Category Archives: TV

Flash Off

Quite the media blitz leading up to the premiere of Flash Forward, eh? We were tempted by old faces, new ideas, and the possibility that larger answers could be found in Earth’s shared trauma.

Flash Forward had everything going for it, in my book. What the premiere delivered, however, has me tuning out for good. After an impressive disaster scene (which I had grossly underestimated in my narrow view of what Earth would resemble after everyone blacked out for 2:17), everything went downhill. The pacing seemed off, not frantic enough perhaps. We got a few glimpses of key players’ flashes, but even those were boring. As a matter of fact, I found the whole thing to be the most boring show in recent memory.

This kind of show works if the audience wants to stay onboard to learn the fates of the cast, but there is not one person I care about enough to see what their future holds. “Tormented, dedicated, alcoholic, law enforcer”, “Strong, beautiful, doctor, adulteress”, “Scared child”, “No-vision having sidekick”, etc. all adds up to BORING. Who cares what happened? Who cares who or what caused it? Who cares if the future is changed for any or all of the key players? These are questions that we should be asking after a strong premiere episode. All I asked myself was, “How fast can I delete this from DVR?”

The sad thing is, this show will probably get to finish its run, while the vastly superior Defying Gravity struggles to get the remaining episodes aired. Sometimes I hate network television.

Come One, Come All!

Heroes returned last night, and I enthusiastically declare the return triumphant. Though I have remained a fan throughout, I really, REALLY hated the military angle of “Fugitives”. Military storylines are just boring, no matter how legit you’re trying to make them seem. Boring.

Carnivals, however, are inherently creepy and there is always a bit of wonder involved. Having our beloved (and/or hated) heroes become intertwined with carnies is absolutely intriguing. Are the carnies good or bad? Evil or misunderstood? What does the compass do? Do all the carnies have abilities? When did Ray Park get so handsome? These are all things that I’m wanting to know, but I’m almost afraid to find out because, again, carnivals are SCARY.

The cast is on top of things once again, but I’d like to see Claire drop out of college soon. That storyline seems to have to potential to get boring quickly. I’m pretty pleased with the current plots, but I miss Mohinder. Then again, there was one scene, and if you saw the premiere, you know the one, that had a brief return by one of the most bad ass heroes we’ve seen, and that was enough to make me happy to be a fan.

If you jumped off the Heroes train, here’s your chance to get back on! Mondays at 9pm EST on NBC, Tuesdays at 10pm on G4, and on Hulu just about anytime you want.

ABC Fail

I may be jumping the gun here, based on faulty information, but all historical data is accurate.

ABC has submitted next week’s episode of Defying Gravity as the “Season Finale”. That’s fine and dandy, but there are at least two episodes after that one. The fact that ABC hasn’t marketed the show at all suggests that they aren’t as tied to it as the fans are. If indeed ABC doesn’t plan on airing the rest of the season or renewing the series, we can add this to an ever growing list of great shows that ABC killed way before their time: My So-Called Life, Relativity (oh, god, how I loved that show), and Pushing Daisies; and those are just the ones that immediately spring to mind–I’m sure there are tons more.

Get it together, ABC!

Glee Me

After looping the first episode of Glee for months, we finally got a new episode this week. The big question everyone had was, “Will it maintain its endearing quirkiness?” I think it did.

The characters stayed pretty true to the established cliche roles, and even though they are near-caricatures, I think they work. As a matter of fact, the portrayals are so over the top that they’ve actually looped around to the realm of believability.

The school situations are way more absurd than the happenings of the Glee Club, though. For instance, a teacher would never be given a part-time janitorial job by a principal; the job would go up for bid through the BOE and applicants would be ranked and placed according to seniority, etc. blah blah blah. Another point, and one that is important to me, is the fact that the school counselor is still referred to in the antiquated “Guidance Counselor” terminology. Still, if those are my biggest gripes, I’m thrilled.

I like how we got to see the setup to some resolution for the big events of the premiere. The oh noes!Baby situation leaves me satisfied and the will-they-or-won’t-they of Finn/Rachel was addressed early on, as it should have been. I wasn’t a fan of the final song, so I fast forwarded through it. This may be the case with future episodes, too, but I’m not watching the show as a musical, so that’s fine with me.