2010 Year End TV Review: Jason Zingale
Posted by Jason Zingale (12/13/2010 @ 5:11 pm)
It was an especially transformative year of television, at least for me, as my TV viewing diet underwent a bit of restructuring. Once-favorite shows began collecting dust on the DVR (sorry “Burn Notice,” but you’re losing your sizzle), and in the case of a few (like “Chuck”), were deleted altogether. Consequently, NBC’s “Community,” which spent most of its freshman season on the fringe of receiving similar treatment, is now the highlight of my Thursday nights. That’s because while shows like “Burn Notice” and “Chuck” are pretty much running on dead fumes at this point, “Community” has just begun to hit its groove. “How I Met Your Mother” also bounced back from an off-year with some of its funniest episodes to date, “Glee” and “Castle” continue to be as guilty as they are pleasurable, and the new season of “Top Chef” might just be the best yet. But none were able to crack my Top 5, which goes to prove that while there might have been a few misses this year, the hits were a lot more memorable.

1. Terriers
Clever, funny, dark and provocative, “Terriers” may have wowed critics with its flawed characters and rich storytelling, but that didn’t change John Landgraf’s recent decision not to renew it for a second season. I don’t blame the FX President for the low ratings (most networks would have given up after only a few weeks), but I do blame the rest of America for failing to tune in to the best new show of the season. Yes, you heard right. Although I enjoyed “The Walking Dead” and the overrated “Boardwalk Empire,” the buddy detective drama delivered better acting and writing week in and week out. Donal Logue and Michael Raymond-James had unparalleled chemistry as the scrappy private investigators (the titular terriers, if you will) caught in the middle of the case of a lifetime, so it’s a shame that we won’t get to tag along on any of their further adventures – especially since the season finale left things wide open. Another brilliant but cancelled television show that, ten years from now, will still be missed.

2. Modern Family
It hasn’t even completed its second season, but “Modern Family” already seems destined to become a comedy classic. It’s that good, and anyone who says otherwise should get an X-ray to see if their funny bone is broken. Of course, considering that it’s one of the most-watched shows on TV, you’d be hard-pressed to find anyone who doesn’t agree. But for those who still haven’t experienced the funniest half-hour of television, it’s about time that you do, because there isn’t a single show that even comes close to matching the number of laughs in an average episode. And although the writing staff certainly deserves some credit, it’s cast members like Ty Burrell, Ed O’Neill and Sofia Vergara who make every joke that much funnier. Even the kids are funny, and that’s saying a lot from someone who isn’t particularly fond of child actors. It’s almost unbelievable the way the show fires on all cylinders so consistently, but that’s what separates a great show from a good one, and “Modern Family” is nothing if not that.

3. Sons of Anarchy
The third season of FX’s outlaw biker drama may not have been its best, but after a sluggish start, the series redeemed itself by getting back to the kind of top-notch storytelling that fans have come to expect. Many of those fans were quick to criticize the ambitious Ireland subplot that dominated most of the season, but along with fleshing out some of the club’s back story, it also set the stage for what turned out to be a killer finale. Many of the supporting players got lost in the background this year, but Charlie Hunnam gave the performance of his career, guest stars Paula Malcomson and James Cosmo proved themselves worthy additions to the cast, and Ally Walker put the finishing touches on what might just be the best TV villain in quite some time. The show may have stumbled a bit along the way, but no matter how you felt about the season as a whole, those who stuck around for the long haul were given plenty of incentive to come back next fall.
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Posted in: Actors, Actresses, Mad Men, Sons of Anarchy, The Walking Dead, TV, TV Comedies, TV Dramas, Year in Review
Tags: 2010 Year End TV Jason Zingale, Agent June Stahl, Ally Walker, AMC, Andrew Lincoln, best TV shows, Boardwalk Empire, Britt Pollack, Bullz-Eye Year in TV 2010, Burn Notice, Castle, Charlie Hunnam, Chuck, Community, Don Draper, Donal Logue, Ed O'Neill, Elisabeth Moss, Frank Darabont, FX, Gale Anne Hurd, Glee, Greg Nicotero, Hank Dolworth, How I Met Your Mother, James Cosmo, Jax Teller, Jay Prichett, Jeffrey DeMunn, Jon Hamm, Kiernan Shipka, Laurie Holden, Mad Men, Matthew Weiner, Michael Raymond-James, Modern Family, Paula Malcomson, Peggy Olson, Phil Dunphy, Rick Grimes, Robert Kirkman, Sally Draper, Sofia Vergara, Sons of Anarchy, Steven Yuen, Terriers, The Walking Dead, Top Chef, Ty Burrell
The 2010 Primetime Emmy nominations are in!
Posted by Will Harris (07/08/2010 @ 1:19 pm)
Bright and early this morning…by which we mean 8:40 AM EST / 5:40 AM PST…the nominees for the 62nd Primetime Emmy Awards were announced by Joel McHale (“Community,” “The Soup”) and Sofia Vergara (“Modern Family”). It ended up being a worthwhile gig for one of them, at least, with Vergara pulling in a Supporting Actress nod for “Modern Family.” Maybe that’s why McHale seemed so stone-faced. (Seriously, did someone tell McHale that he wasn’t getting paid if he didn’t keep his smart-assery in line ’til after the nominees were read? The only time he cracked anything approaching a joke was when he preempted Vergara’s mangling of Mariska Hargitay’s last name.) Anyway, here’s a list of who got the glory…and, in the case of Best Actress in a Drama, who got the shaft.

Outstanding Comedy Series:
* Curb Your Enthusiasm (HBO)
* Glee (Fox)
* Modern Family (ABC)
* Nurse Jackie (Showtime)
* The Office (NBC)
* 30 Rock (NBC)
My Pick: “Modern Family.” There’s no question that “Glee” is award-worthy, but not necessarily as a comedy, which is also where “Nurse Jackie” falters in this category. I feel like “The Office” and “30 Rock” coasted in on their past merits this year, but “Curb” got a huge boost from the “Seinfeld” storyline, so it’s the only real competition here. Still, the buzz on “Modern Family” is all over the place. I can’t imagine it won’t bring home the glory.
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Posted in: Actors, Actresses, News, TV, TV Action, TV Comedies, TV Dramas, TV Sci-Fi
Tags: 2010 Emmy Awards, 2010 Emmys, 30 Rock, A Dog Year, Aaron Paul, Al Pacino, Alec Baldwin, Alice, American Idol, Amy Poehler, Andre Braugher, Antiques Roadshow, Archie Panjabi, Breaking Bad, Brenda Vaccaro, Bryan Cranston, Burn Notice, Capturing Mary, Catherine O'Hara, Chris Colfer, Christina Hendricks, Christine Baranski, Claire Danes, Community, Connie Britton, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Damages, Dame Judi Dench, Dancing with the Stars, David Strathairn, Dennis Quaid, Dexter, Dirty Jobs, Edie Falco, Elisabeth Moss, Emma, Emmy Awards, Endgame, Eric Stonestreet, Friday Night Lights, Georgia O'Keeffe, Glee, Glenn Close, Great Performances, Hamlet, Heidi Klum, Holland Taylor, Hope Davis, House, How I Met Your Mother, Hugh Laurie, Ian McKellen, Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution, Jane Krakowski, Jane Lynch, January Jones, Jeff Bridges, Jeff Probst, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Jim Parsons, Joan Allen, Joel McHale, John Goodman, John Slattery, Jon Cryer, Jon Hamm, Jonathan Pryce, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Julia Ormond, Julianna Margulies, Julie Bowen, Kathy Bates, Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List, Kristen Wiig, Kyle Chandler, Kyra Sedgwick, Larry David, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Lea Michele, Lost, Mad Men, Maggie Smith, Mariska Hargitay, Martin Short, Masterpiece, Matthew Fox, Matthew Morrison, Men of a Certain Age, Michael C. Hall, Michael Emerson, Michael Gambon, Michael Sheen, Modern Family, Monk, Moonshot, MythBusters, Neil Patrick Harris, Nurse Jackie, Parks and Recreation, Patrick Stewart, Phil Keoghan, Project Runway, Real Time with Bill Maher, Return to Cranford, Rose Byrne, Ryan Seacrest, Saturday Night Live, Sharon Gless, Sofia Vergara, Steve Carell, Survivor, Susan Sarandon, Temple Grandin, Terry O'Quinn, The Amazing Race, The Big Bang Theory, The Closer, The Colbert Report, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, The Good Wife, The New Adventures of Old Christine, The Office, The Pacific, The Prisoner, The Special Relationship, The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien, Tina Fey, Tom Bergeron, Toni Collette, Tony Shaloub, True Blood, Two and a Half Men, Ty Burrell, Undercover Boss, United States of Tara, You Don't Know Jack
ABC: What’s New for Fall 2009
Posted by Will Harris (09/06/2009 @ 4:56 pm)
V (Tues., Nov. 3 @ 8:00 PM, ABC)

The competition: “NCIS” (CBS) “The Biggest Loser” (NBC), “Hell’s Kitchen” (Fox), “90210” (The CW)
Starring: Elizabeth Mitchell, Morris Chestnut, Joel Gretsch, Lourdes Benedicto, Logan Huffman, Laura Vandervoort, Morena Baccarin, Scott Wolf
Producers: Scott Peters (“The 4400,” “The Outer Limits”), Jeffrey Bell (“Day Break,” “Alias”), Steve Pearlman (“Reunion,” “Related”), and Jace Hall (“The Jace Hall Show”)
Network’s Description: A re-imagining of the 1980′s miniseries about the world’s first encounter with an alien race. Simultaneously appearing over every major city in the world, the Visitors (or V’s) promote a message of peace. Through their generous offer to share advanced technology, the V’s build a following that may actually hide a more malevolent agenda, one that twists a very deep component of human nature: devotion. While the world quickly becomes fascinated with the V’s and their link to wonders just beyond the reach of human understanding, FBI Counter Terrorist Agent Erica Evans discovers a secret hidden beneath the skin of every V – a secret that may threaten the lives of everyone close to her. Yet for her teenage son, Tyler, the V’s are his ticket to something big and hopeful — a new chance for mankind to unite in common goals. To Chad Decker, a career-hungry news anchor, his exclusive interview with Anna, the leader of the V’s, is crucial to his dominating the airwaves. Also unsure about the Visitors is Father Jack, a priest questioning his faith in the wake of the Visitors’ arrival. Seeking answers outside the church, Father Jack discovers there are other dissidents who believe the Visitors are not who they say they are, including Ryan Nichols, who is faced with his own life-altering decision when the V’s show up. Never has there been more at stake — it truly is the dawning of a new day.
The Buzz: Like “Eastwick,” there’s a certain instinct to ask, “Why do we need to revisit a 20-year-old property?” In the case of “V,” though, most of those who remember the show fondly will probably nod their heads and consider that, yes, special effects technology has evolved to a point where a concept like this one deserves to reap the benefits. And although the purists will no doubt grimace and claim that it won’t be the same without original creator Kenneth Johnson working behind the scenes, they need look no farther than “Battlestar Galactica” to have a good reason to consider the possibilities for a new “V.”
Pilot Highlight: Personally, I dug the showdown between Anna and Chad when he refuses to offer an interview consisting solely of softball questions and she informs him that either it’ll be all queries that paint the Visitors in a positive light or the interview will be canceled, but the episode’s tie-ins to terrorism were damned intriguing.
Bottom Line: There’ll clearly be a “we’ve seen this” reaction from the generation who grew up with “Independence Day,” but it’s already clear that this is not your parents’ “V.” It may not prove to have any more legs than ABC’s last stab at alien infiltration (“Invasion”), but it’s going to come down to whether or not the viewers who come in for the curiosity factor, thinking, “Hey, I liked the old show, I wonder how the new one will be,” are going to given enough to sell them right off the bat.
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Posted in: Fall TV Preview, News, Pilots, Reviews, TV, TV Action, TV Comedies, TV Dramas, TV Sci-Fi
Tags: 2009 Fall TV Preview, Anthony Carrigan, Ariel Winter, Ashley Benson, Atticus Shaffer, Bill Lawrence, Bob Stephenson, Brannon Braga, Brían O'Byrne, Brian Van Holt, Busy Philipps, Charlie McDermott, Chris Dingess, Chris Kattan, Christa Miller, Christian Slater, Christine Woods, Christopher Lloyd, Cougar Town, Courteney Cox, Courtney B. Vance, Dan Byrd, Danny Cannon, David Arquette, David Koechner, David S. Goyer, David S. Rosenthal, DeAnn Heline, Dominic Monaghan, Ed O'Neill, Eden Sher, Eileen Heisler, Elizabeth Mitchell, Eric Stonestreet, Hank, Heather Stephens, Ian Gomez, Jace Hall, Jack Davenport, Jaime Ray Newman, Jason Winer, Jeffrey Bell, Jerry Bruckheimer, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Jessika Borsiczky Goyer, Joel Gretsch, Johann Urb, John Cho, Jon Bernthal, Jonathan Littman, Jordan Hinson, Joseph Fiennes, Josh Hopkins, Julie Bowen, Kelsey Grammer, Kevin Biegel, Laura Vandervoort, Lindsay Price, Logan Huffman, Lourdes Benedicto, Lukas Reiter, Maggie Friedman, Marc David Alpert, Marc Guggenheim, Mark Friedman, Melinda McGraw, Michael Katleman, Michelle Borth, Mike Clements, Modern Family, Morena Baccarin, Morris Chestnut, Nancy Won, Nathan Gamble, Neil Flynn, Nolan Gould, Patricia Heaton, Paul Gross, Peyton List, Rebecca Romijn, Rico Rodriguez, Rochelle Aytes, Sara Rue, Sarah Hyland, Scott Peters, Scott Wolf, Sofia Vergara, Sonya Walger, Steve Pearlman, Steven Levitan, The Forgotten, The Middle, Tom Werner, Tucker Cawley, Ty Burrell, V, Veronica Cartwright, Zachary Knighton