Why do you always hate on cop shows? Many have compelling characters and story arcs.
Something I've long suspected to be true, just by looking at what they produce. How else could you end up with the nonsense that's coming at us this season - half of the shows are cop shows!The whole business is based on fear. The fear that they'll lose their jobs if they take a show concept to their boss that bossman won't like. So they play it supersafe and dumb it all down.Nobody with half a brain cell can possibly think that's a good idea - they'll divide the market and most will go down in flames. But they're terrified not to trot out a slate of cop shows.
Wasn't that who Arthur Petrelli was supposed to be? A supervillainous kingpin acting behind the scenes, with some big nefarious plan?
Yeah, pretty much. What I've seen of the third season (first 8 or so episodes) didn't make much sense, was completely random and looked like a S1 all over again.So, if I wanted to check out this trainwreck that became 'Heroes' I would only watch the 1st and 2nd seasons before said trainwreck...?
So, if I wanted to check out this trainwreck that became 'Heroes' I would only watch the 1st and 2nd seasons before said trainwreck...?
The problem with Arthur was that they didn't explain his plot,
Everything else fails because Nielsens system is !@#%ed up.
Yeah, pretty much. What I've seen of the third season (first 8 or so episodes) didn't make much sense, was completely random and looked like a S1 all over again.So, if I wanted to check out this trainwreck that became 'Heroes' I would only watch the 1st and 2nd seasons before said trainwreck...?
So, if I wanted to check out this trainwreck that became 'Heroes' I would only watch the 1st and 2nd seasons before said trainwreck...?
If you want to check out Heroes, watch the first season and stop. Season two has huge pacing problems and most of the new characters really sucked. It's best to pretend the show got cancelled at the end of season one.
Indeed. And it goes beyond that - I think it actually damages our national psyche to be so fixated on lurid and fantastical tales of murder. The vast majority of killings are, AFAIK, gang-related and really pretty mundane, but cop shows are filled with cases to match the flair and complexity of the Zodiac case on a weekly basis. I think it makes the more credulous amongst us more fearful, more narcissistic, less respectful of cities and their populations and altogether more Republican.There are too many cop shows hogging up all the time slots. Where are the space operas? Where are the historical dramas?
So, if I wanted to check out this trainwreck that became 'Heroes' I would only watch the 1st and 2nd seasons before said trainwreck...?
If you want to check out Heroes, watch the first season and stop. Season two has huge pacing problems and most of the new characters really sucked. It's best to pretend the show got cancelled at the end of season one.
Indeed. And it goes beyond that - I think it actually damages our national psyche to be so fixated on lurid and fantastical tales of murder... I think it makes the more credulous amongst us more fearful, more narcissistic, less respectful of cities and their populations and altogether more Republican.
That, and the gore and emotional trauma depicted often skirt a thin edge between mere exploitation and all-out pornography...but the cop show industry is a particularly sordid business of which both producers and audiences should be ashamed.
Kring should have known this wouldn't work. I heard there was some thinking in the beginning that 24 would do something similar. Same premise, same actors, but each season there would be new characters, with the actors playing different roles. That obviously got dropped early.It probably didn't help that Kring didn't really want to tell stories about the same people every season. Remember the "entirely new cast every volume" thing?
Maybe it'd be better off if every season ended with a "Kill em All" to make the next season about someone else, and the writer was someone who honestly believed in doing that.
British and American TV are two different animals.Doctor Who got away with changing the actor who played the Doctor every once in a while, as well as dropping and picking up new companions all the time.
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