![Image](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BMzVkODI2NmQtODU1Mi00ODk0LWIxNjYtNzJkMDBkZGQ1NGU0XkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTE0MzQwMjgz._V1_QL75_UX500_CR0,0,500,281_.jpg)
Leeza Gibbons is extending her multi-year relationship with Ktla. The Emmy-winning host, writer and producer has signed a new deal with L.A.’s Nexstar-owned television station. Under the pact, Gibbons, who has co-hosted the annual Rose Parade since 2017, will return as co-host for 2025. She also will co-host Remarkable Women, Nexstar’s nationally televised annual special that honors the contributions of women in local communities across the United States.
“For 8 years, I’ve had a dream-come-true job and the best seat in the house,” said Gibbons in a statement. “No one covers this iconic tradition [Rose Parade] better than Ktla, which has become like family to me. Starting with the leadership of Don Corsini and John Moczulski through the exceptional Janene Drafs, I’ve been grateful to work with the best of the best,” adding “I’m excited to continue to host America’s New Year’s celebration and to help start...
“For 8 years, I’ve had a dream-come-true job and the best seat in the house,” said Gibbons in a statement. “No one covers this iconic tradition [Rose Parade] better than Ktla, which has become like family to me. Starting with the leadership of Don Corsini and John Moczulski through the exceptional Janene Drafs, I’ve been grateful to work with the best of the best,” adding “I’m excited to continue to host America’s New Year’s celebration and to help start...
- 4/5/2024
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Ktla-tv is poised for a historic changing of the guard as Seattle station executive Janene Drafs takes the reins of the storied Los Angeles TV station as general manager following the retirement of local broadcast stalwart Don Corsini.
Drafs, who is the first woman to lead Ktla, is set to begin her post as VP and general manager on Feb. 10. She’ll oversee all broadcast and digital operations of the station, now owned by Nexstar Media Group. Ktla marks Nexstar’s largest market among its 197 TV stations that reach some 63% of U.S. TV households. Los Angeles ranks No. 2 in TV market size behind New York representing an estimated 4.8% of the national TV audience.
Drafs comes to Ktla after working her way up from an entry-level sales position at Seattle’s Komo-tv starting in 1992. Since 2013 she’s served as VP and g.m. of two Seattle TV stations (Komo and Kuns) and three radio stations,...
Drafs, who is the first woman to lead Ktla, is set to begin her post as VP and general manager on Feb. 10. She’ll oversee all broadcast and digital operations of the station, now owned by Nexstar Media Group. Ktla marks Nexstar’s largest market among its 197 TV stations that reach some 63% of U.S. TV households. Los Angeles ranks No. 2 in TV market size behind New York representing an estimated 4.8% of the national TV audience.
Drafs comes to Ktla after working her way up from an entry-level sales position at Seattle’s Komo-tv starting in 1992. Since 2013 she’s served as VP and g.m. of two Seattle TV stations (Komo and Kuns) and three radio stations,...
- 1/23/2020
- by Cynthia Littleton
- Variety Film + TV
Nexstar Media Group, which gained control of La TV station Ktla after buying Tribune Media last year, has appointed Janene Drafs as the station’s VP and Gm.
Drafs succeeds Don Corsini, who had a long and high-profile career as a broadcast news leader in the La market, including a decade running Ktla. Corsini announced his retirement last fall after the Nexstar-Tribune deal closed. Drafs, who is heading to La after several years in the Seattle market, will start February 10 and will report to Nexstar COO Brian Jones.
Since 2013, Drafs has been VP and Gm of a combination of a Seattle media portfolio including local TV stations Komo (an ABC affiliate) and Kuns (Univision), related digital platforms and three radio stations. She started her career at Kuns and Komo as an account executive in 1992.
During her tenure running Kuns and Komo, Drafs led an integrated media approach to content, sales,...
Drafs succeeds Don Corsini, who had a long and high-profile career as a broadcast news leader in the La market, including a decade running Ktla. Corsini announced his retirement last fall after the Nexstar-Tribune deal closed. Drafs, who is heading to La after several years in the Seattle market, will start February 10 and will report to Nexstar COO Brian Jones.
Since 2013, Drafs has been VP and Gm of a combination of a Seattle media portfolio including local TV stations Komo (an ABC affiliate) and Kuns (Univision), related digital platforms and three radio stations. She started her career at Kuns and Komo as an account executive in 1992.
During her tenure running Kuns and Komo, Drafs led an integrated media approach to content, sales,...
- 1/23/2020
- by Dade Hayes
- Deadline Film + TV
Veteran station executive Don Corsini, a fixture in the Los Angeles TV market who spent the past decade running Ktla-tv as President and General Manager, has informed the station’s staff of his plan to retire at the end of the year. He made announcement at a meeting with employees yesterday, emphasizing that the departure was entirely his decision, according to sources.
The move comes following an ownership change at Tribune Media’s Ktla, which has been taken over by Nexstar Media Group after the company closed its $4.1 billion acquisition of Tribune in September. A Nexstar rep confirmed to Deadline that Corsini is winding down his time at the station.
Corsini has worked at most major TV stations in the second biggest market in the Us. Prior to taking the reins of Ktla in January 2009, Corsini was President and General Manager of CBS’ Los Angeles O&Os Kcbs/Kcal. He...
The move comes following an ownership change at Tribune Media’s Ktla, which has been taken over by Nexstar Media Group after the company closed its $4.1 billion acquisition of Tribune in September. A Nexstar rep confirmed to Deadline that Corsini is winding down his time at the station.
Corsini has worked at most major TV stations in the second biggest market in the Us. Prior to taking the reins of Ktla in January 2009, Corsini was President and General Manager of CBS’ Los Angeles O&Os Kcbs/Kcal. He...
- 10/16/2019
- by Nellie Andreeva and Dade Hayes
- Deadline Film + TV
Updated with cause of death: Ktla anchor Chris Burrous’s death has been ruled accidental, according to the Los Angeles County Coroner’s office.
Burrous died on Dec. 27 from what the coroner called methamphetamine toxicity, authorities said today. Other contributing factors in Burrous’ death included hypertension and heart disease.
Burrous is survived by his wife Mai and 9-year-old daughter Isabella.
Earlier: Ktla Morning News reporter and weekend anchor Chris Burrous died Thursday after being found unconscious at a Glendale motel. His death is being investigated as a possible overdose, police said. He was 43.
Burrous was found unresponsive at a Days Inn in Glendale after a male he was with called authorities around 1:15 Pm to report he had passed out and was possibly not breathing, Glendale Police Sgt. Dan Suttles said at a news briefing. Paramedics administered CPR before transporting Burrous to a hospital, where he was later pronounced dead,...
Burrous died on Dec. 27 from what the coroner called methamphetamine toxicity, authorities said today. Other contributing factors in Burrous’ death included hypertension and heart disease.
Burrous is survived by his wife Mai and 9-year-old daughter Isabella.
Earlier: Ktla Morning News reporter and weekend anchor Chris Burrous died Thursday after being found unconscious at a Glendale motel. His death is being investigated as a possible overdose, police said. He was 43.
Burrous was found unresponsive at a Days Inn in Glendale after a male he was with called authorities around 1:15 Pm to report he had passed out and was possibly not breathing, Glendale Police Sgt. Dan Suttles said at a news briefing. Paramedics administered CPR before transporting Burrous to a hospital, where he was later pronounced dead,...
- 2/23/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
![Chris Burrous](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNTc0ODg0MzE5M15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwMDkwODQwNzM@._V1_QL75_UX500_CR0,0,500,281_.jpg)
Chris Burrous, the weekend news anchor and reporter at Los Angeles-based at Ktla, died in December from methamphetamine toxicity, the Los Angeles County coroner’s office said Friday. He was 43.
Other contributing factors to Burrous’ death include hypertensive and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, the coroner’s office added.
The manner of Burrous’ death was deemed accidental, according to the coroner’s office.
Also Read: Chris Burrous 'Used to Make Me Laugh Till I Cried,' Remembers Ktla Co-Anchor Lynette Romero
Burrous was found unresponsive at a hotel in Glendale, California, on Dec. 27, 2018. He was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead at 2:06 p.m., the coroner said.
Burrous joined Ktla in 2011 as a reporter and anchor and helped to expand its popular morning news shows to a seven-days-a-week broadcast.
The son of a Central Valley farmer and a Nasa engineer, he previously worked in Bakersfield and Fresno before...
Other contributing factors to Burrous’ death include hypertensive and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, the coroner’s office added.
The manner of Burrous’ death was deemed accidental, according to the coroner’s office.
Also Read: Chris Burrous 'Used to Make Me Laugh Till I Cried,' Remembers Ktla Co-Anchor Lynette Romero
Burrous was found unresponsive at a hotel in Glendale, California, on Dec. 27, 2018. He was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead at 2:06 p.m., the coroner said.
Burrous joined Ktla in 2011 as a reporter and anchor and helped to expand its popular morning news shows to a seven-days-a-week broadcast.
The son of a Central Valley farmer and a Nasa engineer, he previously worked in Bakersfield and Fresno before...
- 2/22/2019
- by Tim Kenneally
- The Wrap
![Chris Burrous](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNTc0ODg0MzE5M15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwMDkwODQwNzM@._V1_QL75_UX500_CR0,0,500,281_.jpg)
KTLA anchor Chris Burrous died Thursday afternoon after being found unconscious at a motel in Glendale, Calif. He was 43.
Burrous was found unresponsive by Glendale firefighters and died later at a hospital. Firefighters found him “suffering from a medical emergency” in a room at the Days Inn in downtown Glendale, according to the Glendale Police Department.
“The man was not breathing and CPR was administered as paramedics prepared to transport him to the hospital,” Glendale police said in a news release. Police were contacted by telephone at 1:14 p.m. by a man who told them “an individual he was with had passed out and was possibly not breathing.”
Police said the caller indicated that Burrous “had possibly overdosed.” No other information was disclosed about the caller or details of what was found at the scene. Police are awaiting a Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office report for a determination on the cause of death.
Burrous was found unresponsive by Glendale firefighters and died later at a hospital. Firefighters found him “suffering from a medical emergency” in a room at the Days Inn in downtown Glendale, according to the Glendale Police Department.
“The man was not breathing and CPR was administered as paramedics prepared to transport him to the hospital,” Glendale police said in a news release. Police were contacted by telephone at 1:14 p.m. by a man who told them “an individual he was with had passed out and was possibly not breathing.”
Police said the caller indicated that Burrous “had possibly overdosed.” No other information was disclosed about the caller or details of what was found at the scene. Police are awaiting a Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office report for a determination on the cause of death.
- 12/28/2018
- by Cynthia Littleton
- Variety Film + TV
![Chris Burrous](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNTc0ODg0MzE5M15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwMDkwODQwNzM@._V1_QL75_UX500_CR0,0,500,281_.jpg)
Chris Burrous, the weekend news anchor and reporter Los Angeles-based Ktla, was found dead Thursday at a motel. He was 43.
According to a statement from Glendale Police, authorities received a call at 1:14 p.m. Pt that Burrous “had possibly overdosed” and was unconscious. He was not breathing when paramedics arrived at a Days Inn, and efforts to revive him failed. He was later pronounced dead at an area hospital.
Glendale detectives are investigating while awaiting a report from the Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office on the cause of death. There was no indication that the death was by suicide, Glendale Sgt. Dan Suttles told Ktla.
Also Read: Hollywood's Notable Deaths of 2018 (Photos)
Burrous joined Ktla in 2011 as a reporter and anchor and helped to expand its popular morning news shows to a seven-days-a-week broadcast.
The son of a Central Valley farmer and a Nasa engineer, he previously worked...
According to a statement from Glendale Police, authorities received a call at 1:14 p.m. Pt that Burrous “had possibly overdosed” and was unconscious. He was not breathing when paramedics arrived at a Days Inn, and efforts to revive him failed. He was later pronounced dead at an area hospital.
Glendale detectives are investigating while awaiting a report from the Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office on the cause of death. There was no indication that the death was by suicide, Glendale Sgt. Dan Suttles told Ktla.
Also Read: Hollywood's Notable Deaths of 2018 (Photos)
Burrous joined Ktla in 2011 as a reporter and anchor and helped to expand its popular morning news shows to a seven-days-a-week broadcast.
The son of a Central Valley farmer and a Nasa engineer, he previously worked...
- 12/28/2018
- by Thom Geier
- The Wrap
The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences has released its annual list of local Emmy nominations. NBCUniversal’s NBC4 is tops with 18 noms, followed by Univision’s Spanish-language outlet Kmex with 15. CW-affiliated KTLA5 is next with 13; ABC’s ABC7 and indie for PBS channel Kcet landed 12 each. Univision’s multiplatform education initiative Educate, Es El Momento (Educate Yourself, The Moment is Now) will receive the 2013 Governors Award. Winners of the 65th Los Angeles Area Emmy Awards will be announced August 3 at ATAS’ Leonard H. Goldenson Theatre in North Hollywood. See all the nominees and a breakdown of noms by station after the jump:l.A. Local Color Special Olympics Southern California: World Of Difference •KTLA5 Don Corsini, Executive Producer Mike Kincaid, Executive Producer John Moczulski, Executive Producer Steve Pomerantz, Producer Jeff Proctor, Executive Producer Steve Rangel, Executive Producer Olivia Kate Stomski, Producer Mark Walton, Producer Tony’S L.A. •Kttv-tv Tony Valdez,...
- 6/20/2013
- by THE DEADLINE TEAM
- Deadline TV
Veteran Los Angeles weatherman Johnny Mountain has signed on with KCBS-TV Los Angeles. Mountain is set to deliver weather reports weekdays on the station's 5 p.m., 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. newscasts. Mountain previously spent 27 years with KABC-TV Los Angeles, where at various times he worked with such current KCBS personalities as Ann Martin, Laura Diaz, Harold Greene and Jim Hill. Mountain departed KABC in January. "This is yet another example of our commitment to recruiting the best people in the business and building the premier television news organization in Southern California," said Don Corsini, president and general manager of KCBS and KCAL-TV Los Angeles.
![Phil McGraw in Dr. Phil (2002)](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BYWE3ZDFjOGMtNGU2MC00ZGEyLTg1NjctNDVjZWRkYmEwYWZkXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNTU2NDQ3NjU@._V1_QL75_UX140_CR0,1,140,207_.jpg)
![Phil McGraw in Dr. Phil (2002)](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BYWE3ZDFjOGMtNGU2MC00ZGEyLTg1NjctNDVjZWRkYmEwYWZkXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNTU2NDQ3NjU@._V1_QL75_UX140_CR0,1,140,207_.jpg)
Dr. Phil is moving his practice in Los Angeles sooner than expected. The top-rated talk show is switching from KNBC-TV to KCBS-TV/KCAL-TV in the No. 2 market in the fall -- a year earlier than originally scheduled. King World Prods., which distributes the syndicated talk show, said in November that the Paramount Domestic Television-produced strip would be moving from KNBC to Viacom's L.A. duopoly starting in fall 2006 as part of a new pact running through the 2008-09 season. But KNBC confirmed that it cleared Twentieth Television's new talker The Suze Orman Show for fall 2005 and plans to air the strip in Dr. Phil's 4 p.m. slot. Don Corsini, president and general manager of KCBS and KCAL, said Dr. Phil's time periods will be announced this year.
- 2/23/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Viacom Inc.'s Los Angeles television duopoly of stations will shake up their weekday late-afternoon news schedules in a bid to strengthen KCBS in a period where it has long struggled. The half-hour 4 p.m. newscast will move from independent KCAL to the CBS affiliate beginning Monday and be anchored by KCBS veterans Ann Martin and Harold Greene, who anchor newscasts before and after that time slot, respectively. The new show will lead off a 2 1/2-hour local news block on KCBS. The two stations, which share newsgathering resources, will continue to produce a total of 11 hours of local newscasts each weekday, station executives said. "The public has made it clear to us that they appreciate the quality of our newscasts, so we are committed to doing even more to serve the community, beginning with the expansion of (KCBS') afternoon/early evening news block," duopoly president and general manager Don Corsini said. Currently, KABC is the only other station in the market with a 4 p.m. local newscast. To accommodate the change, KCBS will move Judge Judy up a half-hour to 3 p.m., while Judge Joe Brown, currently airing from 3-3:30 p.m., will move to KCAL and air from 4:30-5:30 p.m. KCAL will fill the 4 p.m. slot with Judge Judy.
- 3/28/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
![Jerry Springer](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BMjA1ODg0MTMwM15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTYwNTYwMDk1._V1_QL75_UX140_CR0,0,140,207_.jpg)
![Jerry Springer](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BMjA1ODg0MTMwM15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTYwNTYwMDk1._V1_QL75_UX140_CR0,0,140,207_.jpg)
Hey, four words: Jerry Springer -- The Movie.
Poetry in motion, right? You take your average Springer guests and show them in their natural, pretaping habitat. And while you're at it, you also reveal what makes Jerry tick. It's money, baby.
Apparently, it's what the five producers and seven exec producers behind the low-budgeted "Ringmaster" are thinking. The problem is, their fictionalized account of the events leading up to an appearance on Springer's show, a k a "Lifestyles of the Poor and Trashy," plays like one of Jerry's "Too Hot for TV" videos, with the added bonus of bad writing and direction.
But will the guarantee of a bleep-free 90 minutes, complete with a generous flashing of breasts (including Jerry's), plus cheesy, simulated sex acts be enough to lure viewers out of the comfort of their trailer park? Artisan Entertainment, in a bid to break out of its usual art house mode, clearly hopes so, but "Ringmaster"'s true destiny lies on the video racks. Or maybe Jerry will thoughtfully throw in a copy as an incentive to buy his upcoming tell-all book.
Little do Angel, Connie, Rusty and Willie know, their sordid little lives are about to become the "You Did WHAT With Your Stepdaddy?" episode on the next "Jerry Springer".
It seems Angel (Jaime Pressly), a motel chambermaid who goes the extra distance for male guests, is about to tie the knot with the slow-witted Willie (Ashley Holbrook) while also carrying on with Rusty (Michael Dudikoff), who just happens to be married to Angel's mom, Connie (Molly Hagan). When she catches the two in action, Connie decides to teach her daughter a lesson by servicing her fiance.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the park, the take-no-prisoners Starletta Wendy Raquel Robinson) catches her man Michael Jai White) getting freaky with her best friend (Tangie Ambrose). With said boyfriend having previously played the dog with her other best friend (Nicki Micheaux), the grouping is a natural for a "My Traitor Girlfriends" episode.
More than willing to air their dirty laundry for a trip to Hollywood (apparently Chicago isn't sexy enough), both parties head for the "Springer" show -- but not before doing a little interfacing, if you know what we mean.
Playing out like watered-down John Waters, the Neil Abramson-directed, Jon Bernstein-written enterprise awkwardly goes for a poor approximation of cheap, sleazy satire one minute and (inexplicably) quiet, tender introspection the next, with nothing capturing the sheer, guilty-pleasure adrenaline rush of an installment of Springer's real TV show.
The acting styles are similarly all over the place, with Hagan's I-just-wanna-be-loved competitive mom bravely striving for something more noble. She's a trailer trash Ma Joad. At least Robinson ("The Steve Harvey Show") seems to be a enjoying herself as the wrong woman to mess with.
As for Jerry's big acting debut, in which he gets to share a post-coital embrace with Rebecca Broussard and delivers an encore performance of his country song ("Dr. Talk"), here's a Final Thought: Don't quit your day job.
RINGMASTER
Artisan Entertainment
A Motion Pictures
Corporation of America production
Director: Neil Abramson
Screenwriter: Jon Bernstein
Producers: Jerry Springer, Gina Rugolo-Judd, Brad Jenkel, Steve Stabler, Gary W. Goldstein
Executive producers: Brent Baum, Don Corsini, Richard Dominick, Erwin More, Brian Medavoy, Donald Kushner, Peter Locke
Director of photography: Russell Lyster
Production designers: Dorian Vernacchio, Deborah Raymond
Editor: Suzanne Hines
Costume designer: Gail McMullen
Music supervisor: Marcus Barone
Music: Kennard Ramsey
Casting: Carmen Tetzlaff
Color/stereo
Cast:
Jerry: Jerry Springer
Angel: Jaime Pressly
Troy: William McNamara
Connie: Molly Hagan
Starletta: Wendy Raquel Robinson
Demond: Michael Jai White
Willie: Ashley Holbrook
Rusty: Michael Dudikoff
Vonda: Tangie Ambrose
Leshawnette: Nicki Micheaux
Willie: Ashley Holbrook
Running time -- 90 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
Poetry in motion, right? You take your average Springer guests and show them in their natural, pretaping habitat. And while you're at it, you also reveal what makes Jerry tick. It's money, baby.
Apparently, it's what the five producers and seven exec producers behind the low-budgeted "Ringmaster" are thinking. The problem is, their fictionalized account of the events leading up to an appearance on Springer's show, a k a "Lifestyles of the Poor and Trashy," plays like one of Jerry's "Too Hot for TV" videos, with the added bonus of bad writing and direction.
But will the guarantee of a bleep-free 90 minutes, complete with a generous flashing of breasts (including Jerry's), plus cheesy, simulated sex acts be enough to lure viewers out of the comfort of their trailer park? Artisan Entertainment, in a bid to break out of its usual art house mode, clearly hopes so, but "Ringmaster"'s true destiny lies on the video racks. Or maybe Jerry will thoughtfully throw in a copy as an incentive to buy his upcoming tell-all book.
Little do Angel, Connie, Rusty and Willie know, their sordid little lives are about to become the "You Did WHAT With Your Stepdaddy?" episode on the next "Jerry Springer".
It seems Angel (Jaime Pressly), a motel chambermaid who goes the extra distance for male guests, is about to tie the knot with the slow-witted Willie (Ashley Holbrook) while also carrying on with Rusty (Michael Dudikoff), who just happens to be married to Angel's mom, Connie (Molly Hagan). When she catches the two in action, Connie decides to teach her daughter a lesson by servicing her fiance.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the park, the take-no-prisoners Starletta Wendy Raquel Robinson) catches her man Michael Jai White) getting freaky with her best friend (Tangie Ambrose). With said boyfriend having previously played the dog with her other best friend (Nicki Micheaux), the grouping is a natural for a "My Traitor Girlfriends" episode.
More than willing to air their dirty laundry for a trip to Hollywood (apparently Chicago isn't sexy enough), both parties head for the "Springer" show -- but not before doing a little interfacing, if you know what we mean.
Playing out like watered-down John Waters, the Neil Abramson-directed, Jon Bernstein-written enterprise awkwardly goes for a poor approximation of cheap, sleazy satire one minute and (inexplicably) quiet, tender introspection the next, with nothing capturing the sheer, guilty-pleasure adrenaline rush of an installment of Springer's real TV show.
The acting styles are similarly all over the place, with Hagan's I-just-wanna-be-loved competitive mom bravely striving for something more noble. She's a trailer trash Ma Joad. At least Robinson ("The Steve Harvey Show") seems to be a enjoying herself as the wrong woman to mess with.
As for Jerry's big acting debut, in which he gets to share a post-coital embrace with Rebecca Broussard and delivers an encore performance of his country song ("Dr. Talk"), here's a Final Thought: Don't quit your day job.
RINGMASTER
Artisan Entertainment
A Motion Pictures
Corporation of America production
Director: Neil Abramson
Screenwriter: Jon Bernstein
Producers: Jerry Springer, Gina Rugolo-Judd, Brad Jenkel, Steve Stabler, Gary W. Goldstein
Executive producers: Brent Baum, Don Corsini, Richard Dominick, Erwin More, Brian Medavoy, Donald Kushner, Peter Locke
Director of photography: Russell Lyster
Production designers: Dorian Vernacchio, Deborah Raymond
Editor: Suzanne Hines
Costume designer: Gail McMullen
Music supervisor: Marcus Barone
Music: Kennard Ramsey
Casting: Carmen Tetzlaff
Color/stereo
Cast:
Jerry: Jerry Springer
Angel: Jaime Pressly
Troy: William McNamara
Connie: Molly Hagan
Starletta: Wendy Raquel Robinson
Demond: Michael Jai White
Willie: Ashley Holbrook
Rusty: Michael Dudikoff
Vonda: Tangie Ambrose
Leshawnette: Nicki Micheaux
Willie: Ashley Holbrook
Running time -- 90 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
- 11/23/1998
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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