Fox once again makes an interesting scheduling choice, involving one of the network's most popular shows. Apparently musical dramedy Glee will have a "winter finale" on December 4, TV.com reports, and won't pick up the plot again until mid-April. The reason for this 4 month+ layover?
Why, so American Idol can be the lead-in for a new reality show titled Our Little Genius--a competition show for precocious children. Oh boy. I can hardly wait to not watch that.
The good news for me is that the four month gap in Glee programming will allow me to catch up on this critically acclaimed series--which up till now I've been missing only because I've gotten sucked in by the Wednesday competition, Modern Family and Cougar Town.
Glee will get a new Tuesday timeslot in April, following American Idol. While scheduling changes aren't usually the best choice, in this case it's a good thematic pairing and might be a boost for Glee. Since fans are pretty diehard, hopefully they'll be willing to wait four months AND switch days--but it sure seems like a pretty big gamble for a show that's already doing well for the network.
Watch Glee for now on Fox, Wednesday nights at 9/8c.
PHOTO: Glee screencap, c2009 Ryan Murphy Productions, 20th Century Fox Television.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Thursday, November 12, 2009
NBC Nabs Doctor Who
I've been crushed at the imminent loss of David Tennant as the brash, funny, sexy, and wickedly intelligent Doctor Who. His final episodes on the brilliantly reduxed series will air this November and December on BBC One, and in December on BBC America (no idea why the first installment is delayed a month in the US). I wasn't sure anything could console me, but now I see news that NBC has snagged Tennant for a pilot.
Entertainment Weekly reports that the show will be about "a panic-attack-prone attorney [who] teaches his clients to represent themselves". That does sound like a promising comedy premise, and Tennant is very good at both broad physical comedy and sly delivery of clever witticisms. The other thing I've learned from seeing Tennant on Doctor Who (and in the miniseries Casanova) is that he also has a wonderful talent for poignant drama--and the capability of seamlessly weaving drama and comedy together, which is no easy task.
NBC has been faltering in the ratings for some time now. The sad thing is, that they've actually made a lot of interesting attempts at bringing quality to the screen (Kings, Southland), but they don't back up their dramas with the proper support and abandon them before they've had a chance to truly succeed. Tennant is a real charmer and could be a huge draw for NBC. We'll have to hope they either change their strategy, or that the new Tennant pilot gets explosive enough ratings to guarantee it a permanent slot.
I don't think I could bear to lose Tennant a second time, so lets hope the new show is worthy of his talents. Knowing the American audience, I'm guessing it's too much to hope for that Tennant will get to use his lilting Scottish accent--but perhaps we have a shot at the English accent he adopts for Doctor Who.
PHOTOS: David Tennant as Doctor Who (and a hint of Moonlight's Sophia Myles as Madame de Pompadour), Doctor Who "The Girl in the Fireplace" screencaps, c2006 BBC.
Monday, November 9, 2009
Barbie Ruins Three Rivers and White Collar
Why, Three Rivers, why? After I just talked about episode 5, "Code Green", and how much I enjoyed the lack of "blonde Barbie" doctors, Three Rivers introduces a...blonde Barbie doctor. And as a love interest for Dr. Andy Yablonski (Alex O'Loughlin), no less.
I knew we were in trouble two weeks ago, when they got rid of Andy's wife as soon as they introduced her. Now in "Where we lie", they throw Dr. Lisa Reed (Amber Clayton) into his arms, in the midst of one of the worst scenes I've seen on TV in awhile. Now admittedly, the cliche-ridden dialogue of Reed's childhood trauma was bad enough, but Clayton's delivery was awkward and completely unconvincing.
And I hate to bang on the same drum, but it would be nice if they could hook up Yablonski with a more substantial woman. O'Loughlin is a decent-sized guy, and yet you can see in the photo above that Clayton barely makes it into the frame with him. Add to that the fact that all I could focus on in their "emotional" scene was how her collar bone was jutting out of her baggy clothes. Could Hollywood PLEASE let women eat already?
Three Rivers has so many good qualities and good characters. It's a shame they feel they have to ruin it with a love interest storyline that is flimsy, cliched, and unsatisfying in several different ways.
Then we have White Collar, the new Matt Bomer (Chuck) vehicle from USA. White Collar had a delightfully slick, sexy, and fun pilot episode. There was an intriguing plot, interesting characters, and a wonderful rapport between Bomer's white collar criminal Neal Caffrey and Tim DeKay's FBI agent Peter Burke.
I liked that even though Burke was the straight man to Caffrey's charming con man, Burke was smart and cunning and worthy of respect. He's also got an attractive and intelligent wife at home (Tiffani Thiessen), and had a no-nonsense, efficient right-hand woman in Diana (Marsha Thomason). I say "had", because after the pilot, Diana disappeared.
So now, instead of having a cool, classy woman who is immune to Caffrey's charms, White Collar introduced Lauren Cruz (Natalie Morales)--the Barbie FBI agent who first appears in a hooker outfit showing off her impossibly tiny figure. And then we get the obligatory flirting with Caffrey, which just plunges the show into typical cliche.
Morales at least seems to be an okay actress, but her believability as an FBI agent is seriously strained. Word is that Thomason had scheduling conflicts that prevented her from doing the full series of White Collar, but her IMDB page only lists a guest spot on General Hospital, which doesn't seem like that big of a conflict.
It's more likely that USA decided Matt Bomer's attractiveness was skewing the audience too much to the female side. The antidote: add some eye candy to bring in the men. Unfortunately, they also seem to have diminshed the slickness and intelligence of the plotlines, focusing more on flirting and sexual antics. We don't need 12 characters telling us how hot Caffrey is--we can figure that out on our own, thanks.
White Collar is also in danger of making Burke the foil, instead of an equal partner to Caffrey, and that will be a HUGE mistake. DeKay is charming and sexy, too, and it's more fun to see the two boys taking down criminals as a team instead of clever boytoy and bumbling FBI lackey. They haven't taken it that extreme, yet, but I worry they're heading in that direction.
USA and CBS, please listen--dump the Barbies and cliches and focus instead on what's awesome about the shows and characters you're creating.
Watch Three Rivers on CBS, Sunday nights at 9/8c. Watch White Collar on USA, Friday nights at 10/9c.
PHOTOS: Alex O'Loughlin as Dr. Andy Yablonski, Amber Clayton as Dr. Lisa Reed, Three Rivers "Where We Lie" screencap, c2009 CBS; Matt Bomer as Neal Caffrey, Natalie Morales as Agent Lauren Cruz, White Collar "Flip of the Coin" screencap, c2009 20th Century Fox, USA network.
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