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Tag Archives: 2018-19

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Series premiere: Almost Family

The PolyBlog
October 25 2019

Fox went with a ripped from — or imagined from — the headlines premise for the show Almost Family, and added a twist. The premise is, “What if a fertility doctor used his own sperm to fertilize the eggs of the women/couples he helped?”. The twist is that the focus is on the aftermath for the potential multiple babies involved. The show even creates a hashtag of #BechleyBabies after the name of the doctor, Leon Bechley. It didn’t seem like it had anywhere to go, so I predicted cancellation.

But when I started watching the show, I was surprised. First of all, the show introduces you to three women…First up is Brittany Snow as Julia Bechley, his sole child, or so she thinks. Daughter, worker in the clinic, she’s devoted her life to the guy. Even put off med school. But her life is a bit of a mess. She’s always on her bike as she never learned to drive, but it’s constantly giving her problems (rain, forgetting things, almost getting hit by other cyclists, etc.). She hooks up with a guy off a dating app, only later to find out that he is potentially a brother. Ewww. The only problem is that she’s really hard to get a handle on, she’s all over the place. It isn’t until the last 10 minutes that she solidifies who she is, but the previous confusion was not plot, it was just bad acting.

Contestant #2 is Emily Osment as Roxy Doyle. Faux celeb, barely getting by, and spiraling. She might be a #BechleyBaby, and she hopes she is because she really wants a sister. Which seems warm, until you realize there is almost NOTHING about this character worth watching. She has a couple of moments, but mostly she’s a waste of skin (the character, not the actress). She seemed more caricature than character. Yawn.

Contestant #3 is the worst of the bunch. Megalyn Echikunwoke plays Edie Palmer, a lawyer and oddly enough, a family friend of the Bechleys. Her mom even suspected that she was Leon’s daughter. In the episode, she’s dating Julia’s ex, and struggling with sex and intimacy. Later she breaks with the boyfriend and kisses a woman she knows and to whom she’s attracted. But she too is ALL over the place…sometimes secure and professional, then immature and flaky, then just confused.

For the first 50 minutes of the episode, I didn’t like any of them. And then…

They have a scene at the end where they are all together and chatting. And it WORKS. Almost enough for me to watch Ep2. Almost.

Instead, I would be predicting cancellation still, which would be more impressive if I did it before today when the show failed to win a back 9 episode order and is essentially dead. Not surprised.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2018-19, fall, premiere, series, television | Leave a reply

Series premiere: The Politician

The PolyBlog
October 22 2019

Netflix has a show called The Politician, and based on the description, it apparently is about a young man’s self-chosen destiny to be the President of the United States. In order to get there, Payton has six other elections to win, and the apparent intent of the show is that each season will deal with each of the elections. Up first? The election to become president of his high school. Based on the description, I was estimating something between Jack and Bobby and the West Wing, but likely closer to Jack and Bobby. And I predicted cancellation.

What I didn’t see mentioned in any of the short materials announcing the show was the note that the show is, more or less, a COMEDY. If I’d known that, I would have predicted cancellation much more rapidly. Now that I’ve seen it, I can only say it is not like any other show I’ve ever seen. There is humour buried within it, although it is played entirely straight.

Episode 1 revolves around the revelation that Payton’s friend is running against him. Mainly because his girlfriend put him up to it. As the story progresses, you realize that he slept with the guy the year before, there’s much more emotion running through the jealous girlfriend’s hatred of Payton, etc. And — spoiler alert — the guy running against him, River, ends up committing suicide. Then Payton and his advisors scheme how to turn the suicide to his advantage. The juxtaposition between cold and calculated political machinations — Payton sings at the funeral, he picks a girl with cancer as his running mate — against the nature of the job…it’s JUST high school, right? Yet Payton has three advisors on his team. Even the West Wing was never this brutal.

But while it is mildly amusing in places, it is definitely not laugh-out-loud funny, and I don’t see it making it seven seasons. I’m going to check out now.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2018-19, fall, premiere, series, television | Leave a reply

Series premiere: Bless The Harts

The PolyBlog
October 21 2019

Fox has a new animated show called Bless the Harts, and all I had on it was that it was animated, about a Southern Family, and umm, well, Jesus was one of the characters. Okaaaay. I predicted CANCELLATION.

Now that I’ve seen the pilot, let me address the elephant in the room…yes, Jesus is sort of a character. His picture is on the diner wall where the main character works, and from time to time, she imagines him coming down from the wall and talking to her. So sort of a character. Also a bit of a flake, but I digress.

Anyway, the main character is a waitress at a diner, married with a young daughter, a husband who is not the biological father, and living with her mother. This is the lucky-scratch-card crowd, a cross between Married…with Children and the old show, Alice, who worked at Mel’s Diner. The opening episode combines the debt-ridden broke world of Married…with Children with a bit of the get-rich schemes of Bart Simpson. The main character dreams of having enough to pay off her water bill, which the postal delivery woman notes is over due — so overdue in fact that they start putting the threats on the outside, with cartoon images for those who can’t read. Turns out her mother his sitting on a collection of old “Hug and Bug” dolls (like Cabbage Patch dolls mixed with Care Bears) that she hopes will be collectables worth money. Kristen Wiig (SNL) voices Jenny Hart, and does a decent job.

But in the end, I’m just not sure there’s enough there to hold people’s interest. Sticking with Cancellation!

Posted in Television | Tagged 2018-19, fall, premiere, series, television | Leave a reply

Series premiere: Carol’s Second Act

The PolyBlog
October 19 2019

Maybe it’s because I know a few people who have gone to med school, or that I know one in particular who went to med school later in life, but I kind of had a bit of hopefulness in watching the new CBS show, Carol’s Second Act. The short exposition dumped early in the episode is that Carol taught high school science, had some kids, etc., and then her marriage fell apart and she went to med school. Now she’s the oldest intern. Sounds like the show, The Rookie, except instead of cops, it’s medicine, and female instead of male. I would say also it’s supposed to be a comedy instead of a drama, but that’s highly debatable.

The show stars Patricia Heaton, and for many, that’s apparently a bonus. Sure, people liked her long-suffering role on Everybody Loves Raymond, and the audience applauds as soon as she appears in the episode. But it’s a comedy. And I don’t think I even smiled the entire episode. It was more farcical than comedic and her own attempts to be funny? Ridiculous. Even down to the “I’m going to rant and rave and then stop, only to find out you were going to apologize” scene. This passes for comedy?

She’s surrounded by five other doctors, all ridiculous caricatures. The strict, no-nonsense black woman boss. The laid back, pseudo hippie senior attending physician. Three other interns — quiet guy, Latino girl, over-confident white guy. The only good scene in the entire episode was Dr. Carol talking to a patient and giving bad news, drawing upon her life experience to deal with him compassionately and professionally. Sweet. Touching. Redeeming if it wasn’t done by her since her ethics were already intact. Snore.

I’m out, and I’m betting lots of other people will be too. It’s just not funny.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2018-19, fall, premiere, series, television | Leave a reply

Series premiere: Evil

The PolyBlog
October 19 2019

CBS has a new show called Evil and my quick summary of the premise was an investigatory team looking into supernatural occurences and deciding if they are caused by supernatural or psychological forces. A little bit X-Files-ish, a little bit like Proof (2015-16 series about whether there is life after death). Or maybe just The Exorcist by another name. It didn’t sound like a winner to me so I went with cancellation as my prediction.

The first episode was a bit different than I expected. The lighting and camera work was softer than I expected, odder angles, so it gives you a bit of an off-balance look to the scenes, which was interesting. And the mystery unfolds in an interesting way. The main character is a forensic psychologist, Kristen Bouchard, and in the pilot, she’s investigating a defendant accused of killing three families. She interviews him, finds him to be lying, deems him fit for trial, her job is done. Until the defence asks her to confirm that it is psychological, and not potential possession by demons. She has a WTF? moment with him on the stand like he’s an idiot, and then she meets David Acosta, priest in training (why is it always a new priest or a priest in trainng?) who works for the Catholic Church on contract to investigate if something is supernatural or not. She doesn’t believe in the mumbo jumbo he’s peddling, but she does witness the defendant freak out and start speaking Latin to her, so she thinks maybe he’s hallucinating. More investigation is needed.

At this point, the story kind of goes weird for a bit. ** Spoiler alert ** She has a dream where she meets an “otherworld figure” aka George the demon and she has a night terror. He comes back a second night, and then when she’s talking to the defendant later, he asks about George. Something he couldn’t possibly know as she told nobody else. Well, except her therapist. Dun dun dun. At this point, it turns into a routine investigation of a con.

And it is that switch that makes the pilot so confusing. If the show was meant to be X-Files-style, the truth is out there, then the show SHOULD end on a note of a question — are there unanswered questions out there? Does evil exist? Are possessions real? The answer in the pilot is CLEARLY no, it was just a con. And as a result, it’s not clear where the show will go — debunking everything or there are unexplained outcomes. The beauty of the X-Files was that Scully could explain a LOT but not everything Mulder experienced. The truth was out there, they just had to find it. For this show, they said, “Nope, here’s the truth, that’s it, nothing to see beyond this.”

Which is a weird way to sell the show. The believers in the possibility would feel slighted by the conclusion; those who don’t believe merely had their belief confirmed, it’s all a con. But would they watch? Probably not.

The actress playing Bouchard, Katja Herbers, was familiar to me, but I had no idea where I’d seen her. Westworld would not have been my guess. She’s pretty good, but as I mentioned, the camera work leaves you a bit off-balance. She handles strong well, she handles confused and scared well. The only thing that she doesn’t do well is angry…there’s a couple of scenes where she is in battle mode, taking no prisoners, and she comes off spirited more than furious.

The priest-in-training is played by Mike Colter of Luke Cage fame, and he is really good. Compassionate, caring, quiet. Relaxing. Comforting. I was expecting more doubt in his faith, but he has none. Not in a “I’m blind to it” way, a total “all in” way. Not the normal portrayal in the genre. One of his regular phrases is that he doesn’t care that Bouchard doesn’t believe, he wants her skepticism.

And, as he puts it, “Possession looks a lot like insanity and insanity looks a lot like possession” and he needs someone to help him distinguish between the two. I do find it a bit odd though that they’re going to be a team, considering she has four kids to look after and an absent husband. When will she find the time to go galivanting off to other locations to investigate miracles or demons?

A third member of the team is played by Aasif Mandvi, and I liked him back on Blue Bloods (series of guest appearances) and way back on Jericho. He’s good here, and a good plot device character as the equivalent of a “ghostbuster” who finds natural explanations for phenomenon (like a dishwasher making weird sounds that make it sound like a demon whispering to the husband).

But as I said above, it’s a weird first EP and a weird way to sell it to potential viewers. Clear answers are not going to get you renewed. I’m staying with cancellation. I almost liked the leads enough to keep watching.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2018-19, fall, premiere, series, television | Leave a reply

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