2011 New Fall Season – Mondays

CBS

How I Met Your Mother – Based on the season premier, we are no closer to meeting the titular mother, and the surprise reappearance of VIctoria will likely kill some time.  By adding another tease (who will Barney marry?), the show seems intent on giving its critics more ammunition, but could avoid it if they start paying off on some of these “mysteries”.  Meanwhile, after a season that stretched his dramatic acting skills, the first two episodes of the season gave Jason Segel more comedic moments.

2 Broke Girls – The first episode started off kind of weak, but it got better later in the half hour.  I’ve been a big fan of Kat Dennings dating back to The 40 Year Old Virgin and Beth Behrs seemed to have some chops as well.  I’ll give it a chance.

Hawaii Five-O – After a mostly popcorn-fun first season, the show returns with a new recurring guest star in Terry O’Quinn.  That in and of itself would be a reason to turn in.

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2011 New Fall Season – Sundays

I never received this year’s Fall TV Preview from our good friends at Entertainment Weekly, so I’m going to wing this based on what I’ve seen so far and what I can remember from the Internets.  Not much to watch on Sunday nights, so let’s get this started.

ABC

Pan Am – ABC’s attempt to hop on the Mad Men brigade premieres tonight, with Christina Ricci making her move to television.  It looks somewhat interesting, so I will give it a shot.

CBS

The Good Wife – Slowly built itself up to a top performer last season and should do even better on Sundays without much competition.  The only problem with the new timeslot will be in the fall due to football overruns.

Book 3 (of 52) – The Late Shift

The Late Shift - Bill Carter

 Stop me if you’ve heard this one before.  The host of the Tonight Show changes, NBC executives start to think they’ve made a huge mistake, and, while the new host is on the air, offers the job to someone else.  No, this isn’t the story of Jay Leno stealing the Tonight Show back from Conan O’Brien, but the original story of Jay Leno stealing the Tonight Show from Johnny Carson and then fighting off David Letterman.

It is a fascinating story, even more so within the context of nearly the same thing playing out 18 years later.  Jay Leno is the permanent guest host of the Tonight Showand his manager is working furiously to push Johnny Carson out of the way.  When Carson announces he is retiring, Jay had just signed a contract guaranteeing him the top spot.  Meanwhile, as NBC’s other late night star, Letterman assumed he would move up an hour once Carson retired.  NBC execs, wanting to placate both stars, split down the middle.  When Jay’s manager goes crazy, starting booking wars and alienating publicists, NBC decides they made a mistake a offer the job to Letterman, who instead decides to leave his home of over a decade and start over at CBS.

The behind the scenes look at these shows, and the men who host them, is intriguing.  Jay Leno comes off as someone with extreme mental disorders.  He is loyal to a fault, either to his manager who almost sabotaged his career or to the network he thinks of as home.  He seems to have trouble dealing with people in an adult manner.  His life appears to revolve around two things: hosting the Tonight Show and fixing old cars.  He is married, but it comes off as though it was done not out of love, but because when you reach a certain age, you are supposed to be married.  The famous story of Leno hiding in a broom closet for hours so he can eavesdrop on a call between NBC executives, and the glee it brought him showing off that he knew things he shouldn’t, makes you feel sad for him. 

Letterman comes off as the more together person, but that really isn’t saying much.  He is described as a bundle of neuroses, who is never satisfied with a performance and is overly critical and dismissive of his own skills.  He spent years bashing the network and his bosses and yet expected them to just know how much it would have meant to him to be the host of the Tonight Show.  The book ends with a triumphant Letterman on top, his Late Showon CBS winning the ratings war for the first year plus.  Unfortunately, for Letterman and his fans, this started to go the other way with Jay Leno, behind a resurgent NBC primetime lineup, overcoming Dave and holding on to the top for years.

As we know, the sequel would happen 18 years later, and Bll Carter is back with the sequel.  Hopefully, I don’t have to wait 18 years to read it.

Midseason Review – Fridays

Our week of fall preview reviews comes to a conclusion with everyone’s favorite day of the week.

7:00

Medium – I don’t necessarily even like this show, but I keep watching.  Every time I’m ready to throw in the towel, something brings me back.  Although, it already has 2 episodes (out of 3 aired so far) backlogged on the DVR.

It has been surprisingly enjoyable, but CBS has pulled the plug and it should end its run early this year.

8:00

Supernatural – Back for a sixth season, and it will be hard to top last season’s battle against the devil and all of the demons of hell.

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Midseason Review – Thursdays

Our penultimate look back at TV’s most competitive night!  October’s thoughts on Must See TV.

7:00

The Big Bang Theory – A lot of nerds don’t like this show, thinking it always goes for the easy jokes about them and their nerd culture.  I disagree.  Consistently one of the funniest shows on TV.

The move from Mondays has worked out for CBS.  There was a slight blip when Kaley Cuoco missed a few episodes after falling off a horse, but it seems to be back to firing on all cylindars.

Community – A pop culture cornocopia that brings the funny every week.  Plus, it has Annie’s Boobs.

Still great, but it may have gone to the wacky theme episode well once too often in an attempt to replicate the glory that was last year’s paintball episode.  Not to mention a return appearance by Annie’s Boobs.

My Generation – This will be cancelled by the end of October. Didn’t even make it the end of September.

Wow.  I had managed to completely forget about this.

Bones – The gang is brought back together to fight crime.  Again, the relationships between the characters trumps the case of the week.

Continues to be enjoyable. Continue reading →