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Are You Ready For Sara Again???

Sara still alive This blogger says
Read below!!! Our favorite druggie doctor might be headed back to our favorite inmate’s arms!!! Hooray! Prison Break executive producer Matt Olmstead tells TV Guide,”Lincoln glanced at the head in the box for a split second. That could’ve been anyone. He wasn’t about to pull it up from the hair and inspect it closely.” Olmstead also admitted that the fans affected the decision to bring back Sarah. “…once we started talking about it, it was mentioned again that fans are still wondering about her. And when people who are fans of the show — and of Sarah — are asking, “Is she really dead?”, what they’re saying, essentially, is, “I hope she’s not dead.” more at justjared.comAlso Kristin at E! is confirming this too!!! see it here
I must say I lean more towards this: Romatic meeting? And you - what do you think?

Break Free With Israeli Transvestite Pop Star Dana International…

Aaron Weber from Meevee brings us this a great clip of Wentworth doing an Israeli TV cable advertisement.

he says:

It’s mostly known as “Japandering” - US celebrities endorsing products overseas while acting like they’re too good to do it for the domestic market. Some people seem to think it’s a horrible thing, but I don’t care. Besides, it’s not like “Prison Break” Wentworth Miller is advertising something totally unrelated to his fame here in this Israeli cable ad. He’s just advertising his cable-ready hotness. (See ONTD for a loose translation and the identity of the transvestite pop star he finds blocking his escape tunnel).

I think it is great Public Relations for prison break, mixing with the local culture icons, and also quite amusing.
This particular satellite company does as a rule, very good advertisements, and this is just another example.

Jodi Lyn O’Keefe

Jodi Lyn O'Keefe

In an exclusive interview to John from Buddy T.V Jodi spoke Freely about her character Susan B. Anthony, how she got the role and what working on prison break is like.

Because it is such a cool interview i am bringing it to you as is:

Hi, this is John from Buddy TV, and I’m talking to Jodi Lyn O’ Keefe, one of the new stars of FOX’s Prison Break. Hi, Jodi.

Hi, how are you?


I’m OK. Now, how did you get cast in this role, was it just a straight audition process?

It was. I’ve worked for FOX for many years, but I’ve mostly done comedy for them, and I don’t know how I ever got so lucky as to get in that room. But I did and here I am, it’s been a blessing, the whole thing.


Your character works for the Company, the mysterious organization…

The mysterious organization that nobody reports to and no one knows about.


Exactly. How much did they tell you? Like when you got this role, how much do you know about it, that audiences who just watch it don’t?

Very little, you’d be surprised. I am told on a need-to-know basis, pretty much like my character. So when things are happening and there are things I need to know about, they let me know.


Is it difficult then to play it? To think about who this character is, when you don’t fully know all of her motivations and reasons?

No, I was just given enough to start, I really was. And then as we’ve been going on, they’ve been filling me in as to my backstory, and where I came from. I learned I was in the military immediately and that I was a prisoner of war, and I had some really terrible, horrible things happen to me. Torture, that sort of thing. So that now at this point in my life, that’s how I became the person that I am, and that’s why I’m able to do the job that I do. Because none of it affects me anymore, because things were so bad then that now they told me, you’ll kill someone or eat a ham sandwich, either way, as long as you’re doing your job.


And is it difficult to play such a villainous character, kind of, do you…?

No. I don’t know, I mean, it’s been difficult because there’s so many different subtleties in the character. And at the same time it’s a woman, so there’s all that that goes along with being a woman, and being an assassin, and being a cleaner. It’s hard to balance, but I think that there’s a really dark, horrible place within all of us that we can imagine. We don’t actually act on it, but it’s there, and you can just sort of tap into that. And I got to tell you, it’s good fun being the bad guy.


And were you a fan of Prison Break before you got cast?

Yes, I was. I watched Prison Break, my entire family watched Prison Break, it’s their very favorite show. So you wanna talk about being intimidated on day one? That was me shaking in my boots. I was in a bar scene with Dominic Purcell, and I was, may as well have been in a bar with Lincoln Burrows. It just, walking onto that set being the new guy and being on a show that I absolutely adored, was completely scary and horrifying.


And then does your character get to interact with a lot of other people? Because in Sona and out of Sona, you’re probably mostly working with Dominic. Do you get a chance to work with any of the other actors as well?

I do, and I’m not allowed to talk about that yet, because it’s in later episodes. We’re already filming number nine right now, but yes, I get to interact with a few others. (laughter) You’ll be pleased.


So how much of this character is written on the page? Because when you’re playing this character, what are you bringing? Like, what do you bring that’s not written on the page? It’s just, this is your choice?

I have been told that what I’ve been bringing and the reason that I’m here is because I brought swagger. So that’s pretty much the best compliment I’ve ever been given.

It must be really intresting to act a character on a need to know basis.

I wonder why that is - inorder to create something based on the now or maybe the writters are making it up as they go along?

Iike to mull over the creative prossess.

 

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