emmy Award nomination for her role opposite dual Academy Award winner Sally Field in US drama series Brothers and Sisters. In Australia filming Rachel Ward directed and Bryan Brown produced feature film Beautiful Kate, Rachel Griffiths, 39, happily toasted the best supporting actress nomination news with close friends and family following the announcement after 11pm last night. “I got a call telling me I had been nominated when I was out to dinner with friends in Australia,” the mother of two told Variety magazine. “We were just finishing up and were determined to go home not too drunk and not too late. Then we heard the news and got champagne and stayed an extra hour.” Bless. Also, I feel we should take this moment to welcome Griffiths in our “top celeb chicks we’d sink the piss with” list (she now breathes the same rarefied air as Sienna Miller and Charlotte Church). And that’s a nomination to write home about if ever there was one! More »

Relieved ‘Brothers & Sisters’ Creator Jon Robin Baitz Leaves L.A. Hoping It Burns To The Ground

7:20AM Defamer Hollywood | Playwright and Brothers & Sisters EP Jon Robin Baitz has spilled out his feelings about being “ousted, not fired, an important distinction,” from the series he created, though he fails to mention what that distinction is. (We think one ends with the extension of a middle finger and the sound of a door slamming, and the other precedes those with a farewell dinner at Chaya.) Baitz covers a lot of ground in his 5000-word meditation (and that’s just part two!) on what it means to leave Hollywood for New York’s always-welcoming, rodent-infested embrace, recalling behind-the-scenes power struggles–no McChokeyGates, thank heavens, but Rob Lowe did tend to get pissy if you failed to tell him how nice he looks at the table reads–to his online dating adventures in the “world capital of loneliness.” (Baitz obviously a man who never wintered in Bydgoszcz, Poland.) And as for its treatment of the gracefully aging, well–for shame, L.A., for shame: But perhaps most disheartening to me, a man who adores women, is the daily LA visual horror show of how they are discarded there, no matter how desperately they try to cling to youth. More »