Mary Tyler Moore remembers being cast on “The Dick Van Dyke Show.” Tina Fey talks about creating “30 Rock.” Anderson Cooper explains how he became a reporter. “The Sopranos” creator David Chase faces off with “whacked Sopranos” like Steve Buscemi and Drea de Matteo. Conan O’Brien riffs with his writers.
They’re all on the souped-up website of The Paley Center for Media, the Manhattan archive that used to be called The Museum of Television & Radio. Under either name, the facility frequently hosts panel discussions with TV’s top creators, performers, journalists, executives and other experts. Excerpts from more than 40 of those are now online. (If you want to watch entire usually-90-minutes events, you can head to The Paley Center at 25 W. 52nd Street. Or to the Paley's Beverly Hills offshoot.)
Recent events now streaming include Roger Daltrey talking about “Amazing Journey: The Story of The Who” (which debuts on VH1 Saturday, Nov. 3 at 9 p.m.) and a discussion of HBO’s new female suicide bomber documentary “To Die in Jerusalem” (airing tonight at 9, as well as Sunday, Nov. 4 at 2 p.m. and Tuesday, Nov. 6 at 8:30 a.m.).

