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Why are they changing the baby? Um, yeah...I know! :rolleyes:
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Yes. She is lighter with "curly" hair.
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I saw that in the previews and got mad. I mean, it's not like the other baby was ugly, she just had the nappy gappies.
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She actually looked like she could have been Taye's baby. Well, that is if his wifey would have been AF AM. :rolleyes: :o
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^^
Ya know? I'm just going to SMAD and not say anything. ;) :p |
Okay?!?!? Last night's ep. Cute baby but why for previews for coming eps, it looks like YET ANOTHER DIFFERENT BABY. :confused:
I loved last night's ep though. |
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And new babyperson looked a little mature. . .just appeared to me to look a little older than she is. I think I'm officially hooked. Good thing Bernic Mac was a repeat. |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by nikki1920
Why come his boy is trying to play him all the time? lol I know right...can't he see that he is trying to do the right thing, and plus he has become really attached to this child. The nanny cracks me up. The nanny is hella-funny. It was so funny when he told Kevin that he thought the baby spoke a word but didn't want to tell him that the word was daa daa. And why in the heck was he trying to get an infant to say Cousin Kevin...I thought fall out I would. |
Article on Kevin Hill Babypersongate
Lots of tots make 1 TV baby
By MARISA GUTHRIE DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER Kids grow up so fast. But for kid actors, the growth spurt can lead to a pink slip. That's what happened on UPN's drama "Kevin Hill." The show's first episode, in which unsuspecting ladies' man Taye Diggs was saddled with his deceased cousin's baby daughter, was filmed in March. By the time the show went back into production in August, the twin girls who appeared in the pilot had "aged out." The baby switch confused some viewers. Listeners called Wendy Williams' WBLS-FM show last week, suggesting the new African-American baby was cast because she is lighter-skinned. Nonsense, said UPN officials. In fact, the show now uses five babies, including two sets of twins, from three families. "It's extremely difficult to do a drama with infant actors," said a UPN spokeswoman. That's because a day on the set of an hour-long TV drama can easily exceed 18 hours. Labor laws stipulate that child actors cannot be on a set more than eight hours a day. And they cannot "work" for more than 15 minutes at a time before they get a 20-minute break. All of which makes for a lot of baby swapping. So much so, it's not uncommon for both sets of the "Kevin Hill" twins to be used in a single episode, according to the network. And it's possible there will be more baby changes on "Kevin Hill." And next time, according to the network, it might be for the opposite reason. "As the show progresses," said a spokeswoman, "we may need to cast an older baby." |
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