Showing posts with label 30 Rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 30 Rock. Show all posts

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Thursday Night TV


Thursday night has plenty of good TV, and with sweeps upon us, the schedule for the month is loaded with new episodes. Earl, Scrubs, The Office, 30 Rock, and Smallville after the jump.

My Name is Earl: Earl puts himself on his list since he never let himself grow up, so he starts by trying to get his G.E.D. It proves a little too difficult, so he goes back to his old high school for help, but his old teachers are all burnt out cause since Earl they've had an endless parade of kids who are no good. To make it up, he takes over as a substitute covering in-school suspension.

He tries to show them his life as an example of what happens when you goof off in school, but kids today got no respect. So Earl convinces the teachers to fight fire with fire, and they pull a series of pranks on their students. Everything works out great until a car rigged with an innocent prank ends up exploding. But after freaking out, it turns out that was exactly what the kids needed to fall in line. The teachers get back to teaching, and Earl gets his G.E.D. A funny episode, especially the exploding car, but accidental car bombs as the solution to your problems seems like a very odd message to send. Some especially funny parts:

  • "In Armando's class there are six women for every man. Nice."
  • A nice callback to Mallrats with Randy's sailboat picture.
  • "You better hope that To Catch a Predator guy doesn't come in here and see you with all these kids."
  • "And Summer, always remember, just because you have a stripper name doesn't mean you have to grow up to be a stripper."

The Office: Crisis mode, as Dunder Mifflin accidentally sends out a bunch of paper with an obscene watermark. Creed is the Quality Assurance guy, and in an effort to avoid blame pulls some evil genius moves. He gets someone fired for his incompetence, then takes up a collection for her and pockets it. I love that guy.


Jim and Andy go to a high school to apologize for the paper, and discover that Andy's girlfriend is a high school student. But that was a one-note story, because aside from that, there was no point and not much humor.

Michael decides to hold a press conference to apologize, presumably without consulting with upper management, to get ahead of the scandal that probably would not have been a scandal of note. And he brings a client to the press conference who won't accept his apology, so it turns out to be an even bigger disaster than I'd have thought. So he records some kind of crazy apology video that sounds like a manifesto and/or threat, and I guess intends to put it on YouTube? Will they continue this story at all, or just leave it? Weird episode, but it had some really good parts:

  • "The image of a beloved cartoon duck performing unspeakable acts upon a certain cartoon mouse that a lot of people like. I've never been a fan."
  • "Every week I'm supposed to take four hours and do a quality spot check of the paper mill. And of course the year I blow it off, this happens."
  • "Lord, beer me strength."


30 Rock: Season finale already? What a pisser. But what a great episode. Completely insane, but great.

Tracy's still in hiding under the assumed name Gordon Tremeshko (I think?), and only Kenneth knows that he's in Needmore, Pennsylvania, with Kenneth's cousin (played by Sean Hayes in the first role I didn't hate him in) taking care of him. Then going all Misery on him. Kenneth not only rescues him, but throws himself down the stairs to an ambulance will rush them through traffic to get to the show on time.


Jack's love of his job and crazy mother remind him that he doesn't love Phoebe. And gives him a heart attack. And Lemon's love of hers puts the kibosh on the Floydster. Which sucks for him because Tina Fey was looking especially hot tonight. Glasses, business suit, and a hint of cleavage really works for her. And speaking of hot, Cerie makes her first appearance in a while.

Just some of the many, many good parts:
  • "My techniques guarantee male orgasm."
  • "The most important thing is that she makes Jack very happy. She's like a white Geisha."
  • "Carrying plastic bags, sitting on benches, brushing my own teeth. This is unsuitable!"
  • "I was at a costume party earlier this evening. And the hostess's dog attacked me, so I had to stab it."
  • "And all the time I've been on this earth, I have only one regret: I should've worked more."
  • "They've got pretzels downstairs!"
  • "If I die will you take care of my birds?" "I got a lot on my plate right now, Ken."

Scrubs: Turk and Dr. Cox fight over who'll treat hypochondriac Lloyd the deliveryman, making up fake diagnoses for his arm pain to make him each other's responsibility. Just as Perry thinks he's won, Turk ups the ante by actually operating. Take that? I have no idea how Perry didn't see that it was all a prank. Turk's prone to doing some stupid stuff, but he's still a good doctor.


I never thought Keri Russell was all that attractive on Felicity but with straighter hair she's gorgeous. She plays Elliot's old friend who J.D. naturally has a thing for. J.D., despite always being a huge jerk to Elliot, is upset that she makes time for Keri Russell but not for him. So he turns into an even bigger jerk and sabotages the Elliot/Keri Russell friendship. We're supposed to like him and all, but sometimes he's a complete dick. It did, however, lead to a pretty amusing appletini scene. But after he gives a hollow apology for his dickishness, Elliot forgives him. And in the closer, Keith proposes to Elliot. Is she going to be Mrs. Dudemeister?

Best parts:
  • "It's my screensaver!"
  • Turk's Booty Breakdown
  • The Janitor's cleanliness ghost

Smallville: The rich have it good. Even Lex's abductors are beautiful women. She blows up a series of tunnels leaving Lex trapped and Lionel in the hospital. Naturally, the tunnels are filled with kryptonite, cause the episode would be over pretty quickly otherwise. As usual, Lex makes it look like he's finally 100% evil, but then turns around at the last second to partially redeem himself. I hope before this show ends, which I hope is soon because I can't stop watching but I really don't like it much anymore, they finally just let Lex become evil. Elsewhere, Lana's getting used to being a Luthor, acting all deceitful and devious. My recording got all messed up in the last 10 minutes, so I might've missed some stuff, but it sounded like the same old conclusion stuff, where they play spooky music and make it sound like big important stuff is going on but nothing really happens.

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Thursday, April 19, 2007

Thursday Night TV


I'm still way behind on TV after an extended weekend. Still to watch: The past two Jerichos, The Sopranos, Entourage, House, Gilmore Girls, The Shield, tonight's Smallville, and I'm still not clear on whether this week's Bones was new. But I did catch My Name is Earl, 30 Rock, and Scrubs tonight. Spoilers past the jump.

My Name is Earl: Cool to see a call back to Burt Reynolds' episode, but even better... Norm MacDonald! I've been a fan for a long time. And once when I saw him at a casino, he said "how's it going?" to me. Also cool to see Charles Robinson, fresh off his appearance on The Riches. I never saw him in a casino, though.

So Norm plays "Little Chubby," son of the now deceased "Big Chubby." He was a huge jerk, so in an apparent cross promotion with kickedinthenuts.com, dons a jumpsuit and an orange wig and... well... kicks him in the nuts. But everyone laughing at him sends him on a spiritual quest, and he comes back a better person.

But it turns out the severe testicular injury meant he wasn't producing testosterone, and since he never saw a doctor for it, it was his mangled nads that made him nice. But thanks to a touching rendition of "Freebird," he sacrifices his balls to be a nice person again.


Best parts:

  • Catalina
  • "It's like having sex with a fat chick, except I can't get her pregnant."
  • "Male intimacy: it's not just for gays anymore."
  • "Never trust a man who wants to put his finger in your butt."
  • "No wonder we make a fortune with this place, I bet everyone here has working testicles."
  • "What would I sacrifice to be loved? Not my balls."

30 Rock: Liz sees herself in New York for the rest of her life, but Floyd wants to go back to Cleveland. So they go to Cleveland and it's like a paradise. It even gets it's own musical montage with a song that actually sounds like it's sung by Sudeikis and Fey. Floyd ends up taking the job, so it sounds like he's taking off. I was seriously impressed with how likable Jason Sudeikis has been in this show, and for the first time that I can remember, I'm sad to see a sitcom character's love interest go.


A secret society of famous black people lead by Bill Cosby is apparently out to get Tracy, so he disappears. And is still on the lam when the episode ends. Jack's wedding is still on, even though his fiancee Phoebe is seeming like even more of a crazy bitch lately.

  • "By the hammer of Thor!" and "blergh" seem to be Liz's new catchphrases.
  • "It's... made of gold."
  • "It's going to be at least $30 million with all the claymation sex scenes."
  • "I'm gonna have so much money, my grandkids are gonna play lacrosse. Lacrosse, Liz."
  • "Who told Tracy about Anagrams? I'm gonna call Dr. Spaceman."

Scrubs: Another episode where the narration gets passed off to someone else, but this time it's to Ted, the Todd, and Jordan. Ted's trying to get Kelso to resolve a pay dispute with the nurses. The Todd is trying to keep Turk from jeopardizing his career by clashing with the head of plastic surgery. And Jordan messes with Elliot and Keith's relationship, but when she succeeds she actually feels guilty. In typical Scrubs fashion, everything gets resolved in the end with a heartwarming narration thing. Nothing was especially wrong with the episode, but it just wasn't all that funny.


Best parts:
  • "Internal uh-oh five."
  • Elliot's stripper pole.
  • "What's with this guy and bees?"
  • Ted's murderous rage at Kelso


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Thursday, April 12, 2007

Thursday Night TV


It feels like about a year since the last new My Name is Earl. I liked Andy Barker, P.I., but I knew it was going to be cancelled, so I did my best not to get too attached. Since Earl will be sticking around, I'm happy to have it back. Spoilers for tonight's Earl, The Office, 30 Rock, and Scrubs past the jump.


My Name is Earl: Flipping on the television at 4am reminds Earl that he and Randy used to harass a local news reporter. To make it up to her, Earl agrees to appear in a heartwarming story, but Randy gets left out of the action. Earl makes him the center of the story, but the reporter ends up editing Randy to look retarded. It's not that big of a stretch, but she did it on purpose. In the end, it just makes Randy feel like he's finally noticed by karma, so now he and Earl are partners in completing the list.

Best parts:

  • I love it every time Tim Stack pops up. Anybody remember Night Stand with Dick Dietrich? That show was hilarious.
  • "Family asks that donations in the name of Mr. West be made to the family."
  • "Also reported killed in the explosion were two drifters, a homeless man, and a bum."
  • "And just like Van Halen, we were going to keep playing until everybody got sick of us."
  • "When he's had a few drinks, he uses his junk as the spout, but never in front of the kids."

The Office: Michael takes the warehouse crew's scarier safety seminar as a threat to his masculinity or something. Andy, who is now Drew, is being shunned by Dwight. Everyone else has turned into compulsive gamblers. Apparently, Michael's plan to prove that he's tough is to jump off the roof, which almost wins Kevin $100,000. No love triangle stuff this week, just good old fashioned funny.


Best parts:
  • Jim's translation of Dwight's thoughts was pretty good.
  • Michael calling that lady "Pudge."
  • Dwight leaning his head into the bailer ("Bailer? I don't even know her!")
  • After Daryl's cool scary safety presentation, Toby's upstairs tips were great. "You always want to keep a sweater or cardigan of some sort in case it gets drafty."
  • I love a good Van de Graaff Generator joke.
  • "When you land, try and land like an eight year old. These bouncy castles are not designed for adults."
  • "If John Mellencamp ever wins an Oscar, I am a very rich dude."

30 Rock: Rip Torn is back as Giess, Jack's boss. After the disastrous fireworks special last week, Giess takes the microwave division away from Jack, and hints that the way to get it back is to get married. This sends Jack into a spiral of depression.

Liz, on the other hand, is jazzed that her relationship with the unfortunately named Floyd is going well, playing Uno by candlelight and crapping all over the same movies. But the bliss is short lived, because Jack latches on to "the Floydster" as a cure for the blues, seriously cramping Liz's style. Eventually she convinces Jack to find someone for himself, and he ends up hooking up with Phoebe, who has "avian bone disorder," leaving her bones hollow and brittle. Which I guess is kinda funny when gentle taps cause her to say "ouch," but I think that'll get old quickly. Sounds like she's sticking around though, as Jack looks to get back the microwave division by proposing to Phoebe in the last scene.


Tracy is still pitching his idea for a movie based on Thomas Jefferson's life, with him playing all the parts, Norbit-style, except it's not a comedy. Rip Torn, however, would like him to make a sequel to Fat Bitch, the movie where Tracy plays a dog. To sell them on it, he's going to use the TGS set and staff to make a trailer. And stays in character all day. After the trailer turns out crappy, he's decided to finance it himself, so it looks like this will be a lengthy story arc.

Best parts:
  • Fun with the pause button: the movies playing when Liz and Floyd came out of the theater were: The President's Wife, Moonquest: Quest for the Moon, Speaking of Emily, and The Boy Made of Corn.
  • "It's like my old man said, 'If you try, you win.' And he was a hell of a garbage man."
  • "I took the money from the sale of those pieces, and a bought a sailboat, and I named it after my ex-wife, and I sank it."
  • How cute was Liz in her pajamas?

Scrubs: After Laverne's funeral, everyone slips right back into routine, except for Carla, who can't understand how everyone can act like nothing's changed.

Elliot doesn't seem interested in anything with Keith except sex, and he's had enough of it. In the first of a few scenes this episode where one character bluntly tells another character exactly what their problem is, Carla, in a rather bitchy manner, tells her that she's letting Keith slip away because she's afraid of getting hurt like she did with J.D.

Dr. Cox is on a quest to take 20 minutes for himself, but keeps getting interrupted by people who need his help. In scene #2 of easy problem solving, Kelso tells Perry that being the "go to guy" is time for himself, because that brings him joy.

J.D. and Turk have to treat a deaf child, and only the Janitor knows how to sign. They figure out he can have his hearing restored with a cochlear implant. After a recent Law & Order: CI covered the same thing, I knew the father wouldn't go for it. In problem solver #3, the Janitor tells J.D. and Turk that being deaf might be the thing the father and son have most in common, so they're better able to understand what's going on.


And apparently everyone solving each other's problems was the spirit of Laverne living on, which gives Carla warm fuzzies. A little too sweet for me. Still some funny scenes though:
  • J.D.'s fantasy of his funeral.
  • Dr. Cox's imaginary sound-proof bubble.
  • After Keith shot down the KFed/Britney roleplaying, was Elliot suggesting Claus von Bulow and Alan Dershowitz roles?
  • "Well that sucks caboodle."
  • "I'll give you a hint, it starts with an 'M' and ends with an 'R'." "Marg
  • Helgenberger!"

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Friday, April 6, 2007

Thursday Night TV/Catch Up

NBC's Thursday night lineup is almost back in full force with three shows back from hiatus with new episodes. My Name is Earl won't be back until next week, but three shows are back. Highlight for spoilers:

  • The Office: Dwight and his pepper spray... "who's laughing now?" That's a great way after the break to address the Jim/Roy tension without opening the episode with a very unfunny savage beating. Although Dwight beating Roy with nunchucks would have been a very funny savage beating. That little fight sets up the entire episode.


    Dwight's heroics have Angela practically melting, so she spends the episode looking for new, hot tales of Dwight kicking ass. Jim feels a debt to Dwight for helping him out, but Dwight doesn't want to take rewards for his heroism.

    Roy's fired, which is weird, but has Darryl's angling for a raise, and Michael's trying out Wikipedia tactics for winning negotiations. But his strategies all result in Darryl taking camera phone pictures of embarrassing things.

    Ryan and Kelly are still in adjacent cubes, and their constant bickering is hilarious. I hadn't realized Toby would be next door. Toby also spend a lot of time with Michael, and every scene with them was hilarious... their interaction is one of my favorite parts of the show.

    Pam tries to apologize about the whole Roy thing, but Jim is a huge dick about it, saying rather dismissively that Pam and Roy would end up back together again. But they share a friendly coffee together which sort of makes Jim's dickish prediction look right on.

    Best moments:
    • "Everyone here is extremely gruntled."

    • "Because. That is the way these things are done... in films."

    • "Every year I get a $100 gas card. Can't put a price tag on that."

    • The Creed/Michael exchange: "Here's the $40 you gave me." "I didn't give you $40." "In a way, you did."

    • "Toby is the worst human being I've ever known."

    • "It will be a groundbreaking case when it inevitably goes to trial."

    • "You know who's a real Hero? Hiro from Heroes. That's a real hero. Also, Bono."

  • 30 Rock: Will Arnett as a rival executive of Jack's is great casting. And giving him a gay crush on Kenneth is excellent. Both executive types using him as their pawn in a power struggle was better still. And it all lead up to a great payoff with the fireworks show making it look like Rockefeller Center blowing up.


    Elsewhere, Jason Sudeikis did seem so normal. I'm not so concerned about the alcoholism, but his name is Floyd? That's no good. But Liz manages in a messed up way to end up with him. I'm not a 'shipper by any stretch of the imagination, but this makes me happy.

    And in a third plot that was mostly just to set up some Tracy insanity, Tracy finds out he might be a descendant of Thomas Jefferson, while Toofer's ancestor was a black Confederate soldier who helped hide John Wilkes Booth.

    Best moments:
    • "A talking like this contest."

    • "I never got out of my car, and she never got all the way out of her toll booth."

    • Good to see Dr. Spaceman back. Chris Parnell is great at sounding reassuring and knowledgeable while saying ridiculous stuff.

    • "Dr. Spaceman, when they check my DNA will it tell me what diseases I might get or help me to remember my ATM PIN code?"

    • "Love is like an onion. You peel layer after stinky layer until you're just weeping over the sink..."

    • The Maury Povich dream sequence was excellent. Alec Baldwin as Thomas Jefferson giving the audience the double finger?

    • "The last time I drank I ended up doing a man on the street commercial for Tarzan on Ice."

    • "What's that? MC Lyte just murdered Danny Bonaduce? Thanks, phone!"

    • Is it weird that Liz's speech about all the crazy crap she's done made her even more attractive?

  • Scrubs: Laverne remains in a coma, setting us up for a downer episode. But Carla is now seeing Laverne's pre-death ghost following her around and talking to her (which allows us a great callback to Nicole Sullivan's character as the ghost following Dr. Cox).


    We finally get an explanation for Dr. Cox's shaved head a few episodes back, which was apparently aired out of order. "Nobody liked my haircut, so now they can all just suck it," was a great shout out to the fans, who have been complaining about the 'do all year. "Are you on call tonight or will you be busy fighting Superman?" Anyway, he and Jordan finally have their baby, but he wants badly for the birth not to be associated with Laverne's death so he's hot to keep it a secret. But of course that fails, they make some points about the circle of life or whatever, and enjoy some touching moments. An ok episode, but I like the show when it's just more fun.

    Best moments:
    • Bad news robot. I think they blew the entire effects budget on JD's disintegration.

    • Janitor converting to the Norse religion his awesome.

    • Delivery Guy and his speed metal again. Lots of little callbacks this episode.

    • Turk mentions all the black people around, Snoop Dogg resident and the security guard, but whatever happened to Hooch?

    • Shadow Puppet Theater!



  • Bones: Building an episode around a Poco song is a great way to ensure that I'm not going to love it. Lots of the issues with Brennan and her parents that I really wasn't interested in before are brought back up, and I mostly remain uninterested.


    The focus almost entirely on Brennan also means that Hodges and Zack and everyone get pushed into the background, with almost everything they do being scientific babbling to push the plot forward. I like Bones, but as a mystery show with interesting characters, not as a character-driven show with some crime thing going on in the background.


Still to watch: Friday Night Lights (fresh off a Peabody Award), Jericho.

Once again, I didn't watch Andy Barker, P.I., because I'd already seen it. Decent episode though, Traci Lords was very funny.

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Thursday, March 8, 2007

Thursday Night TV

Almost everything's on reruns. Highlight for spoilers:

  • Scrubs: Carla's jokes are interesting given that I've recently been reading Jane Espenson's blog where she talks about "clams," which is apparently writer-speak for lines used so often that they're just not funny anymore, and Carla's one-liners sound just like them. And Dr. Cox's rant sounded more like a rant from the writer's room, giving a quick rundown of why each character's source of comedy, and... well Carla as a character just really isn't. She plays a big part in the story, often acts as JD/Turk/Perry's conscience, and helps set up a lot of Turk's jokes, but rarely is actually funny herself. So this whole storyline seemed more straight from the writers than from any character or anything.

    I had been expecting Private Dancer to die, just cause patients who stay in a hospital for a long time don't have a very good chance. So the opening scene with him ready to discharge was a nice way to get me not expecting a downer before going with the suicide storyline.

    "My baby's happiness is worth all the vaginal dryness in the world," was an excellent line, and the arguments over Turk's college hookup who turned out to be dead were morbidly hilarious. I think they found a decent balance of comedy and drama here, and while a few of the jokes were a little weak, this was a pretty good episode overall.


  • 30 Rock: Jason Sudeikis again, and you like him even more cause Liz Lemler cause she seems cute and pretty cool. Nathan Lane as Alec Baldwin's brother though? I don't like it. Mostly cause I just don't like Nathan Lane, he overacts like a silent movie star. Molly Shannon and that Dan Bakkedahl guy from The Daily Show show up too. But neither of them really did anything. Good to see Cerie getting at least a token appearance. She's been neglected recently.

    As far as the actual episode, I kinda saw the Hospital thing being a scam, and was sorta expecting the father to still be alive. Tracy's finding religion story started out awesome but kinda faded. I'm not sure I cared all that much for crazy out of control "George W. Bush" Liz.

    Best lines:

    • "My lawyer has advised me to join a church preemptively."

    • "We lose half the congregation every time American Idol shows up."

    • "It's only inappropriate with ugly people."

    • "Kabbalah mixes all the wonderful parts of Judaism with magic."

    • "I'm gonna go talk to some food about this."

    • All the fist names!


On the Tivo: Jericho still.

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Saturday, March 3, 2007

TV Catch-up

Catching up on Thursday, highlight for spoilers:

  • Scrubs: A clip show? Yikes. The Turk-ey bacon joke was hilarious, but otherwise a not very memorable episode at all. I guess a lot of people dug the music, but I could've gone for some fresh material.

  • 30 Rock: Another hilarious episode. I'm glad Jason Sudeikis showed back up, even though it was so briefly. He's not my favorite SNL cast member or anything, but I think his brief performances on this show are great. L.L. Cool J was excellent too. Best moments:

    • Dewey Cheatham and Livingston? Hilarious.

    • "I'm riding on a subway full of scary, teenage people."

    • "When you get rich off this stuff, take care of my family. I don't want my kids to have to go to college."

    • I love a random MC Scat Cat reference, and namedropping Ron Mexico was great too.

    • "He's got blood on his tote. You're making a mockery of the Source Awards! Wait til I tell Tupac about this!"

  • Sarah Silverman Show: The Tab storyline is seriously one of the best B-stories in sitcom history. Seriously, every time Brian Posehn went on a rant about freeing himself from his self-inflicted prison of Tab-lessness, I was dying. The lesbian story was pretty lame, although it had two good moments... the song actually wasn't terrible, just cause the "it doesn't matter if you're gay or straight or black or white or asian, but just those five" line... and the bit at the end where she goes chasing the cop down in the rain. I guess there's only one more episode left this season, but it's already been renewed, which is good news.
On the Tivo: Nothing

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Thursday, February 22, 2007

Thursday Night TV

Sick as a dog, so I'm crashing before Sarah Silverman. Highlight for spoilers:

  • My Name is Earl: Tivo cut off the beginning, so I missed the reason for the flashback to Earl Jr.'s birth. Quality moments though:

    • "For a second there we were gonna all get to dress up like clowns!"
    • "Merlin. We meet again."
    • "That, or she's banging an Asian doctor, trying to get one of everything."

    And c'mon, what's funnier than Beau Bridges chucking gerbils out a window? Other than possibly hanging a "Kids, do not touch!" note on an outlet. Excellent episode.

  • The Office: Pam is hilariously unconvincing as her new assertive self. Best parts:

    • Michael the Magic
    • "It's been sitting in my car all day with the sun beating down on the mayonnaise."
    • "Why is this so hard? That's what she said. Oh my god."
    • Creed's fake ID company.
    • Dwight inspecting the house.
    • Toby instantly going for the duck, winning it, and getting no points with Pam for it. This show loves screwing him over.
    • Jim's look of terror when Karen is playing with that guy's tie.
    • "Hey Jan." "Not too good."
    • Dwight popping out of the back seat at the end

    Now... what the F was up with Roy's reaction to the news that Pam kissed Jim? Sitcoms and murderous rage don't mix. Like the Joss episode, everyone's going to blame JJ Abrams for all the successes and failures of this episode, but I still think it's 99% everyone else. Anyway, I liked the episode, but I'm completely freaked out about the direction Roy's heading. I don't really see how that can be good for a show like this.

  • Scrubs: Continuing with the best parts theme:

    • I'd love to put my ear on her butt to see if I could hear the ocean.
    • Oh, how I love the Sarah Chalke semi-nudity.
    • I'm a genius, I totally knew the lupus question that Turk didn't know.
    • Mutton chops.

    I liked the fake relationship with Ann, the most pathetic attempt at asking someone out in the history of everything, and the "fainting when he poos" jokes are still excellent.

  • 30 Rock: More best moments:

    • "I would like to be Michelle Pfeiffer to your angry black kid who learns that poetry is just another way to rap."
    • Cerie's (sweet sassy molassey, she's hot) iPod sunglasses.
    • "I love this cornbread so much I want to take it behind a middle school and get it pregnant."
    • "I hate the troops!"
    • "Does my vulva look swollen?"
    • "You're marrying my mom, aren't you?"
    • "Lemon, what happened in your childhood to make you believe that people are good?"
    • "...and that lady you European kissed last night was actually a gentleman."
    • "Television on! Pornography!"
    • The non-spinning pinwheels.

    The agent guy was kinda funny, but the cutting words short bit got old fairly quickly. Chris Matthews looked like he was about to bust out laughing all the way through his cameo, while Tucker Carlson was showing off his range by playing a dick.
On the Tivo: Sarah Silverman Program.

I get Martin Lawrence, Tim Allen, and John Travolta embarrassing themselves in Wild Hogs, but why would William H. Macy do it too?

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Friday, February 16, 2007

Thursday Night TV

Was kinda tv-ed out from catching up on Tuesday and Wednesday, so I only caught a little of tonight's stuff. Highlight for spoilers:

  • Scrubs: With all the plot recently, this was mostly a treading water kinda episode, story-wise. Nothing really happened, which was pretty nice. Just a bunch of goofy jokes. I'm guessing it's overloaded right now, but TheToddTime.com isn't loading for me. I'll have to check it out later. I also love that the janitor signs his emails "Janitor." The Milos the surgeon plotline though, just reminded me of Milos the janitor from Newsradio. Not a great episode, but enough laughs to work.


  • 30 Rock: How unbelievably great is this show? Rip Torn! I kinda saw the Tracy not having a daughter thing coming, but it was still pretty funny.
    • "It turns out she asked him to take it out."
    • "They're very good at sensing debilitating loneliness in a person."
    • "Damn straight, I'm delightful."
    • "Don't tell me to calm down, you fungdark."
    • "Do you like the new me? And before you answer, Superballs!"
    • "I will fire you, and you will never alter drapes in Atlanta again, because you do not cross a Sugarbaker woman!"
On the Tivo: Smallville, The Office, Earl, Sarah Silverman.

Hey, whoever writes those NBC promos? Don't tell me what I'll be talking about tomorrow.

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Wednesday, February 14, 2007

30 Rock/Studio 60

One of those New York gossip columns has a pretty amusing story from the WGAs:

Tina Fey dissed archfoe Aaron Sorkin Sunday night at the Writers Guild Awards. The "30 Rock" star competes with Sorkin's "Studio 60": Both take place behind the scenes at a show like "Saturday Night Live," where Fey was head writer. Wiggling around the Hudson Theatre stage in a party frock with plunging decolletage, Fey told the crowd, "I hear Aaron Sorkin is in Los Angeles wearing the same dress - but longer, and not funny."
I like Studio 60 (mostly), but that's still damn funny. The "archfoe" thing is weird, though. Given Sorkin's reaction to recent criticism, he might think of Tina Fey as a foe of sorts, but I can't imagine her having more than a casual dislike of him. When everyone was on the Studio 60 bandwagon before the season started, 30 Rock had some fun at their own expense, with those ads that had Alec Baldwin thinking he'd signed up for the Sorkin show, so it seems like Tina Fey at least has a bit of a sense of humor about the situation.

Via Defamer.

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Friday, February 9, 2007

TV Catchup

Oh man, Thursday night has a lot of shows... (highlight to reveal spoilers):

  • Smallville: So... this show is still kinda lame. The plot centered around creepy pictures sent by a stalker to Lana's Sprint(tm) cell phone. Now the product placement was annoying, but the Lana-centric-ness was nice. I basically only still watch the show because she's unbelievably hot. Seems like Clark and Lana are sort of making up, Lex made a half-assed attempt at mending some fences... or like 10-percent-assed. But still plenty of tension all over the place. And in a plot element that nobody really cared about, I think, Chloe and Jimmy got back together. Hooray?
  • The Office: Oh, where to begin? I love Scrantonicity, and like Pam, I thought they only played Police songs, but discovered that they didn't earlier. Fields of Gold was a Sting solo effort. You can tell by the fact that it's completely girly.

    Toby having a smoking hot date was a great touch. All they've ever done on the show is make him a nice, friendly, caring guy who constantly gets crapped on. And Ryan knocking the bouquet out of the way was a fantastic touch.

    I liked Dwight's fascination with catching wedding crashers... and I hope his Pavlovian altoid reflex comes back in a later episode. Angela's Jackie O getup was pretty amusing. Most of Michael's stuff was kind of annoying though, sometimes when you go for that cringe factor it crosses over the line a touch.

    And with the love... rhombus or something... I know a lot of the fans obsess over this stuff and create portmanteau names for all the couple combinations but it's my least favorite part of the show. But the dancing outside shot of Pam and Roy (Ram or Poy?) with the cut to Dwight and Angela (the commercials went with Dwangela, but I'd rather see something like Anght (pronounced anked), cause it sounds cool). then the cut to Michael being all sad, that was good stuff.

    And as a Celtics fan, the senile Uncle's "the Celtics were a great team" comment was painful during the franchise record losing streak. Robert Parish, you are indeed missed.
  • My Name is Earl: Byron from Andy Richter Controls the Universe (Jonathan Slavin)! D.J. Qualls! They're like the funniest weasely guys on earth! And whoever played Liberty is quite a lovely young lady. Quick hit thoughts since I don't have much to say about the plot:

    1. - I think feeding Listerine to a turtle might kill it. Do not try this at home.

    2. - What was up with that jar of sangria? That thing looked disgusting.

    3. - "Since nowadays wrestling is planned in advance...." Great line.

    4. - Black Ladies of Wrestling = BLoW. Excellent.

    5. - I'm liking the way they handled the Randy/Catalina storyline. They keep the same jokes but they all seem fresh now.
  • Scrubs: Occasionally on Scrubs, the comedy gets a little derailed with plot. This episode wasn't too packed with jokes, but it was actually an interesting story. JD's girlfriend tells him she had a miscarriage, they agree that they're better off broken up, but in the end we find out that she still has the baby. Them dames is devious! And Dr. Cox's baby required prenatal surgery, which provided a nice feelgood balance to the miscarriage/deceit storyline.
  • 30 Rock: I continue to love this show. Kenneth the page would be the best new character of the year, except that Alec Baldwin steals absolutely every scene he's in. And Cerie? Sadly, in winter, she's wearing more, but still, she is quite the looker. Liz's thing with Jason Sudeikis was kinda sweet, and he suddenly struck me as a guy who could totally be a leading guy in a romantic comedy type thing. I'm assuming he'll be back for a story arc.

    These guys don't know how to play "Boff"/Marry/Kill, though. It's supposed to be difficult choices. Like three women you hate and would never want to see naked. Or three gorgeous women who seem really nice and you wouldn't think about killing. If you give them Liz, Jenna, and Cerie, you've got one who's easily the hottest, one who's easily the coolest, and one who's irritating as hell.
  • The Sarah Silverman Program: Zach Galifianakis! Brian Posehn showing off ninja moves! If they can work Patton Oswalt and Maria Bamford in somehow, it will be this Comedians of Comedy fan's dream. The line of the show: "I better go. Homeless don't crap themselves." Also, the Cousin Sal cameo was totally weird. But I definitely dig this show. It's uneven, and the musical elements don't work for me, but it's two for two in coming up with pretty frequent big laughs. Not nearly enough shows can come up with one per episode.
Parked on the Tivo: Some TCM stuff, but nothing first run.

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