Love:
The Good Guys (yeah, it premiered this summer, but that was only a handful of episodes.)
Totally agree with you on that. I really like that show, but again, last I saw, it's rating were horrendous.
Love:
The Good Guys (yeah, it premiered this summer, but that was only a handful of episodes.)
Boardwalk Empire is the only new one I'm watching, and I do like it, though it took about 4 episodes to really hit a stride.
Rubicon --very intelligent, slow and methodical, daring you to pick up the subtle clues.
On Halloween of course.The new shows are terrible. I'm barely maintaining interest in The Event, and No Ordinary Family is almost off the menu. When does that zombie show debut, anyway?
Rubicon --very intelligent, slow and methodical, daring you to pick up the subtle clues.
When does that zombie show debut, anyway?
Rubicon --very intelligent, slow and methodical, daring you to pick up the subtle clues.
That's a great description of the show. I've saved up the last five episodes and I'm going to watch them, along with this weekend's finale, as soon as I finish the second season of In Treatment. It'll be fun to marathon it.
Rubicon, in the running for best drama as far as I'm concerned. Don't expect a second season, but it should get Emmy awards, for writing and Michael Christofer's role as Truxton Spangler.
No Ordinary Family, a charming comedy.
The Whole Truth, which deconstructs prosecutor shows with the defense segment while deconstructing defense shows with the prosecutor segments. For instance, the scenes in the episode about the "bikini" dancer (how blue nosed we're getting as the country goes Right down the drain!) where prosecutor Maura Tierney gets exculpatory evidence for her victim and blithely ignores it is a welcome lucid moment for the lawyer show genre. It will likely be cancelled next week, but it's still good. It's just too nongeneric, which naturally means the reviewers have to dismiss it as generic!![]()
The Whole Truth, which deconstructs prosecutor shows with the defense segment while deconstructing defense shows with the prosecutor segments. For instance, the scenes in the episode about the "bikini" dancer (how blue nosed we're getting as the country goes Right down the drain!) where prosecutor Maura Tierney gets exculpatory evidence for her victim and blithely ignores it is a welcome lucid moment for the lawyer show genre. It will likely be cancelled next week, but it's still good. It's just too nongeneric, which naturally means the reviewers have to dismiss it as generic!![]()
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.