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Tag Archives: 2019

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Series premiere: Gone

The PolyBlog
June 14 2019

For the show Gone, all I heard about it initially was that it was about an ex-victim who survived an abduction and was now helping find new abductees. Based on that description, it was a coin toss for my prediction, but I had to err on the downside and predict cancellation. Now that I’ve seen the first episode, the coin toss was probably the right metaphor.

The show is a bit different than I imagined. The main character is a girl named Kick…she was abducted and held by a predator for five years, and given a new name. When she’s rescued in flashback at the start of the episode, the FBI swoops in to save her, arrest the guy pretending to be her dad, and her mom runs upstairs and commits suicide. Kick isn’t the girl who was abducted anymore, or the girl from before the abduction, so she creates a new name aka Kick. Fast-forward 15 years and she’s a hard-core fighting machine. She teaches self-defense, is an expert marksman with a handgun, and practices picking locks for fun just to ensure she’s never locked in anywhere again. The old FBI agent who rescued her comes knocking, asking her to join a task force that hunts abductees, and the first case is a missing little girl. The agent thinks that Kick can help because she knows how predators think. She helps them figure out a bunch of stuff that the task team doesn’t know how to instinctively figure out on their own, and they’re off and running. Along for the ride is a young FBI agent who isn’t sure about Kick, another female FBI agent who was part of the original team that rescued Kick, and a friend of Kick’s, another abduction survivor who is also a hacker. There are lots of other people running around but mainly it’s the five of them.

Let’s see…a fast turn-around team that specializes in missing people aka people who are “gone”. Wait…wasn’t there another show about missing persons? No, not the one based on 1-800-Missing with the girl with the visions but the FBI task team that specialized in missing persons. You know, “Without a Trace”?

When the EP started, I had some high hopes. The main character, Kick, is played by Leven Rambin, and she is great. She looked familiar, but was having trouble placing her…maybe The Tomorrow People, I thought, while perusing IMDB until I saw her listed as the girlfriend Riley back in Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. I like her, I’d watch. Plus I like her character, some interesting threads there.

The old FBI agent is played by a very muted Chris Noth…I hated him as Mr. Big on Sex and the City, loved him back in the day on Law & Order. Doesn’t have a lot to do in the EP, but he’s a comfortable presence. Meanwhile, the young FBI agent, Bishop, is played by Danny Pino aka Scotty Valens from Cold Case that I’ve been binging. He’s usually decent, occasionally not, but again, another comfortable presence. And no hint of the sliminess / fast-shaking from the Cold Case character, so a more honorable character to like. He’s got the tortured past that every character must have, even if we don’t find out what it is in this episode. And sure, he’s likely to be a love interest for Kick over the longer term.

What I found a bit odd was that another Cold Case alumni, Tracie Thoms, aka Kat Miller plays the extra FBI agent that helped rescue Kick back in the day. She doesn’t have much to do in EP1, just like Noth, but another comfortable presence. Equally, Andy Mientus doesn’t have much to do as Kick’s fellow survivor, aka hacker James, and I didn’t recognize him from his role of villain-of-the-week on Flash (as the Pied Piper). Okay, nothing to write home about.

And the lack of anything to write home about is part of the problem. The EP was okay, but I didn’t feel there was a lot of oomph going on outside of a sparring session early on. So I was on the fence about “renewal” or not. Except there’s a small glitch in the matrix. The show came up on my radar as a supposedly new show, but it turns out it’s an OLD show. It was on in 2017-18, lasted a single season, and was *cough, cough* gone.

Easy peasy, lemon squeezy, easy to know how that one comes out. But the quirk in the matrix made me try to recreate the feed that gave me the show in the first place. Why would it tell me about a 2-year old show that is already gone?

I found another show, a TV series, for 2019 listed as in development. Not likely it. Another one was about a man teleporting around the earth, but it’s a movie, not a TV show. And then I found a 2018-19 show that was originally called Gone and was renamed Save Me, about a man looking for his missing daughter. None of them interest me.

So I’ll take my quirk and predict it will be cancelled (since it already was). Now I just have to decide if I’ll watch the other 11 EPs for a dead series.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2019, premiere, series, television | Leave a reply

Series premiere: Flack

The PolyBlog
June 14 2019

When I heard about the new show, Flack, all I knew was it was something to do with publicity and had Anna Paquin in it. Based on that, I thought, “Didn’t we see this a few months ago with Piper Perabo?” And some other versions too? I predicted cancellation. Now that I’ve seen the first episode, I’m going to go with the same prediction, but for different reasons.

The show kicks off with Anna’s character, Robyn, totally dropped in the crapper. Her client is in a hotel room with a gay sex partner, they’ve been doing heavy drugs, and the partner is unconscious on the floor. She’s there trying to revive him while the client is freaking out. Drugs everywhere, alcohol everywhere, the two guys are naked, and Robyn is keeping it all under control and handling the situation. In other words, demonstrating she has her sh** together.

Then you see the rest of her life — she’s dealing with the anniversary of her mother’s suicide that her and her sister feel guilty about, her sister has the husband and 2.2 kids and serves as contrast to her crazy life, and you see her flitting through the day while her sister goes back to dealing with kids. Another client is about to be outed for having an affair, even though his reputation is squeaky-clean family guy, and Robyn works through whatever helps the client, even proposing a distraction by having the wife go for a mammogram and give the press a different story to write about.

Meanwhile, Robyn has sex with a client, is doing drugs all day, and at the end of the long hectic day, you find out she has a husband or boyfriend at home who works in an ER and is apologetic about having smoked some weed at the house. So obviously they don’t know much about each other’s life, meanwhile he’s trying to get her pregnant and is following her ovulation cycle on his phone.

The show is an absolute sh** show. Robyn’s life is a depressing mess; her sister’s is a clichรฉ; her boss is a nutbar; and she has a close friend at work who is superficial and flighty/flaky. The only two people in the entire show the least bit interesting are (a) the sister, not for the character but rather the actress (Genevieve Angelson), and (b) an innocent intern who can act as the fish out of water foil to see how she reacts to the chaos at the firm.

But I don’t care about any of them, or what happens to them, or what doesn’t. It’s just depressing.

The only reason to watch is if you like train wrecks.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2019, premiere, series, television | Leave a reply

Series premiere: The InBetween

The PolyBlog
May 31 2019

When I saw the description for The InBetween last fall, basically that it is a detective show with a person who can talk to the dead, it sounded like Medium and The Ghost Whisperer, or a few other shows in the genre. Most of those shows went for several seasons, and it was a guess but I went with RENEWAL. Now that I’ve seen the first episode, I’m going to predict CANCELLATION, which is disappointing as I enjoyed the show.

In most of these shows, there is one of two things that is part and parcel of episode one. First, there’s the genre where the person is normal and something BIG AND TRAUMATIC happens in episode one, and BAM! They see dead people. Second, or more alternatively, there is a flashback to either a traumatic experience or a lot of backstory to explain how they have dealt with their abilities in their life, usually with the plot device that they’ve always tried to avoid or deny their power, and now something is forcing them to confront it and deal with it. So BAM! They see dead people.

Then, it moves to GHOST OF THE WEEK.

The InBetween doesn’t do that. The premise is that Cassie, a mid-20s-ish woman, has visions. She sees things and she tells her gay adoptive father who’s a police detective. And the visions help him with his cases. In the opener, she sees a woman in a walk-in freezer, lying on a table dead, with her eyes removed. She thinks it is the case he’s working, but when she sees a photo of a missing girl, it’s not the same person. Hop, skip and a jump later, and they find out it is all somehow related. Eventually her visions lead to the bad guy, case semi-closed. However, in the episode, Cassie is also dealing with a young girl who spends time with her and hangs out, even though she’s actually the ghost of a murder victim. The girl’s grandfather went to prison for her murder, and Cassie is helping the little girl come to terms with her death. After she gets a bit of revenge on her pedophile Grandpa.

But the difference in the show is not only what will likely kill it but also what I like about it. The tone and pacing is totally different. Almost a British show, slower, less action. And while I spent the show waiting for the exposition dump of her backstory, it never came. Instead, you get a feel for her almost phoning it in, she’s not actively part of the case or anything. She just tells the detectives what she sees in her occasional visions and they take it from there. It seems almost like she’s passive about it all.

The girl with visions, Cassie, is played by Harriet Dyer. I haven’t seen her before, but she does a decent job. A couple of times, I thought it was Amy Adams but a bit younger. Her adoptive father, Tom, is played by Paul Blackthorne, who I know from watching Arrow. Yet, I never much cared for him on Arrow. I liked him better back on The Gates. It’s hard to get used to the change of accent here, but I like his acting much better.

One small sour note is Justin Cromwell as a new partner for Tom, just moved to town from LA to get a fresh start. You know there’s some sort of big backstory for him, and sure enough, he goes to visit some girl in a coma at the end of the episode. But he’s also a bit inconsistent throughout the episode — skeptical, believer, passionate friend, solid or flaky partner. There’s even a scene where he goes to see Connie, gets in trouble, and goes back AGAIN to see her on his own. Inconsistent character all around.

But the EP ended with a twist. One of the sick bad ghosts pays her a visit at the end of the EP and says they need to talk. I’ll tune in to see, but I don’t think the pace or plotting will garner renewal. Too bad, it has a nicely different feel to the show.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2019, premiere, series, television | Leave a reply

New TV shows for 2019

The PolyBlog
May 11 2019

The regular season has ended, but there are lots of other shows debuting, some of which were pushed from earlier. Here are my predictions, updated as I do them, until we get to the fall premieres.

ShowDescriptionPrediction based on descriptionPrediction based on premiere
The InBetween  (NBC)Ghost WhispererRENEWALCANCELLATION
The Red Line (CBS)White cop shoots black doctorCANCELLATIONPENDING
Grand Hotel (ABC)Family-owned hotel in Miami BeachCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
Ultraviolet (NetFlix)Online group of sleuthsCANCELLATIONPENDING
TitansSomething with superheroes or mutantsRENEWALRENEWAL
A Discovery of Witches  Witches and vampiresRENEWALRENEWAL
BoomerangYoung ad workersCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
Deadly ClassA school for assassins?CANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
Doom PatrolSuperheroesRENEWALCANCELLATION
The Umbrella AcademySuperhero siblingsCANCELLATIONRENEWAL
Sex EducationSon of sex therapist counsels students at his schoolCANCELLATIONRENEWAL
FlackPublicist/PR person dealing with crises for clientsCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
City On A HillBlack lawyer cleaning up 1990s BostonCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
Dead to MeTwo women meet in grief counsellingCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
L.A.โ€™s FinestTwo female detectives have secretsRENEWALCANCELLATION
ManhuntCreative Non-fiction of British crimeCANCELLATIONRENEWAL
Miracle WorkersHeaven Inc is run by GodCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
PureMennonite MobRENEWALRENEWAL
The OrderSecret magic societyCANCELLATIONRENEWAL
Queens of MysteryMurder They WroteCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
RamyShow by stand-up comedian Ramy Youssef, Muslim in JerseyCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
RivieraBillionaire is dead, wife wants to know whyRENEWALRENEWAL
Russian DollGroundhog Day repeating dayCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
ShrillOverweight girl refuses to be shamed anymoreCANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
SpecialGay guy with CP learns to live lifeCANCELLATIONRENEWAL
Too Old To Die YoungCop/hitman in LACANCELLATIONCANCELLATION
Turn Up CharlieDJ becomes nanny for rich friendCANCELLATIONRENEWAL

So, let’s see how it goes…

Posted in Television | Tagged 2019, cancellation, predictions, renewal, season, tv | Leave a reply

Observer’s Handbook, 2019 by RASC (2018) – BR00142 (2019) – ๐Ÿธ๐Ÿธ๐Ÿธ๐Ÿธ๐Ÿธ

The PolyBlog
March 12 2019

Plot or Premise

This is the annual observer’s guide published by the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada.

What I Liked

Each year, the Observer’s Guide is produced and sold to amateur and professional astronomers across North America, and those astronomers vary considerably in their capacity and interests. It’s hard to serve any “one group”, but as I am at the intro stage to the hobby, I’ll review from that perspective. Some highlights include:

  • List of observatories, star parties, planetaria (pp 11-14);
  • Observable satellites of the planets (pp 25-26);
  • Observing artificial satellites (p 38);
  • Overview of filters (pp 64-67);
  • Deep-sky observing hints by Alan Dyer (pp 85-87);
  • Lunar observing (pp 158-161);
  • The brightest stars (pp 274-283, 285); and,
  • The deep sky (pp 307-337).

Of course, it also has the key reference materials:

  • The Moon (pp 148-157);
  • The Sun (pp 184-193);
  • Dwarf and minor planets (pp 241-251); and,
  • Double and multiple stars (pp 291-294, 296-297).

And it has specific highlights for the year:

  • The Sky month-by-month (pp 94-121);
  • Times of sunrise and sunset for 2019 (pp 205-207);
  • 2019 transit of Mercury (pp 139-143);
  • The planets in 2019 (pp 211-229); and,
  • Comets in 2019 (p 264).

I’m happy too that some of the errors in URLs published last year have been corrected.

What I Didn’t Like

I still find the pages on telescope exit pupils (pp 50-53) to be incredibly dense. I keep meaning to find a more basic set of explanations online of it, but I never seem to get around to it. I would add the next section on magnification and contrast in deep sky observing (pp 54-57) as equally confusing. I have to believe that dense text can somehow be explained more easily to the newbie with some basic guidelines for common scopes and ages of users. Equally, I’m not thrilled with the astrophotography section (pp 91-93) which still lists the “big cameras” as best, in the same way that many photography websites ten years ago suggested that professionals would never go digital. There is an emerging market for people sharing prime shots they take with their smartphones — souvenir quality shots, not NASA shots — and it is almost completely ignored by the section (grudgingly it says “even cell phones”). I also find that the economic bias of last year towards higher-end binoculars and scopes continues. But those issues are mostly me just being picky — they aren’t enough to reduce the overall rating.

Disclosure

I received a copy of the guide as part of my annual membership in RASC.

The Bottom Line

Excellent edition for the year.

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged 2019, Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, astronomy, astrophotography, book review, Good Reads, hobbies, Library Thing, new, non-fiction, OPL, paperback, PolyWogg, prose, RASC, reference, science, self-help, series, technology, textbook | Leave a reply

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