If you were looking for a completely serious take on the Chuck premise, a super agent with computer-aided abilities, that was devoid of any and all humor, Intelligence was the show for you. Based on the ratings, however, not many people were looking for such a show. What should have been a no-brainer, with Josh Holloway in his first post-Lost starring role and Once Upon A Time‘s Meghan Ory teaming up as the microchipped agent and his handler, the show failed quickly. I bailed after 4 episodes and with no sign of improvement on the horizon. CBS aired the full 13 episode order before pulling the plug.
Tag / Intelligence
Midseason Review – Mondays
Day 2 of our look back at my thoughts on the new fall television season and what is new for the winter and spring.
7:00
How I Met Your Mother – Entering its 9th and final season, the show finally introduced the titular mother in last spring’s finale. This entire season will take place over the weekend of Barney and Robin’s wedding, but should have some flashbacks and flashforwards involving the mother.
The show has worked best this season when the mother has been involved, which, sadly, hasn’t been too often. The plan is for it to air without reruns through the series finale in March.
Bones – Also returning for its 9th season, Bonesstarts the year on Mondays but is scheduled to move to Fridays after the World Series. Replacing it on Mondays will be
Well, FOX finally pulled the trigger and actually moved Bones to Fridays. Not much to say about the show that hasn’t already been said. It seems to just keep chugging along.
Almost Human – Brought to us by some of the good folks responsible for Fringe, I’ll give this a shot, assuming it ever does show up on Mondays.
We’re 9 episodes into the season and I’m still not sure what to make of this one. More often than not, I find myself falling asleep during the show, which I guess doesn’t bode well for it.
8:00
2 Broke Girls – Entering its 3rd season, it is time to accept that this show is not going to change. It will continue to feature two talented leads and surround them with base racial stereotypes and humor aimed towards the lowest common denominator. To this point, the charm of the leads has been enough to overcome bad things about the show. At some point, though, that is bound to change.
The status quo got shaken up a bit, first with the addition of the cupcake window at the back of the diner and then with the addition of the baking school. Continue reading →