| 5 Great Things For This Weekend |  | | 1.R.I.P. TV The Fall TV season has barely gotten underway, and already the networks have added to our “12 Creative TV Deaths” gallery. Click through to take a moment to remember Charlie Harper and “stock mob boss from The Playboy Club” before placing your bets on the next creative offing | | - Sit Down with Statham Check out EW’s interview with Jason Statham before Killer Elite hits theaters this weekend for his take on issuing a beatdown while tied to a chair and what it was like working with Robert De Niro
- Path to Nirvana Saturday marks the 20th anniversary of Nirvana’s game-changing album Nevermind. Read our interview with band mates Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic, plus producer Butch Vig, as they recall recording the album that sent them on meteoric rise to fame
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Who's the 'Bossy'? Tina Fey’s Bossypants sold its millionth copy this week. If you’re one of the hold-outs who hasn’t read it yet, spend the weekend catching up with Ms. Fey -
G Is for 'Glitter Vest!' That's what Mr. "Gooster" is wearing in Sesame Street's brilliant parody of Glee, which is appropriately all about the letter 'G' | | |  | | Boardwalk Empire 9-10PM HBO, SEASON PREMIERE ''You'll be judged by what you succeed at, boy. Not by what you attempt,'' says the Commodore (Dabney Coleman) to son Jimmy (Michael Pitt) in tonight's season 2 premiere of the Prohibition-era drama. And so the assault on Nucky Thompson begins. But taking down Steve Buscemi's Nucky will be no easy task, as evidenced by a scene in which the Atlantic County treasurer skillfully plays to both sides of the color line in the wake of a deadly Ku Klux Klan attack. Can the Commodore succeed where Michael Shannon's unhinged Agent Van Alden has so far failed? It's time to pick a side, and I'm on whichever one the dude with half a face chooses. B+ —Dalton Ross More Tonight's Best TV | | | | IN THEATERS THIS WEEKEND |  | Moneyball Supersmart and rousing – maybe the best baseball movie since Bull Durham – Moneyball is drenched in a kind of wise-guy-jock knowingness about what makes professional baseball tick. Yet the dialogue is so light and sharp it just about cuts the air | |