Which television shows are you watching? Part III

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Re-watching Silicon Valley because the final season is almost upon us.
I had forgotten how many of the most memorable moments came from season one. On the other hand, the later seasons have much more Gavin Belson who has to be one of the greatest comedy antagonists of our time.
I love the show but the last few seasons were a real chore as they leaned sooooo heavily on the 'idiot plot' - where the major drivers of the plot can only be explained by everyone acting like complete idiots. It was also maddeningly frustrating that the core cast was in a continual loop of rebooting their efforts. Maybe that's a key feature of real-life silicon valley start up life but it seems like they have one massive failure after another, only to pick up the pieces and re-achieve quick success within a few episodes. And really I could forgive all of the re-booting if it wasn't for everyone being a complete goddamn idiot at every key moment. There was a scene where the crew had super-sensitive documents that detailed their plans to defect from their company, only they had them on their person at that company and then proceeded to drop them such that someone from that company found them out. It was tedious.
 
Following @Zkribbler's YouTube-drop in the Rants thread, we watched a couple of eps of Mr Iglesias yesterday. It was generally good-natured, mildly amusing in places — and dumped-on by its laugh-track. Why (oh why) do so many (American) sitcoms insist on including the laugh-track? Are (American) audiences assumed to be too stupid to notice the jokes otherwise?

(Hmm... Maybe I should have put this post in the Rants thread as well...)
 
Last night hubby and I started watching "The Boys" on Amazon ... so far I think it's pretty interesting. I love how all the graphic nudity so far has been male, lol!

I'm most interested in Starlight's story at this point in time, I'd like to see how she, as a pure hero, can fight corruption and rot from the inside. She joined up to fight the bad guys, and she didn't realize the real bad guys are those who hired her ...

Karl Urban's really a phenomenal actor.
 
Following @Zkribbler's YouTube-drop in the Rants thread, we watched a couple of eps of Mr Iglesias yesterday. It was generally good-natured, mildly amusing in places — and dumped-on by its laugh-track. Why (oh why) do so many (American) sitcoms insist on including the laugh-track? Are (American) audiences assumed to be too stupid to notice the jokes otherwise?

It's not too bad. It could be worse. It could be German; any jokes are followed by a reprimand by your manager at work due to loss of productivity. :mischief:
 
It could be German; any jokes are followed by a reprimand by your manager at work due to loss of productivity.
Yer honour, I protest!

That stereotype is inaccurate, and thus offensive :nono:

;)
 
The reprimand is issued by your manager's manager rather than your manager then?


I've watched the first two episodes of LA's Finest. I'm sticking with The Rookie.
 
A new poster for season 4 of The Expanse. Poster's meh, but I'm stoked for the show, so I suppose it did its job.

Spoiler :
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I should be caught up by then.
 
New Amsterdam is surprisingly good. I wasn't expecting a lot, but it turns out it's pretty good. It's a drama more in the vein of early seasons of E.R. and less a primetime soap like Grey's Anatomy (nothing wrong with Grey's Anatomy, btw, I watched it off-and-on for years). I thought the jazz drumming affectation would grate on my nerves after a while, but I kind of dig it. Good cast, most of whom I didn't know. Good writing.

Season 2, episode 2:
Spoiler :
Is Max genuinely hallucinating? The 'magical realism' of the two of them singing to the baby worked in the season premier, and it followed the whole ep's misdirection about who died, but when Georgia appeared in the last moment of episode 2, I thought, "uh-oh." Now that I'm thinking about it, Dr. Kapoor's "he's grieving in his own way" line now seems written to be a little ominous in retrospect.

I also don't know what to make of Dr. Reynolds covering for the kid, and I kind of like that I don't. And isn't Evie an attorney? For the hospital? Maybe I'm misremembering.
 
This has piqued my interest a little.

 
What do you mean, ‘nothing’ wrong with Grey's Anatomy?
 
So far, so good for Stumptown and Emergence through 2 episodes.

Stumptown
is scratching an itch, in the absence of more Jessica Jones. Smulders' clever, self-medicating P.I. in a leather jacket and bluejeans is less snarky than Ritter's clever, self-medicating P.I. in a leather jacket and bluejeans, but the tenor of the show is lighter. Smulders' version is a war veteran with a heavy case of survivor's guilt, where Ritter's was a sexual assault survivor with a heavy case of survivor's guilt. I don't think I've seen Smulders actually act before, and she has some chops. The show has outstanding fight choreography, focusing as it does on characters who don't really know how to fight. It's a little bit comical but no less violent for it. I notice the show has a separate stunt choreographer and fight choreographer. The latter is Travis Wong, and Smulders' stunt double is Marie Fink. Neither is a name I recognize, but they're doing good stuff. The '80s music soundtrack is beginning to get a little worn, but they've chosen some decent songs and mix it up with both older and newer stuff, and the joke about the jammed cassette deck in the junker car is still making me laugh. Jake Johnson and his character are quickly charming; Michael Ealy and his character haven't found their gear yet, but it's still early. As with the '80s soundtrack, the relationship triangle is maybe a little banal..? But I'm hopeful they can do something interesting with that. Again, still early; we're only in the 'setting the stage' phase.

It's too early to tell whether Emergence is careening towards an actual reveal and resolution of the mystery they're setting up, or will pull an X-Files and yank our chains again and again. Through only 2 episodes, it does seem to be moving along at a clip. I was afraid the main character being a police officer would mean that we would get a lot of "Case of the Week" episodes that have nothing to do with the main story, just to distract and delay. They could still do that, of course. Here again we have a scrappy, canny woman as our protagonist. Do I have a 'type'? Yeah, okay. Like most people, I have several 'types', but there's no question these two shows have tapped into one of them. Allison Tolman has charisma coming out of her pores, and also seems like a decent actor. The fight scenes aren't quite as cleverly done as Stumptown's, although Tolman's resolution to the impound yard scrap made me laugh and say "ow" at the same time. "What happened?" "His face got... broken."
 
If you want to see more of Cobie Smulders' acting chops then you could try and find a production of Present Laughter she was in (with Kevin Kline as the lead) about two years ago.
 
New Amsterdam is surprisingly good. I wasn't expecting a lot, but it turns out it's pretty good. It's a drama more in the vein of early seasons of E.R. and less a primetime soap like Grey's Anatomy (nothing wrong with Grey's Anatomy, btw, I watched it off-and-on for years). I thought the jazz drumming affectation would grate on my nerves after a while, but I kind of dig it. Good cast, most of whom I didn't know. Good writing.

Season 2, episode 2:
Spoiler :
Is Max genuinely hallucinating? The 'magical realism' of the two of them singing to the baby worked in the season premier, and it followed the whole ep's misdirection about who died, but when Georgia appeared in the last moment of episode 2, I thought, "uh-oh." Now that I'm thinking about it, Dr. Kapoor's "he's grieving in his own way" line now seems written to be a little ominous in retrospect.

I also don't know what to make of Dr. Reynolds covering for the kid, and I kind of like that I don't. And isn't Evie an attorney? For the hospital? Maybe I'm misremembering.
Ryan Eggold, who plays Max, had to leave The Black List because his minor character was far better played than any of the main characters outside of James Spader's Reddington. I started watching New Amsterdam just because he was in it but I agree with your assessment. Good cast, good writing.

Spoiler :
As long as he knows he's hallucinating it's okay.

Yes, she is in the hospital's legal department and when the case comes up it is almost certain to complicate their relationship.
 
It's too early to tell whether Emergence is careening towards an actual reveal and resolution of the mystery they're setting up, or will pull an X-Files and yank our chains again and again.
I think it's more likely that ABC will be the one yanking your chain and will cancel it after one season. The big networks are not going to sucker me again into a show with lots of mystery and zero resolution.

I watched the first 6 seasons of The Walking Dead, but please, someone let this franchise die. The main series was just renewed for an 11th season and now there's a newer, lamer second spinoff.

 
I think it's more likely that ABC will be the one yanking your chain and will cancel it after one season. The big networks are not going to sucker me again into a show with lots of mystery and zero resolution.

I watched the first 6 seasons of The Walking Dead, but please, someone let this franchise die. The main series was just renewed for an 11th season and now there's a newer, lamer second spinoff.


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Netflix has a great ambience show called Moving Art where they show footage from lots of exotic natural locations with soothing music playing over the footage. It's top-tier background/ambience TV and I highly recommend it to anyone who's looking for a show to watch which they don't really want to watch. If that makes sense.
 
Netflix has a great ambience show called Moving Art where they show footage from lots of exotic natural locations with soothing music playing over the footage. It's top-tier background/ambience TV and I highly recommend it to anyone who's looking for a show to watch which they don't really want to watch. If that makes sense.

This unironically salvaged my work day after an extremely difficult morning.
 
Ryan Eggold, who plays Max, had to leave The Black List because his minor character was far better played than any of the main characters outside of James Spader's Reddington.
The Black List was one of those shows I watched for 5-6 episodes when it premiered, but it couldn't hold my attention amid the onslaught of shows. I didn't even know Eggold was in it.

I think it's more likely that ABC will be the one yanking your chain and will cancel it after one season.
Yup, wouldn't be surprised. The television cemetery is littered with those shows.
 
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