4 posts tagged “fox”
According to television execs, we're supposed to be excited Excited EXCITED. Because it's Upfronts! week. Didn't ya know?!?! Was that a 'meh' I heard? Yeah, thought so.
I know, I haven't been around for a while. Actually, I've written several posts just in the last week that I haven't made public because I wanted to proof (and edit out some rambling--I know, hard to believe). But it's time for the Upfronts! Which means very little but the network execs like to think the Upfronts! are thrilling and imperative to the world spinning right round, even though all the confetti-tossing is really to attract ad moola that will hopefully trickle down and keep them employed and out of personal bankruptcy. So the thrill is really just for network honchos to show their competitors what big money they can draw for mediocre programming on as little budget as possible. Huzzah for Hollywood! But it does offer a chance for tv-geeks to rant and rave about what the evil networks are doing to their precious couch-tater time. So I am going to jump back into blogging, despite being on deadline for a project, and post to my heart's content since it's time for the Upfronts! Upfronts! Upfronts! Well, except for NBC which had it's Infronts? two weeks ago (blogged about it but wanted to edit a tangent about Chuck, which got picked up this weekend! Yay for announcements made two weeks after the Infronts? to try and upstage the Upfronts! Silverman, you are so you.)
So, here is FOX's 2009-2010 lineup. Pairing Bones with Fringe makes superb sense, although Fringe is still opposite NBC's funnies and my Thursday-night-addiction, Supernatural, so still won't be watching it live (and still have to catch up on a lot of season one). Bones got two seasons. I've never really been a big fan although I do watch from time to time. It often falls flat for me and I don't see the chemistry between Boothe and Bones (think I'm just not a big fan of Emily Deschanel), but good for David Boreanz. Let's see, what else do I care about? They canceled The Sarah Connor Chronicles which is lame because the show really improved after limping along early on in the season, at least the finale was spectacular. And, as someone pointed out somewhere on a message board (don't recall, sorry), with Terminator:Salvation coming out this summer it would be perfect promotion for the show. I always hoped Sci-Fi (oh, wait, is it Sy-Fy?) would give it a good home after BSG ended. Let's see, what else? Dollhouse was picked up, which I am ambivalent about. I'm a big goofy fan of Whedon shows (Firefly has ended up being my favorite with Angel and Buffy respectively following, probably because I can still see Angel in syndication every morning on TNT), but I just cannot get behind the premise of this show, for many reasons, or believe Eliza Dushku can carry it on her shoulders. It's just often subpar, and that's disappointing. But Whedon shows do often get better with time, so maybe it will improve, I just don't know if I'll ever be on board. Alan Tudyk was the best thing I've seen on the show as Alpha, truly enjoyable to watch, but was that the actor or the show? And how often could he be back since ABC is going to pick up V?
As for the newbies, I have to do a little research, considering how FOX likes to yank shows that I enjoy. FOX did add six shows to the lineup, four pilots in addition to Glee and The Cleveland Show. I'm really interested in Human Target, FOX's attempt to cash in on graphic novels. As I recall, Mark Valley hasn't been lead in a show since (the truly underrated and unwatched) Keen Eddie. Add Chi McBride and Jackie Earle Haley, I'll give it a shot.
I was going to talk about season finales here too, but I kind of said all I wanted to say already about FOX's. I gave up on 24 a few episodes ago, although I will probably watch the finale to see how it ends, what happens with Alameda, how it sets up for the next season. A show I used to never miss for fear of not being able to catch up, now I have no trouble just jumping in whenever I wish. I guess my Lost:Don't Give a Rat's Rectum theory works for other shows as well.
My random thoughts on TV that aren’t long enough to stand alone but combined make for one long-ass post:
- Did you watch the Emmys on
Sunday? Yeah, nothing else was on but Tell
Me You Love Me, so the Emmys it was. Did you also find them boring while still reminding the viewing public how out of touch voters are? Sure, sure, no
surprise, especially after six years of Lauren Graham snubs, but you can't blame them for dissing her for last season. Maybe that will change
with her new development deal at NBC. So, did you hear a chorus of "Are
you f*cking kidding me?" in bad faux-Jersey accents sweep the country when
Sally Field won? Followed by "You gotta be f*cking kidding me." when James
Spader took the stage? Oh, right, ratings sucked, not enough viewers for it to be audible. Well, at least Spader seemed genuinely befuddled, more so than usual. Okay, so I've crushed on Spader since he was typecast as '80s elitist sleezoid, and he's a fine actor even though the other Jimmy really did deserve the statue, but who watches Boston Legal besides my stepmother and William Shatner? Sally Field reminded me why I don't watch Brothers & Sisters, not for what she said but the shrill rambling (Brain fever, Celeste?), I don't care if Everwood's
Emily VanCamp is a cast member now. Give me a Chris Pratt guest
stint, maybe I'll reconsider for a few. But what's up with Katherine Heigl actually winning? Did the other gals split the votes? I've always liked her, but, really? Nah-ah, the S-word is not allowed here. Eh, I'm so tired of the Shondafication of the small screen, I'm elated Grey's didn't take more statues. Huh? I agree, Seacrest is a manscaped asshat. But thankfully Stephen Colbert, Jon Stewart, and Steve Carrell were on the recycled stage to give us one worthy laugh.
- Oh, Tell Me You Love Me. Sorry, I just can't make that commitment. No, no, it's not me, it's you. Who wants to watch a show about annoying people going through couples therapy for intimacy issues? Agony. It's as if thirtysomething stopped taking its antidepressants and ditched the fun-fun-fun storylines that dealt with kid barf, money matters, soul-sucking bosses, death, and cancer. I tried watching the second episode but my muttering "ShutupShutupShutup" followed by "Uggggh" repeatedly drowned out dialogue. I had issues with the promos that showed creator Cynthia Mort saying something about not even thinking about the sex when she conceived the first script; it just didn't occur to her. I don't remember exactly what she said because my brain imploded on that statement. A show with sexual intimacy as the central theme yet nookie didn't cross the mind? So when it was pitched to HBO, they weren't interested in all the "ground-breaking" nekkid, it was greenlit just because of issues, issues, issues, yay! Riiight. Do airlines service your island of delusion yet? Because I'd love to visit.
- Mad Men was renewed. I thought it would be, but after last week's ending, I would toss my telly if it wasn't.
It rocked my socks. Betty mid-afternoon still in her pink nightie ensemb, perfect hair, cigarette a
dangling, using live pigeons in her front yard as skeet just left me giddy and speechless but for
a "Hell Yeah!" Housewife Barbie has a dark side, now please let Mouse Ears cross
over too. It's a repeat of "5G" tonight, but that's okay. Now that I
have renamed the day Mad Men Thursday, I'll be back.
- Top Chef, why are we just now becoming friends? We’ve met once or twice, passing primetime acquaintances, and I got your messages about meeting up again but never returned the calls. Now, I look forward to our weekly sit-downs to see what detail Colicchio will nitpick; how Padma can be both goofy and condescending in one breath; if Queer Eye's delightful Ted will judge or that Food & Wine whiner Gail instead; how the camera will catch Hung in some obnoxious act which he will completely deny during a confessional; what Big Gay Chef comment Dale will make this week; how overblown Casey's hair will be during her talkingheads; if Brian will incorporate seafood into a dessert; will Sara expertly roll her eyes while making couscous; and what inane Quick Fire challenge our little cheftestants will face. Sadly, Sara will not get the chance to roll her eyes in Aspen. But maybe she can get an investor now to exhibit her mad skills on a Jamaican cheese farm.
- The new Fall season starts next week. Okay, so Fox launched new shows this week, as has The CW. Again, never got around to commenting on their upfronts either, so meh. Don't really plan on watching Fox much besides 24 anyway. If it weren't for Keifer, sweeeeet Keifer, I would ditch it, although I heard today that Tony "Soul Patch" Alameda will very briefly return. Sneaky rat bastards. Oh, and I will probably catch The Sarah Connor Chronicles whenever it shows up. I did watch Back to You for some inexplicable reason. Kelsey Grammar was trying not to be Frasier Crane, Patricia Heaton the anti-Deborah. I'm a sitcom snob, so studio audiences and laugh tracks don't often reel me in, and I don't think it worked this time either. That said Fred Willard is comedy gold even with a mediocre script.
- I probably won't watch the CW much either but I must admit, I did watch Gossip Girl. Teen dramas are an oxymoron and I am a skosh TV snob. But we've all got guilty pleasures, and these are my guiltiest of TV guilty pleasures. I rarely stick
around for a whole season, but I am compelled to check them out once if only to mock. I said I wasn't going to watch GG, but I couldn't help myself. Josh Schwartz, people; no matter how far The O.C.
sank, it still hooked my shallow soul in the beginning. As for GG, I have
not read the books, nor do I plan to do so. So it's all new to me, and yes, reminds me of Cruel Intentions, but thankfully nobody monotones dialogue like Ryan Phillippe for the small screen. Honestly, it was one
of the longest hours of TV I've seen in a while, meaning I checked the clock at the half-hour thinking things must be winding up. Wrong. I miss the comedy of The O.C. because poking fun at itself was incredibly charming. The acting isn't completely wretched. The
story is completely predictable. The Humphrey kids are likable, which is good since
they are the characters we are supposed to identify with the most as average folk. And Dan already slammed a Ryan-Atwood-new-kid-punch to date-rape-is-fun richie-rich asshole, Chuck. As for the music, not a fan.
Although they did work an Air song into the popfest, I've had Peter Bjorn &
John's "Young Folks" in my head all damn day now and I have no patience for the whistle in any tune. I forgot that Kristen Bell
narrates the show and although her voice doesn't have Veronica's specific snarktastic
edge, it was disconcerting having listened to so many VMVOs. But then I
thought of it like a big F U to the C-double-U. Bank on my popularity for publicity yet cancel my show, fine, but I
will still be narrating what you think will be your biggest hit yet while I kick your
ass Monday nights on Heroes. Will I watch again? If I'm home, and not
busy, and nothing else is on, maybe, um, okay, probably.
- I had planned on a bullet for the
shows I'm stoked to see in the upcoming weeks but that's just way
too much for a wee bullet to support. That last bullet is on roids so it
can handle the wordy weight. So, that will be up later in a separate post. I know, it's like the worst
cliffhanger ever, right?
I wasn't going to post about Drive again unless I actually saw the last two episodes FOX planned to burn off this month. I didn't trust FOX would follow through with the craptastic July 4 time slot for those last two episodes. And then some time last week, FOX did indeed move it to July 13, even though it was too late to correct printed weekly TV listings. It didn't really matter to FOX. The only people tuning in compose a small audience actually waiting for those last two episodes. I even forgot it was scheduled for the Fourth until it was moved.
Evidently FOX decided that this still wouldn't work, so it was pulled completely from the schedule and now will only air online (FOX's myspace page or local FOX affiliate sites). Seems like it's pouring the production and post-production costs down the drain because FOX thinks it can get better ratings with a repeat of Bones in the middle of the summer. Maybe it was a matter of advertising. In that case, repeats of House or Bones would be a better choice for ad revenue. I just can't help but see all of the money and hard work that went into making those episodes, the long hours the crew worked to put that jigsaw puzzle together, the effects post added during editing--geez, the picture car budget alone had to be huge for that show. Seems like a waste to only make available online. But what do I know?
Anyway, DriveFans.com posted an interview with Tim Minear and Craig Silverstein that divulges their plans for Drive's wily band of speed-racing characters. They had some intriguing ideas, twists and turns in character and story development. I still don't know if this show would have grown into something better because it could have easily merged onto the freeway of implausible plot twists. It may not have developed into a show worth tuning into long term, but it was a fun ride while it lasted.
Side note: The next time we may catch Nathan Fillion on the small screen could be on Desperate Housewives next season if he moves to Wisteria Lane as Dana Delany's younger husband. Oh, say it ain't so, Captain. I'll comment on that when The Hollywood Reporter reports that he's actually listed on the call sheet.
I meant to post this yesterday but didn't get to it. So I'm a day late and a gripe short . . .
Last week, Fox cancelled Drive after only four episodes of six aired. Evidently ratings were not stellar. And obviously replacing the show with repeats of House on Mondays is the way to conquer sweeps. If you say so. Oh, I'm being too hard on Fox. I'm sure they also needed to make room for Are You Smarter Than A Meerkat? I understand ratings are important, but Fox didn't give the show a shot. I guess they hoped for better numbers with the major promotional push Drive got. I read somewhere they even had the cast pump free gas one morning, for Nielsen's sake! True, the show was not groundbreaking television. It was a little clunky, a few of the characters were grating and/or boring, average writing. Okay, the scenery never matched where the racers were supposed to be--last epi., tall palm trees in northwestern Georgia, um, no. But it was escapist fun. Pure entertainment, no thinking cap required. It's too bad because it seemed like the show was getting better. Maybe I would've given up on it after a few more episodes, who knows. But it had Firefly/Serenity's ab-fab Nathan Fillion as the lead, playing a good guy with a bad boy past. Driving a badass 70s Dodge Challenger (having seen Grindhouse twice, I thought that was perfect timing). Anyway, I kind of hope that showrunner Tim Minear (that's three of his shows killed by Fox, right?) and Fillion both flip Fox the bird and never return. If it weren't for 24, I'd be done with those motherfoxers.
Actually, 24 is losing me quickly. I still haven't even watched last week's episode yet, recaps sadly seemed to suffice. There was a time when I did not miss 24. People knew why I didn't answer the phone Monday nights. Now I haven't even been home the past two Monday nights. There have been like seventy storylines this season and then they bring back Audrey and the Chinese. I was looking forward to the exploration of how Jack may have changed after two years in a Chinese prison, and we saw his reluctance to work with CTU again early on. But they yanked him right back into his old vigilante patterns, complete with torture and disregard for the powers that be. So, I started wondering what was different. Something was off, other then the fact that we could live in a country that would elect Wayne Palmer president. And it hit me like Jack bitchslapping the terrorist of the week. The Bauer Bag. Jack no longer carries his trusty James Bond-meets-Marry Poppins man purse. I actually have this bag (in army green). No, I didn't buy it because it was the Bauer Bag, but when I realized they were one in the same, I understood his loyalty to it. I would be lost without it, it really is the most awesome bag. And I bet Jack misses his too. Probably more than Kim.