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The new 2015-16 TV season: New shows

The PolyBlog
August 25 2015

I’ve written before about how much I like serialized story-telling, which is basically why I love TV series. Just like in books, I like revisiting known characters with backstories engaging in new adventures. It isn’t sufficient, but it is often a pre-requisite. So, while some people get excited about new baseball or football or hockey seasons, I scout new TV shows looking for diamonds in the rough to add to my roster. Here is my take on 34 new recruits of the upcoming season.

Full season subscriptionTry one episodePass
Blindspot
DC Legends of Tomorrow *
Heroes Reborn
Limitless
Minority Report
The Player
Quantico
Supergirl
X-Files *
* Information still pending on these shows, but likely to be full season ones
Benders
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend
Grinder 
Hand of God 
Into the Badlands
The Muppets
Public Morals
Rosewood
Wicked City
Angel from Hell
Ash vs. Evil Dead
The Bastard Executioner
Best Time Ever with Neil Patrick Harris
Blood and Oil
Chicago Med
Code Black
Detour
Dr. Ken
Fear the Walking Dead
Flesh and Bone
Grandfathered
Life in Pieces
Master of None
Narcos
Scream Queens
Truth Be Told
Wrecked
  • Angel from Hell — Jane Lynch as a guardian angel…so, I know some people love Jane Lynch, but I find her grating on her best days. Doesn’t matter if she’s on Glee or a game show, I can’t watch her. Add in the guardian angel genre that usually goes more sappy than drama, not interested. — PASS
  • Ash vs. Evil Dead — “hilarious horror antics”? — PASS
  • The Bastard Executioner — A broken knight? Sounds good. Wait, never mind — Katey Sagal is on it. I didn’t like her in Married with Children or Sons of Anarchy. Someone else I can’t watch. I think it’s the voice. — PASS
  • Benders — Comedy about group of friends obsessed with a hockey team? Intriguing. — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Best Time Ever with Neil Patrick Harris — I like NPH, don’t love him. Sometimes a little too smarmy. And it’s part game show, part talent show, part reality — PASS
  • Blindspot — NBC has pulled together some amazing elements for this show. First, there’s the deeper mystery of who this tattooed woman is, and her backstory. Not wonky like Lost, but accessible like Blacklist, Jericho, Flashforward. Second, they pulled Jaimie Alexander from Thor, one of the best elements of the series and I love her presence. Third, it’s FBI-ish and fast-paced. So I am in like Flynn for this one. However, unless they keep the production value up, it could be done in one season — FULL SEASON SUBSCRIPTION
  • Blood & Oil — It’s basically a new form of Dallas or Dynasty, with modern day oil boom. With Don Johnson as J.R. Nothing about this show appeals to me from the description. — PASS
  • Chicago Med — The Chicago franchise is expanding to the hospital, and I haven’t enjoyed a medical drama since St. Elsewhere. — PASS
  • Code Black — Oh, look, another medical drama but in L.A. Overcrowded, understaffed, under-equipped…sounds like St. Elsewhere, but still not interested. — PASS
  • Crazy Ex-Girlfriend — Comedy. Musical elements. Big city kid moves back home for love. Sounds very much like 10 other shows in the last fifteen years, just with musical part added. But an hour-long comedy? I’ll take a peek. — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Detour — National Lampoon’s Vacation set in TV land. — PASS
  • Dr. Ken — Great physician, no bed side manner. But it’s a comedy. — PASS
  • Fear the Walking Dead — Fear the “companion series”? — PASS
  • Flesh and Bone — The demanding world of professional ballet. — PASS
  • Grandfathered — Two men and a baby, with John Stamos. — PASS
  • Grinder — Rob Lowe as the big city kid (TV star) who moves back home to practice law. Obviously a comedy. I almost always like Rob, if not the show, so I’ll give it a shot. — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Hand of God — Ron Perlman believes God speaks to him, kind of like Eli Stone, except instead of helping people as a lawyer he gets to engage in vigilante justice. — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Heroes Reborn — Reboot of Heroes, which I liked at the beginning of the series, held real promise when the were all about “Save the cheerleader, save the world”. Later? Not so much. But I’m in. — FULL SEASON SUBSCRIPTION
  • Into the Badlands — Martial arts, a la Mad Max mixed with Kung Fu? — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Life in Pieces — Ensemble family comedy with Dianne Wiest and James Brolin? — PASS
  • Limitless — Take a drug, use 100% of your brain, fight crime. Okay, why not? — FULL SEASON SUBSCRIPTION
  • Master of None – Seinfeld remake with Aziz Ansari. — PASS
  • Minority Report — Fifteen years after the movie and pre-cogs are in hiding, yet fighting crime still. Awesome premise, likely to die in six episodes. — FULL SEASON SUBSCRIPTION
  • The Muppets — Adult-ish version of Muppets, but with PG humour. — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Narcos — Gritty, raw, cocaine cartel. Yawn. — PASS
  • The Player — Does anyone remember Drive with Nathan Filion? It was about an wheel-man recruited to drive in an illegal raceand his wife was kidnapped to force him to play. Now  we have Philip Winchester doing the same, but with more explosions and action. Oh, who am I kidding? Of course I’m going to watch. — FULL SEASON SUBSCRIPTION
  • Public Morals — Crooked cops in 1960s NYC vs. an honest cop. Sounds like Life on Mars with different timeframe. — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Quantico — Oooh, a dirty FBI recruit, and you get to figure out who. — FULL SEASON SUBSCRIPTION
  • Rosewood — Pathologist helping cop, with a bit of zen thrown in. Forever, but with sunshine coming out his butt. Okay, I’ll bite. Or at least nibble. — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Scream Queens — Anthology comedy horror series. Umm, no. — PASS
  • Supergirl — As a huge Smallville fan, and anything almost that is superhero-ish, I’m all in. — FULL SEASON SUBSCRIPTION
  • Truth Be Told — Overanalysing comedy couple. Yawn. — PASS
  • Wicked City — Detective chasing serial killers in the 80s? Okay, I’ll nibble. — TRY ONE EPISODE
  • Wrecked — Lost, but with humour. Gilligan’s Island Redux? Definitely no. — PASS
Posted in Television | Tagged 2015-16, fall, premiere, season, series, television | Leave a reply

I really wanted to like CSI: Cyber

The PolyBlog
March 5 2015

I admire the success of the CSI franchise on TV. When the original CSI first aired, it blew the doors off the competition. It introduced viewers to the idea of Crime Scene Investigation, many for the first time seeing it as a profession within a profession. Ignore the requisite suspension of disbelief, it was just “new”. Somewhat original. A whole series about crime scenes and forensics, not on the margins of the investigation but driving it. And like Law & Order, it spawned new generations.

CSI: Miami went the opposite way to the original CSI in Las Vegas. Where Gil Grissom was quiet, unassuming, laid back, the consummate geek in charge, Lt. Horatio Caine played by David Caruso was just the opposite. Vegas moonlight gave way to Miami sunlight. And those cheesy, over the top, groan inducing squints into the camera at the start of every episode, followed by a quip and putting the sun glasses back on. If science wasn’t cool enough, then their leader would be.

CSI: New York staked out a third claim — the cynical homicide detective who focuses on the “evidence”, with military bearing and background, and with Gary Sinise to give the strong character of Mac Taylor just the right amount of New York attitude.

I watched CSI in the beginning, and it was decent. And it’s permeated our culture — there are law and criminology courses now on the so-called “CSI” effect…viewers began to believe that science can deliver the exciting smoking gun in 44 minutes or less, and in regular citizen sound bites, and when those viewers see real-life CSI, they are underwhelmed. So much so that prosecutors in the real world sometimes lose cases because the science didn’t deliver the CSI slam-dunk.

CSI: Miami had a different feel. I liked the Medical Examiner, and more importantly, there was Emily Procter as Calleigh Duquesne. She was awesome on West Wing, and I watched CSI: Miami at the beginning just for her. I liked the greater emphasis on police work outside the CSI lab (vs. the original CSI show), but Caruso is an acquired taste. Excuse the cheese, and the show was watchable. Kind of Hawaii Five-O watchable. Not great, not awesome, but watchable.

When CSI: New York started, I almost swooned. The grit of Vegas, the charismatic leader of CSI: Miami, and the attitude of New York. With an even greater focus on police work. And who doesn’t love Gary Sinise in just about everything except Reindeer Games? But he had strong backup — Anna Belknap as the cute and cuddly girl next door, Lindsey Monroe; Eddie Cahill as the homicide detective; Melina Kanakaredes as Mac’s work partner Stella Bonasera, with just enough fire for people to think “will they or won’t they”; and Hill Harper as young ME Sheldon Hawkes. All solid performances. But Gary was the lead and even his wry cynical attitude wore people down over time. The show was kind of a downer.

While CSI is still going with new actors at the helm, the other two are long dead. But the new kid on the block is CSI: Cyber — if the crime involves electronic devices of any sort, it’s the purview of the Cyber Threat Operations Centre headquartered in Washington. Last year, the show Hard Target showed us the global Cyber Command for the national security types, and this is supposedly the FBI version for domestic crimes.

I’m going to start off by clearly stating I wanted to like this show. CSI — already a fan. Cyber — always a fan initially, willing to see what they bring that is new. Weekly procedural — high on my must-see style of show. And the first episode out of the gate had some winning elements.

First up, the plot for the week — somebody is hacking national baby cams and using it to spy on babies, find cute ones, and then kidnapping them for delivery while auction them off to the highest bidder. Interesting. Good take on invasion of privacy, strong east coast flavour (not just D.C.), combines some interesting elements. Nice.

Second, the writing. You’d think because the initial plot was solid, the writing delivered. It didn’t. There are four giant plot holes that nobody questions. First, the kidnapper sells a child to someone spontaneously, and the person has $75K to hand over. On short notice. In cash. Sure, the guy’s a working stiff, but no problem. Second, the kidnapper steals a SD card from one of the cams. And while time is hard to follow in the show, some 36-48 hours later, she still has the card in her pocket. And in a protective outer case (which she didn’t steal btw). That is one convenient find. Third, an electronic message is “delivered” to the FBI via the neighbour’s kid video game console. That’s black hat level of hacking, similar to the original hacking of the cams, but we’re supposed to believe that was the way they would communicate (oh and the guy running the gang is a thug — no cyber techie in sight). No email. No txt. No video on internet. No hacking cyber HQ. Nothing. Oh, let’s hack the kid’s X-box next door to get our message across, that will work. Really? Finally, and this is a large spoiler, at the end, they have to rescue a baby from a sinking car. Which they do (well, a doll anyway, incredibly evident for about three successive scenes before it being a child again). But the rescuer leaves the two people who are transporting the baby (with no explanation of why that child is still in the market) still trapped in the car. No one in the water. No one trying to save them. No evidence that they survive. Just save the baby, the rest are allowed to die. Not sure if it was “they deserve it” or “they were in the front seat and are injured which must mean they died on impact” but just left hanging. Don’t get me started on the dialogue. It isn’t a lot worse than other CSI’s, but it’s also not any better. And out of the gate, with as much time as they had for the pilot, that doesn’t bode well.

Third in the list of features is the editing. It is choppy in places, a couple of scenes look like they’re missing and are filled in by exposition later. But, more importantly, the main leader is not a techie — she’s a social psychologist. Bad experience with a hacker in her past, it “drives” her to try to limit cyber abusers to save others. A cliche motive, sure. But I’m talking editing here, not character development. What’s wrong? The problem is that the viewer doesn’t know any of this. There are cryptic refs through the episode that her team don’t like her leading the team cuz, well, we aren’t told why. Nada. Oh, but when we get to the end of the episode, we need to give the main character a monologue and we get exposition to explain several things we should have learned as the episode unfolded. Nope. Just at the end, with bad editing throughout.

So a good plot will forgive a lot, mediocre writing, and bad editing. What could possibly save it? Acting of course. If you watch any episodes in the future, let me know if any acting shows up. I sure won’t be watching.

Now, I’m being incredibly unfair to three actors in the series. James Van Der Beek is their FBI lead investigator, Elijah Mundo, and does a solid job. Not a lot for him to work with, but he’s solid in the character. If he was the main character, I’d give him a chance. He’s only listed in IMDB for 2 episodes though, so maybe we shouldn’t get too attached. Mundo is supported in the team by Charley Koontz as white hat hacker Daniel Krumitz, also a solid performance, and by Hayley Kiyoko as Raven Ramirez (no back story yet). If you’re a Nickolodeon fan, or just a fan of Wizards of Waverly Place, you might recognize her…she had a limited role in the show, but did okay.

Unfortunately, the remaining three cast members leave a LOT to be desired. Starting at the smallest role, Peter MacNicol is in as Simon Sifter, the team’s big boss. I liked MacNicol on Numb3rs, and even on Ally McBeal. But he doesn’t exactly have command presence. Anyone could replace him in the role and nobody would notice. Or eliminate it all together, save the casting dollars. But hopefully they didn’t spend much on Shad Moss aka rapper Lil Bow Wow. He plays a former black hat hacker who joins the group, putting his skills to better use, but he starts the episode as the punk who “has to be there”, is a key member of the team by middle, and is in awe at the end. Really??? If you’re going to give me character growth, can you perhaps think about SHOWING IT ON SCREEN????

Yet, for all of the above, I can’t help feeling like it wasn’t the real problem with the show. The real problem is the lead Patricia Arquette. I know, I know, she won a supporting actress Oscar for Boyhood. She thinks she’s an actress. She thinks she can act. Most of her family think they can act.

Rosanna? No.

David? No.

Patricia? No.

They each have a very tiny limited range, and outside of that, it’s ridiculous. I’d love to know how many takes they gave her for Boyhood. It had to be a lot more than they can afford on a TV show. Where to start. Her opening quip? Delivered monotone and almost angry, which didn’t fit the content. Her delivery with grieving parents? She’s supposed to be an empathetic counsellor, she’s basically comforting them in a voice like she’s berating them. Her dramatic lines before commercial? Dead. Wooden. Non-emotive. Like her tranquilizers kicked in just when they said, “Action!”. But the worst has to be the final scene.

The black-hat hacker comes to her at the end of the episode. She’s a trained psychologist, and his boss. He’s looking for guidance. Trying to see the bigger picture. See how he might fit in. Her big moment to inspire him. Her approach? To act tired, subdued, almost “oh, i had a patient who was killed, and now I scour the world trying to find the hacker who hacked me.” While she continues to pack her briefcase, ignore him, generally take a “woe is me” attitude, no inspiration, no real acknowledgement of him at all. She had a chance to actually connect with him (and by him, I mean the audience) for us to do anything to care about her character and she is subdued and, well, childish. Most of the episode seems more like her acting like a petulant teen made to work with people who don’t like her.

I hate to say this, because it’s pretty damning. About 10 minutes in, I would have killed for David Caruso to take over. But what the heck. She got an Oscar from someone, and Medium ran for 130 episodes. I have no idea how, but it did. With her as the lead.

I hope the show does well, but I won’t be watching. The only crime involving electronics that I can see is continuing to make this show.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2014-15, CSI, premiere, season, series, television | Leave a reply

The new 2014-15 TV season: Summary of predictions

The PolyBlog
November 5 2014

My review is complete, and a table of my predictions is shown below. I previewed 98 shows in total.

Of the 72 shows that I’m not watching, I predict 21 will be cancelled mid-season and 51 that will make it full season.

Of that 26 shows that I am watching, I am expecting 3 will be cancelled mid-season and 23 that will go full season.

Note that I will be updating the list with strike-throughs as shows get cancelled.

Mid-season cancellationFull-season pickup
Not watchingSunday: Boardwalk Empire, The Newsroom, Resurrection, The Comeback, Mulaney, Madam Secretary
Monday: Mom, Jane the Virgin, State of Affairs
Tuesday: Manhattan Love Story, About A Boy, Marry Me, Selfie
Wednesday: Black-ish, Red Band Society, The Mysteries of Laura, Stalker
Thursday: Bad Judge, The McCarthys, A to Z
Friday: Cristela
Sunday: Bob’s Burgers, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Family Guy, American Dad, CSI, Homeland, The Good Wife, The Walking Dead, Revenge, Once Upon a Time, The Simpsons, The Affair
Monday: The Originals, 2 Broke Girls, The Voice, Dancing with the Stars
Tuesday: Utopia, Supernatural, The Mindy Project, Sons of Anarchy, New Girl, Chicago Fire, Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Wednesday: American Horror Story Freak Show, The Middle, Survivor, The Goldbergs, Criminal Minds, L&O: SVU, Modern Family, Nashville, Hell’s Kitchen, The 100, Chicago P.D.
Thursday: Grey’s Anatomy, The Vampire Diaries, The Millers, Scandal, Parenthood, The Biggest Loser, Bones, Two and a Half Men, Reign, How To Get Away With Murder, Gracepoint
Friday: Shark Tank, MasterChef Junior, Hawaii Five-O, Last Man Standing, The Amazing Race
WatchingMonday: Scorpion
Tuesday: Forever
Friday: Constantine
Monday: NCIS: LA, Gotham, Sleepy Hollow, The Big Bang Theory, The Blacklist, Castle
Tuesday: NCIS: New Orleans, The Flash, Person of Interest
Wednesday: Arrow, NCIS
Thursday: Elementary
Friday: Blue Bloods, Grimm
Short-runs: Suits, Perception, Lost Girl, Covert Affairs, Unforgettable, Taxi Brooklyn, Undateable, Continuum, Republic of Doyle
Posted in Television | Tagged 2014-15, fall, premiere, season, series, summary, television | Leave a reply

The new 2014-15 TV season: Non-big-network shows

The PolyBlog
November 5 2014

So I finished my list of network shows, covering off Sunday to Friday. Which might make you think the list would be done. But there are a few other shows that don’t make those lists because they aren’t part of the big network milieu. I won’t (nay, can’t) cover them all, just some of the shows I watch. Most of them are short-run series, 10-13 episodes and then nothing for 3-4 months.

Like Suits for example. It is a completely ridiculous portrayal of a super bright kid, eidetic memory, who becomes an associate at a law firm without ever having graduated college. Or passed the bar. But while it is obviously ridiculous on even small details, it is sure fun to watch. A guilty pleasure, as it is really bad soap at times.

Perception is another short-run series starring Eric McCormack as a schizophrenic neuropsychology professor who helps the FBI with cases. Early on, every episode came complete with a full on hallucination that would interact with him to help him solve the case (i.e. a psycho manifestation of clues that his subconscious noticed but his conscious mind missed). Good fun, not much else like it out there where it is full mental illness rather than just high-level social awkwardness.

Lost Girl runs in short bursts as Grimm-lite and is all about the vessen, err, fae world. Pretty much every character is fae at this point, and the lead character Bo has refused to align herself with either dark or light fae. The “unalligned succubus”, she acts as a freelance private investigator for the fae. The show has interesting plotlines, even if the acting isn’t that great.

I normally also watch Covert Affairs, except I seem to have missed the launch this year (one of the downsides of it running on off-network channels is you don’t see the upcoming announcements), and so I’ll catch up on Netflix or something some time. I like the show, but waiting isn’t that big a loss.

I spent part of the summer watching three shows, two of which I have no idea the status. The first, Unforgettable, wasn’t bad, although a little too much “will they/won’t they (again)” at the end of every episode for the main NYPD detectives. They retooled it last year and moved it to a bigger showroom, ditched some characters, added some others, was a nice mix. But it’s been cancelled. I was also, gulp, watching, umm, Taxi Brooklyn. I can’t tell you how embarrassing that is to admit. It was a horrendous show, but there wasn’t much else on, and I loved the main actress. Hated the dialogue, hated the premise, hated the editing, hated most of the actors, and I was still watching. I can never make fun of anyone for watching Hawaii Five-O, cuz I watched TB. It disappeared at the end of summer, no word on possible Season 2. The third show I was watching was a comedy. I know, I know, if you read the other pages, you know comedies rarely make my watch list. But Undateable was kind of fun. Some of the actors seemed to actually enjoy their roles a little too much at times, even, almost like the characters had their lines and the others weren’t told what they were going to say. Lots of one-liners, sure, but the premise of a ladies man teaching a romantic how to date women was kind of fun to watch. It wasn’t fully packaged, it wasn’t smooth as a show, but parts were awesome. It too, however, disappeared at the end of the summer, no word on its future.

I am also back into watching a home-grown shown, Republic of Doyle. I say that with some surprise as the network announced it was cancelled. Then I saw ads for the new seasons starting, and there it was. Yep, it came back for another season of watching PI Jake Doyle round around St. John’s, Newfoundland investigating cases and trying to make a relationship work with his cop girlfriend.

I also really enjoy watching the sci-fi Continuum where the lead detective came back in time from 2077 to capture 8 escaped criminals bent on changing the capitalist system that has taken over by 2077. Still waiting on the next season, if it is even renewed.

Not much point in predicting length of the series as all of these short-runs are fully in the can by the time airing starts.

Posted in Television | Tagged 2014-15, fall, premiere, season, series, short-run, television | Leave a reply

The new 2014-15 TV season: Friday night

The PolyBlog
November 4 2014

Friday night’s offerings are pretty eclectic, as most networks go for niche programming or leave it as the scorched earth / survival of the fittest test. Or they send shows there to die, even if they don’t admit it.

I confess that I don’t watch Shark Tank or MasterChef Junior. Shark Tank is interesting but once they present their idea, my interest is gone. If they produced an 8 minute synopsis of the show, I’d be good to watch that instead. MasterChef Junior combines three genres I care nothing about — reality programming, cooking, and kids. Some love it, I don’t get the appeal at all. I’m sure both will go full season.

Hawaii Five-O is still on the air. Did I really just type that? I know it is Friday night and the network expectations are low, but it’s stamina still surprises me. I even watched Season 1 and part of Season 2. But about the time they turned into Team Rambo to go into North Korea was when even the silly side of policing the islands jumped one too many sharks. Still, it will probably finish the season.

Last Man Standing is returning, and while I like Tim Allen in small doses, this isn’t the format for me. Not the worst show on television by a long stretch, but I’ll still pass. I expect others will enjoy a full season though.

Cristela is a new show about an intern. A woman. In a law firm. In Texas. A comedy even. Oh, and she’s Latina. I could write that as all one sentence, but it seems more like six phrases someone pulled out of a hat at a party and now has to make a TV show combining those pieces. Now let’s see if they combine can “mid”, “season”, and “cancellation”.

Finally getting to the good stuff, The Amazing Race is airing on Fridays. I like the premise of the show, always have, and still have mild interest. Not enough to tape and keep on my PVR, but enough to occasionally check in live. The downside is they frequently cast emotional nutbars and then spend a lot of time on them when editing. They learned their lesson in about Season 7 when a boyfriend was constantly negative about his girlfriend, and viewers were crying abuse, but nutbars keep showing up. I have no interest in the drama, just the challenges and locations. However, since they started The Amazing Race Canada, I already get my fix and so far that show hasn’t been filled with nutbars. The original show remains a favorite of many, and it will definitely keep returning for awhile.

Despite the fact that I have attended ComicCon Ottawa the last two years, I am a pretty weak comic nerd. So while I’ve heard of Constantine, I know very little of the mythology. I am tuning in with moderate interest, mostly for the off-beat vibe in the show, but it is very dark. Add in his accent, and I’m not convinced this show screams main-stream success. Episode 2 introduced a female partner that will go toe-to-toe with him, and the spark of conflict / danger / protection / romance (?) was interesting as long as it doesn’t lead to close-talking for the next 10 episodes. I’m enjoying it enough to continue, but I expect early cancellation.

Which leaves two returning shows where I have high interest and enjoyment. Remember earlier in this series where I said I had no credibility for watching a couple of bad shows? Well, any vestiges that I had, or even regained, go out the window on Friday night. I enjoy Blue Bloods. This may be the worst show I watch, and I keep watching. Wahlberg is decent, and I could probably watch just him as a detective. Or Selleck as the somewhat smarmy Police Commissioner. Or Will Estes as the rookie. Or Bridget Moynihan as the DA. I like all four characters and all four actors. The writing? Well, umm, it’s a bit schlocky. Not ripped-from-the-headlines stuff, but still schlocky. The weekly Sunday dinner scene drives me bananas, and unfortunately, it frequently includes info you need to understand the next step in the investigations, so you have to sort of watch it. It’s already in syndication so expect it to keep going for the full season.

My big expectation for Friday though is Grimm. I love the premise, I love the character of Nick and Munroe. Juliette is still a bit grating, but the introduction of Theresa Rubel aka T.Rubel? Absolutely awesome. Nick finished off last season losing his Grimm powers so the new season starts with T.Rubel being the only Grimm in town. There’s a HUGE plot hole in the first two episodes (hello? Nick the son lost his Grimm powers? Mom is an email away and has years of experience as a Grimm? Yet no one is saying, “Yo’ Mom, any suggestions?”. Sure she’s off with the child of destiny but still, I think she’d come for a visit…or send a basket of fruit. Not to mention word getting out that a Grimm has lost his powers and bad vessen might want revenge?????). I don’t mind getting my geek on for this show, and somewhat schlocky or not, I love the vessen-of-the-week storylines. Sue me. I predict full season pick up.

DayShow TitleCategoryInterestPredictionStatus
FridayShark TankReturningZeroFull seasonPending
MasterChef JuniorReturningZeroFull seasonPending
Hawaii Five-OReturningZeroFull seasonPending
Last Man StandingReturningZeroFull seasonPending
CristelaNewZeroCancel mid-seasonPending
The Amazing RaceReturningMildFull seasonPending
ConstantineNewModerateCancel mid-seasonPending
Blue BloodsReturningHighFull seasonPending
GrimmReturningMildFull seasonPending
Posted in Television | Tagged 2014-15, fall, Friday, premiere, season, series, television | Leave a reply

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  • A red-eyed tree frog wearing a panda apron is stirring food in the Lilypad Kitchen.
    Sweet Chicken Curry Slow-Cooked with Mango ChutneyJune 16, 2026
    Sweet Chicken Curry: This was an adaptation from a diet recipe book for slow cookers, and was a pretty easy recipe (particularly using the slow cooker, but also just the limited number of items to chop / dice / slice). And the mango chutney is really the key to the sweet taste. I wasn't a big fan of chutney before, but it is awesome here.
  • A red-eyed tree frog rolling out dough wearing an apron with a panda image on it.
    Chocolate Chip Caramel Rolls baked in Brown Sugar and CinnamonJune 15, 2026
    Chocolate Chip Caramel Rolls: I snagged the base for this recipe from a "Taste of Home Fall Baking - Fresh from the Oven" cookbook. My first real attempt at a baking recipe, part of a new goal for myself.
  • A red-eyed tree frog wearing a panda apron is stirring food in the Lilypad Kitchen.
    Maple Pork Tenderloin with Maple Syrup and Dijon MustardJune 14, 2026
    Maple Pork: Andrea snagged this recipe from her Mom, and it might be a Looney-Spoons recipe originally. It's pork tenderloin with maple syrup. Sure, there's other stuff in it, but those are the two flavours that pop. Totally awesome.
  • A red-eyed tree frog wearing a panda apron is stirring food in the Lilypad Kitchen.
    Green Curry Chicken with Eggplant and LemongrassJune 12, 2026
    Green Curry Chicken - This is one of my favourite dishes, compliments of a cooking course through the local public school board. I have rated it "medium-to-hard" for the level of difficulty but that is a bit misleading. The individual steps are not particularly difficult, nor is the sequencing, but there are a significant number of detailed steps (including sous-chef preparations) and it takes a long time to prep and cook; it is definitely not a "quick weeknight meal". I have also rated it "mild" for spice, and I do not have a particularly high threshold.
  • Frog writing book review entries into a journal
    It’s not you, it’s me: my first book-club breakupJune 12, 2026
    I have over 40 general book clubs that I follow, with several having sublists / groups. My intent when I started was to see what was out there and get out of my reading comfort zone, at least insofar as I would see what was on offer. I combed through 2025, and the first six … Continue reading →

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