NEWSMAKERS


NEWSMAKERS

‘Roots’ is most-watched cable miniseries premiere in 3 years

NEW YORK

Nielsen says 5.3 million viewers watched the multi-network debut of “Roots” on Memorial Day, making it the most-watched scripted miniseries premiere on cable television since 2013 when “Bonnie & Clyde” aired on A+E.

The premiere airing of “Roots” was carried on History, Lifetime, A+E and LMN.

According to Nielsen Fast National numbers, the audience totaled 8.5 million over the course of Monday’s three telecasts of the initial episode.

The second episode aired Tuesday, and the remaining two episodes will air tonight and Thursday.

The miniseries is based on Alex Haley’s 1976 best-selling novel, “Roots: The Saga of an American Family.” It comes four decades after the original “Roots” miniseries became a national phenomenon when it aired on ABC in 1977.

‘Shield’ actor convicted of murder in wife’s death

LOS ANGELES

A jury on Tuesday convicted an actor who played a police officer on TV of second-degree murder in the shooting death of his wife that was partially witnessed by their two young sons.

The verdict in the trial of Michael Jace, who appeared on the FX series “The Shield,” came after a weeklong trial in which Los Angeles jurors were told the actor shot his wife, April, in the back and then twice in the legs with a revolver that belonged to her father.

Jace, 53, did not testify in his own defense. He told detectives soon after the attack that he had retrieved the gun to kill himself but couldn’t do it. Instead, he planned to shoot his wife, an avid runner, in the leg so she would feel pain, Jace said in a recorded interview.

Deputy District Attorney Tannaz Mokayef told jurors the actor was waiting for his wife, shot her in the back and taunted her before shooting each of her legs.

Jace’s 10-year-old son testified that he heard his father say, “‘If you like running, then run to heaven,”’ before firing the second time.

Savoy Brown, an adult son of April Jace’s, said the family was pleased with the verdict. He said watching Michael Jace has been difficult for the family, and he is hoping the actor, who bit his bottom lip when the verdict was read but showed no other emotion, will show his feelings when he is sentenced.

“I’d just like to see the sadness on his face, that he realized it because it seems every now and then, there’s moments of sadness and there’s moments of not,” Brown said after the verdict. “And those moments of not really get me questioning, you know, how can you go that far? How can you say those words? How can you do that?”

Mokayef said the potential sentence would be 40 years to life in prison when Jace is sentenced June 10.

She said during the trial that the actor was upset that his wife wanted a divorce and believed she was having an affair, although no evidence was presented during the trial that she was cheating.

Associated Press