
Kaitlin Olson and Rob McElhenney
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia stars Kaitlin Olson and Rob McElhenney are expecting their second son this spring, People reports.
The baby boy will join older brother, Axel Lee, who celebrated his first birthday last month.
FX orders two more seasons of It's Always Sunny, renews Wilfred and Louie
"We're having a boy! We're so happy that Axel gets to have a brother so close in age. And that I get to add another set of ...
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Kristen Bell, Justin Long
FX has ordered a new animated comedy series from It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia writer/producers David Hornsby, Scott Marder and Rob Rosell, the cable network announced Thursday.
The series, titled Unsupervised, centers on two best friends trying to survive their teenage years and do the right thing without any parental supervision. The series will premiere in January and be paired with FX's other animated comedy, Archer.
Fall TV: Get the lowdown on this season's must-see new shows
Unsupervised's voice cast includes...
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Glenn Howerton and Jill Latiano
Paddy's Pub will need a nursery soon.
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia star Glenn Howerton and his wife, Jill Latiano, are expecting their first child.
"Check out my beautiful preggers wife, y'all," the actor tweeted Sunday, along with a photo.
Check out photos from It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
The FX comedy is having a baby boom lately: Stars Charlie Day and Mary Elizabeth Ellis are due in ...
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It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
Paddy's Pub isn't the best place to turn for child care: The guys of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia once purposefully started serving underage kids to get more business, and adopted a Dumpster baby to exploit as a TV star. But now that star Kaitlin Olson is pregnant in real life, get ready to see Sweet Dee with child this season.
"Ultimately we realized we were never going to be able to hide it, realistically," co-creator, executive producer, star and baby daddy Rob McElhenney tells TVGuide.com. "So we knew we had to...
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OK, again, digging yall who checked in last week. The fun we had, huh? And what better way to recover from the lost joys of The Land of the Lost than with some love for the City of Brotherly Love. As bhm1304 guessed last week, the best FX sitcom youre not watching is
Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia.Granted, while its not really always sunny here, as a right proud Philly boy who just spent Labor Day wandering Center City, reading in Rittenhouse Square and chowing down on The Continentals insane crab Pad Thai, I have to say that this town does indeed rock.Much like this dirty little gem. Centered on foul-mouthed pub owners Mac, Charlie and Dennis, his barmaid sister Sweet Dee and a still unnamed coffee-shop waitress who could teach Friends Gunther a thing or two about stealing scenes, Sunny is best compared to Seinfeld
if Jerrys posse had less morals and raging drinking problems. Once Danny DeVito joins in for season 2 as Dee and Dennis...
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Rob McElhenney, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia may sound like a pleasant enough show, but there's nothing saccharine about FX's cult-hit comedy. Following the deplorable behavior and self-absorbed shenanigans of a group of friends who operate a South Philly dive called Paddy's Pub, the series enters its third season on Thursday, Sept. 13 (10 pm/ET, FX), and the DVDs for Seasons 1 and 2 arrive in stores today. Creator, producer and star Rob McElhenney recently spoke with TVGuide.com about the new season and provided some insight on attractive transsexuals, the City of Brotherly Love and whether he plans to get loaded with costar Danny DeVito before their upcoming appearance on The View.
TVGuide.com: In the beginning you,
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Charlie Day, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
For a series about to start only its second season, FX's It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia has come a long way. The pilot, made by actors/writers/executive producers Rob McElhenney, Glenn Howerton and Charlie Day, was shot on digital video and edited on a home computer for a grand total of $200. Even with limited publicity and starring relative unknowns, the seven-episode premiere season was able to build a word-of-mouth following that caused network execs to order a 10-epi
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