shadowkat: (tv)
I should make dinner, but not hungry - possibly due to the chai tea and gluten-free almond sugar cookies I'd made earlier, while watching ER and The Starter Wife.

Ah Television. Yes, I am a bit of TV slut. I admit it. Always have been. Also have incredibly ecletic taste, which veers towards the off-kilter, cult half of the time. Plus, a huge weakness for serials - that requires committment, as opposed to episodic or anthology stories that don't.

Told Wales at Dinner last night, eating a nice steamed talipia with shrimp, artichocks and snow peas, with broccoli rabe, while she consumed her gnocchi, that Grey's Anatomy had without question "jumped the shark".

"Jumped the shark?" Wales asked. "What does that mean?"

"You're obviously not a tv geek," I replied to her bewilderment. "Jump the Shark as cjlasky once explained to me ages ago, is a term that is used to describe a show that has sort of jumped out of the range of logic into the neverland of mindboggling stupidity. The term was derived when Fonzi of the hit TV show Happy Days, donned a pair of skis and literally "jumped" a "real live shark" as a stunt to get ratings. Evil Knieval was a hit back then and they were copying his stunts - except to my knowledge even Evil didn't try to jump a real live (or animatomic shark). "

Grey's has done this. It came close to doing it last year with the Izzy/George/Callie storyline, but redeemed itself at the last minute. This year, alas, after a decent start, it did it. The writing now makes little to no sense. And you feel the actors and characters looking up at the writing gods and asking the time old question - "what's going on? Are you really stoned? Because this is ridiculous."
Grey's has jumped the shark - cut for spoilers )

Ugly Betty on the other hand, got better. cut for spoilers )

ER has also been relatively good this season. Less over-the-top and more like it was in the early years, when I loved it. I gave up on it for a while - when they kept going to Africa and kept doing weird shoot-outs. (What is this ER or 24?) The focus on Neela, Dr. Banfield,
Gates/Sam, and Morris - with the old series regulars, Dr. Green, Romano, Weaver, and Luca/Abby popping in, has worked. It's writing matchs House's as far as medical dramas go.
It was always more realistic than the other ones out there. I'm loving Neela's storyline this year. Sort of identify with her, in an odd way.

House has also been good, I usually watch it live or the very next day. The dynamic between Wilson/Cuddy/and House continues to evolve and enhance the series. Helps that the three actors are so good and complement on another so well. Also enjoying the interaction between supporting characters - Thirteen/Forbes(Omar Epps character), Cameron/Shane. It's a medical drama that does a good job of using each case as a means of describing a problem with the main character or exploring one. Consistently and tightly written. Unlike Grey's.

The best written show that I'm currently watching or rather the one I'm enjoying the most at the moment and am reluctant to delete from the old DVR is surprisingly enough Supernatural.

I adore this show. It's pure horror noir. Tightly written. Consistent in its thematic structure and mythology, not to mention the rules of its verse (unlike Grey's). Yet at the same time unpredictable and rather imaginative. Tough to do, four years in. Most shows start to crumble around this point. This one just continues to improve. There was only one episode this season that I thought was less than stellar. Also the characters continue to change and evolve. Sam has lost his innocence. Dean has lost his self-righteousness, he's filled with guilt and remorse. He no longer sees the world in black and white and he no longer believes the rules make sense. The show like most good noir is questioning the morality of the universe in which it inhabits, a relatively skewed version of our own self-righteously angry and religious mythos. It questions what it means to be human, what it means to be good or evil. And whether the line is as neat as one might think. Who are the good guys? Are we doomed? Or does our salvation lie in our ability to forgive and love and hope and help one another? Including ourselves? It's not politically correct - true noir isn't by the way, it tends to be pretty sexist and racist, which is why a lot of people abhor it and it rarely hits mainstream. Too dark and controversial. If you look deeper at the art form, you will notice that it is critical of its own racism and sexism, but doing so requires looking deeper at our own societial structure and our own world and realising that noir is at times just a dark mirror of it, emphasizing the bits and pieces we don't want to see, that lie in wait, for us in the shadows.
shadowkat: (Default)
So how was your tv week?

Mine, okay. I guess it is saying something when the only show I really enjoyed this week was Smallville and possibly Doctor Who. Might be a mood thing. Oh Lost was okay, just a bit derivative in places (I've seen one too many time-space/hole in the fabric of reality tv shows in my life time). It feels at times like Fantasy Island meets Mysertious Island meets the Twilight Zone. Doctor Who, SPN and Ugly Betty...cut for potential spoilers... )

Also Lost had it's moments. That show certainly likes anti-heroes - I'll give it that. It may have more anti-heroes than any other tv show, with the possible exception of General Hospital. Makes me giggle when I think about it, because I used to have long debates with cjlasky about this very thing. He kept insisting that a tv series that focused on an anti-hero, such as Spike or even someone like House, would never survive. People couldn't handle watching nasty people each week. I tried to point out to him that the reality shows pretty much killed that thesis. If people are willing to watch real people without scripts or acting experience snarl at each other on screen and act nasty each week - I don't think they are going to have any problems whatsoever with fictional characters doing it. Heck, look at how sucessful Rescue Me, the Shield and The Sopranos were. Those guys make Spike look like a pussycat in comparison.

Lost, in case you haven't been watching it, is basically a show about a bunch of relatively attractive losers stuck on a mysterious island that has, well, issues. Yes, the island is a character not just the setting. They used to do flashbacks, but right now they are doing flash-forwards, and no, as I explained to a friend this evening, there is no way I can explain the show to someone who doesn't watch it. The writers gave up on the whole lets attract new viewers bit a long time ago. For those who do watch - cut for potential spoilers for Lost )

I'd say something more about Smallville, but I'm not sure anyone else is watching Smallville.
I think everyone gave up on it two years ago, can see why - it did have a bit of a slump - I skipped at least three seasons of it -probably not necessary but cut for potential spoilers for smallville )
shadowkat: (sci-fi)
Have the worse sinus/tension headach today, so as a result not doing all that much. Dropped laundry at the laundramat for them to do - which ain't cheap. Used to be 13 or 10 bucks to do three loads, now it is twenty bucks. Plus tip. Ugh. I really envy people who have their own washer and dryer, or have one in their building.

Watched a shit-load of tv this weekend and still have four programs I haven't touched on my DVR. (Life, Dirty Sexy Money, Torchwood, and Moonlight - in case anyone is remotely curious.) I am watching too many tv shows - this DVR thing is dangerous. It can tape up to 30 hours before it starts randomly deleting. I get the feeling that Tivo's have better storage capacity. And... I am apparently getting Showtime now. No clue why. They better not be charging me for it. As far as I can tell they aren't. Don't want it. Don't have the time. I've come to the conclusion that it is physically impossible to watch over 20 hours of tv a week without going stir-crazy.

Have now seen the season premiers of both Supernatural and Friday Night Lights, so no longer need to avoid flist spoilers. Adored Supernatural. Friday Night Lights just bored me. I honestly think this may be a one season show. Last season worked as a complete telenovel in of itself. I'm not sure I need or want more story for this baby. Also found some of the story-lines a little sappy and cliche. Will probably nix.

Supernatural on the other hand has much against my better judgement won over my heart. It is fun, sexy, funny, and scarey all at the same time. Reminds me of old school John Carpenter and the Westerns I studied in my youth. I also enjoy the funky Judeo-Christian by way of HP Lovecraft mythology. Is it just a tad racist and misogynistic? Yeah. But, it is also somewhat realistic in depicting the blue collar white male's attitude towards women and minorities - Dean and Sam aren't saints, far from it. They are deeply damaged men. We see everything from their pov. And the writers do a good job of showing how their pov is not always the most reliable. It may be amongst the most tightly written tv shows I've seen in a while. Also I'm enjoying the relationship amongst the characters - Dean, Sam, Bobby - how they relate to each other and the world outside of them.

Plus, much like Buffy did, we have demons introduced that act as metaphors for the characters emotional arcs.

Supernatural Spoilers )

I may watch Supernatural live instead of Grey's, except I like taping because I like to rewind over certain sections. Grey's doesn't require re-winding or rewatching, it's not that deep. It really isn't. Sigh. The first two seasons of Grey's were pretty good. Now it's gotten very melodramatic and a bit too soapy for its own good. I'm still watching. But how long that will continue? No clue. Having similar problems with Ugly Betty. I found myself somewhat bored with it this Thursday. It was a bit too over-the-top for me.

Profile

shadowkat: (Default)
shadowkat

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 28th, 2025 07:12 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios