Sarah Chalke is Pregnant

Sarah ChalkeScrubs star Sarah Chalke and her fiancee, entertainment lawyer Jamie Afifi, are expecting their first child this winter, reports Life & Style Weekly.

Ottawa-born Chalke, 32, has played Dr. Elliott Reid on the popular medical comedy for eight seasons.


New Cox Joins Scrubs Cast

Looks like J.D. and the rest of the Scrubs gang will be making a new friend.

Courteney Cox, of Friends fame, will be joining the Scrubs cast for a three-episode arc during its upcoming eighth season.

Cox will “ruffle feathers” as Sacred Heart’s new chief of medicine–perhaps by butting heads with the other Dr. Cox, played by John C. McGinley.

This will mark Cox’s return to TV comedy. Cox became a household name for playing Monica on NBC’s hit sitcom Friends. Most recently, the 44-year-old actress played a tabloid editor on the FX drama Dirt, which was canceled after two seasons.

Scrubs ended its seventh season on NBC in May, but will be returning for an eighth on ABC this fall.


‘Scrubs’ Continues Series on ABC

“Scrubs” fans can relax: the show isn’t over after all! It’s just moving.

After NBC heavily advertised last week’s episode, a fairy tale theme, as the series finale, many fans were confused and disappointed. It contained timeline errors and did not justifiably sum up the series.

Star Zach Braff posted an explanation in a MySpace bulletin yesterday. “I was not allowed to say it until today, but Scrubs will be moving to ABC for its final season,” he confessed. “We are currently filming the 8th and final season. The true finale of the show will air on ABC in the fall. NBC merely promoted the Fairy Tale episode as the finale, as it was the last episode they owned.”

The episode featured fan favourite Dr. Cox as the chief of medicine, though he had recently left. Braff explained that the episodes had been aired out of order due to the writer’s strike.


Scrubs Goes to ABC: Stat

Scrubs may finally have a home next year. Or not.

Adding to the confusion of where the long running sitcom is headed next year, Aloma Wright (who played Laverne on the show until the character died earlier this season) tells ew.com that the show is definitely going to ABC next year.

“As far as I know, it’s set. After he killed me off, producer [Bill Lawrence] promised me that if they got picked up for a seventh season he’d bring me back as my twin sister. I’m assuming he’ll continue to do the same,” she said.

ABC and NBC did not comment to the statement.

Scrubs, which has been off NBC since before the writers strike despite having episodes completed, has been on the peacock network for the past seven years.

Recently, ABC said it would be interested in taking the show for an eighth season (to add to the mess, the show is filmed at ABC studios).

However, many of the stars of the show were not prepared to come back for an eighth season – that is apparently being worked out right now.


Braff Set To Score Big Payday For Scrubs

SCRUBS star ZACH BRAFF is set to become one of the highest paid actors on TV if the hit sitcom gets renewed by US network NBC for a seventh season.

According to sources, the 31-year-old actor has landed a deal that will earn him around $350,000 per episode for the 2007-08 season.

The new deal will put him in the top echelon of highest-paid male actors on US television, alongside TWO AND HALF MEN star CHARLIE SHEEN, whose paycheque is also in the $350,000 per episode range.

Braff, who also wrote, directed and starred in the 2004 independent romantic comedy GARDEN STATE, plays DR JOHN ‘J.D.’ DORIAN on the show.

(c) 2007 WORLD ENTERTAINMENT NEWS NETWORK LTD. All global rights reserved. No unauthorized copying or re-distributing permitted.


Canadian Scrubs Star Sarah Chalke Engaged

“Scrubs” actress Sarah Chalke is engaged to longtime boyfriend Jamie Afifi.

Afifi, an entertainment lawyer, popped the question last week while the two were vacationing in Hawaii at the Grand Wailea Resort.

Chalke’s rep wasn’t able to disclose a date; the duo have yet to mark their nuptials on the calendar.

The two are both natives of Canada and it’s a first-time walk down the aisle for both of them.

Chalke, 30, got her big break on the hit series Roseanne as Becky’s replacement. She’s enjoyed a six-year stint as the socially inept Dr. Elliott Reed on Scrubs.

Afifi and Chalke have had a three year courtship.


TV Column: Re-Running Through the Summer

Let?s face it. Summer is a crappy time for primetime television. I can?t stomach all the reality television the networks are shoveling out, but what I can do is offer up some suggestions for great reruns. Whether you watch them weekly or grab a couple DVDs and watch them all at once, the following shows will make for some great viewing that will be sure to help pass the time before Sweeps are finally upon us.

SCRUBS ? This NBC comedy is up for two Emmy?s this year ? its second time being nominated since the show?s debut in 2001. Scrubs features a cast of experienced actors lead by Zach Braff (Garden State), Donald Faison (Clueless) and Sarah Chalke (Roseanne). The actors portray resident medical students working hard to become doctors while attempting to take themselves seriously as professionals and as adults.

While the writing is superb, the great thing about Scrubs is that the entire cast has a knack for performing comedy and drama simultaneously, allowing for scripts of great depth that in turn develop diverse, realistic and relatable characters. Scrubs is the only show on television with writers and actors talented enough to tastefully master fart jokes and death issues in the same half-hour episode.

Be sure to check out Scrub?s first season DVD for John C. McGinley as Dr. Cox, a sarcastic doctor with a penchant for minute-long rants, and Zach Braff as Dr. John Dorian, whose gift for inner-monologue is second to none.

VERONICA MARS ? Veronica Mars just wrapped up its first season this spring, but as long as no one has ruined any season finale surprises for you, it is well worth the reruns. The plot centers on Veronica Mars, daughter of a private eye, who is desperately trying to solve the murder of her best friend, Lilly. Cracking other cases along the way, Veronica receives pieces to Lilly?s puzzle as the season progresses, while dealing with every day high school drama typical of any seventeen-year-old girl.

This show serves up an equal dose of drama and laughs with a healthy sense of dark humor, but it?s the honest portrayal of high school life that really has me hooked. So often, the teenagers we see on television transparently reflect the forty-year-old writers who created them, or the thirty-year-old actors portraying them. But these characters make you forget the fact that they are characters at all, and isn?t that the sign of a job well done? Watch one episode (CBS, Thursdays at 8pm), and I guarantee you will be watching them all for the wit, the writing, and the unfurling mystery that will keep you guessing every time.

ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT ? FOX will finish airing the second half of its Arrested Development marathon this Friday, so if you have some plot re-capping to do before the September 19 season premiere, make sure you?re in front of T.V. tomorrow night at 8pm.
And if you?ve never watched the show before, where the hell have you been?

This Emmy-winning comedy is famous for its sharp wit, inside jokes, and bits that ? if you?re not watching carefully ? can go right over your head. That kind of humor makes this show perfect for re-run watching; you?ll find something new to fall off the couch laughing over every time you watch it.

The plot follows Michael Bluth, who is involuntarily put in charge of his dysfunctional family and their crooked business after his father is imprisoned for cooking the books. Michael must pull the business out of the hole and restore its reputation while supporting his family ? his alcoholic mother Lucille, shopaholic twin sister Lindsay, older brother/magician Gob, mentally stunted younger brother Buster, aspiring actor brother-in-law Tobias, rebel niece Mabey, and finally, Michael?s own neurotic son, George Michael.

The acting on this show is absolutely flawless. The actors have an innate sense of comedic timing, and play off of each other as if they?ve been working together forever. When you?re watching them, you actually get a sense of the fun they?re having, which will inevitably put a big smile on your face in turn. The jokes are subtle and intelligent, without relying too heavily on gags or slapstick, and often leave you wondering ?How did he just say that with a straight face?? In short, Arrested Development respects its viewers? intelligence, and promises to leave them rolling in the aisles.

So there you have it. Three great television shows that will pull you out of your ?Rockstar: INXS?/ ?Extreme Makeover: Home Edition? rut. Something different. Something with substance. Something awesome. Happy re-running!


Twitter @andpop Become a facebook Fan RSS Headlines andPOP Daily