Max confronts Chloe about the dirt he has on her.Free Download Video Hollywood Heights 19th July 2012 Episode On ABC Family Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch Hollywood Heights Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV.Romance and deceit. Fame and heartbreak. Success and secrets. Welcome to Hollywood Heights, where they put the DRAMA in family drama. Follow Loren, an aspiring songwriter and straight-A high school student, as her life drastically changes. When Loren gets thrown into the spotlight suddenly, and meets her musical idol, Eddie Duran, nothing will ever be the same for anyone. The obstacles that come with life and fame become instantly apparent, but it's the strong bond between friends and family that help them all through. Loren Tate's life changes after she wins a songwriting contest sponsored by her favorite singer, Eddie Duran in this adaptation of the Mexican telenovela, Alcanzar una Estrella. ames Franco seems to be going for the Guinness World Record of eccentric guest shots. First, he did 742 intermittent arcs as an insane serial-killer artist on "General Hospital." Now he'll pop up on this piffle of a cable serial "derived from" the Mexican telenovela "Alcanzar una Estrella," playing an "outrageous" (duh) movie mogul.
But first, the setup. "One Life to Live" kid Brittany Underwood (Langston) stars as a high school senior with music dreams that just might come true when her rock idol (Cody Longo, the 2009 movie "Fame") sees her songs. He'll flip for them. He'll flip for her. Melodramas involving parents, BFFs, business buds and significant others play out through October.
MY SAY There's a reason broadcast networks don't run prime-time shows nightly. They're expensive. Or else they look cheap. As in cable's "Hollywood Heights," which lacks the punch of a polished production.
Do we really need another show about California? Can't anyone on the West coast think of a theme not about your own state? This show is completely mindless and without an ounce of literary or cinematographic merit. It has that unfulfilling tendency to feel addictive yet never give the viewer any real fulfillment.
Come on Hollywood - can't you come up with anything better than this? When considering what viewers might enjoy, perhaps considering how people live in most of the country and trying to connect with American people's lives instead of constantly promoting the unrealistic lifestyle of a privileged few who have money and live in Southern California, might be better for ratings.
“Hollywood Heights” starts from that premise and keeps spinning the story from there. Nick at Nite says it will run at least 80 episodes, making this a bold programming gamble for an audience long assumed to have no attention span.
The movies with this premise generally are stylized and almost a little cartoonish. But they’re also jammed solid with music and are so good-natured that no one minds the story could pretty much never happen in real life.
They’re modern fairy tales, feeding teen fantasies. It’s not the same fantasy as “Twilight,” but it’s rooted in the same sort of dreamy romanticism.
One reason these rock fantasies work as movies is that they rip right through the story. We get a showdown with the mean girl and then, boom, into the next song.
“Hollywood Heights” is betting that if the story takes enough twists, we won’t demand a happy ending after 90 minutes.
The first episode, which is essentially the setup, debuts Monday and runs every night this week. It officially premieres next Monday, June 18.
Our heroine is Loren Tate (Brittany Underwood), an 18-year-old high school senior who’s your basic good kid. She’s shy, but has a warm heart.She does her homework and she’s going to be okay.
She also has a huge crush on Eddie Duran (Cody Longo), the hottest rock star on the planet.
So she sneaks out on a school night to see his concert, and after a contorted series of coincidences ends up winning a contest to write a song for him.
But first, the setup. "One Life to Live" kid Brittany Underwood (Langston) stars as a high school senior with music dreams that just might come true when her rock idol (Cody Longo, the 2009 movie "Fame") sees her songs. He'll flip for them. He'll flip for her. Melodramas involving parents, BFFs, business buds and significant others play out through October.
MY SAY There's a reason broadcast networks don't run prime-time shows nightly. They're expensive. Or else they look cheap. As in cable's "Hollywood Heights," which lacks the punch of a polished production.
Do we really need another show about California? Can't anyone on the West coast think of a theme not about your own state? This show is completely mindless and without an ounce of literary or cinematographic merit. It has that unfulfilling tendency to feel addictive yet never give the viewer any real fulfillment.
Come on Hollywood - can't you come up with anything better than this? When considering what viewers might enjoy, perhaps considering how people live in most of the country and trying to connect with American people's lives instead of constantly promoting the unrealistic lifestyle of a privileged few who have money and live in Southern California, might be better for ratings.
“Hollywood Heights” starts from that premise and keeps spinning the story from there. Nick at Nite says it will run at least 80 episodes, making this a bold programming gamble for an audience long assumed to have no attention span.
The movies with this premise generally are stylized and almost a little cartoonish. But they’re also jammed solid with music and are so good-natured that no one minds the story could pretty much never happen in real life.
They’re modern fairy tales, feeding teen fantasies. It’s not the same fantasy as “Twilight,” but it’s rooted in the same sort of dreamy romanticism.
One reason these rock fantasies work as movies is that they rip right through the story. We get a showdown with the mean girl and then, boom, into the next song.
“Hollywood Heights” is betting that if the story takes enough twists, we won’t demand a happy ending after 90 minutes.
The first episode, which is essentially the setup, debuts Monday and runs every night this week. It officially premieres next Monday, June 18.
Our heroine is Loren Tate (Brittany Underwood), an 18-year-old high school senior who’s your basic good kid. She’s shy, but has a warm heart.She does her homework and she’s going to be okay.
She also has a huge crush on Eddie Duran (Cody Longo), the hottest rock star on the planet.
So she sneaks out on a school night to see his concert, and after a contorted series of coincidences ends up winning a contest to write a song for him.