Year: 2006 (Page 153 of 228)

“24,” Hour 18: Respect mah authoritah!

I really need to stop anticipating the actions of the next episode, because my average is looking like Barry Bonds’ stat line. My latest (faulty) prediction was that James “Big Balls” Heller was in on the plot, and that he came to set Logan back on track. Of course, Robocop obtained the recording at the most convenient time, right when Logan was about to announce his resignation in front of VP Leland Palmer, and President Zen wasted no time turning the tables and demanding Heller’s resignation instead.

But there are still two things about Heller that are bothering me. For starters, the way that he ambushed Jack after Jack gave him proof that Logan was behind the day’s events, punching him in the face and preaching about responsibility, seemed a little off to me. Even if Heller’s words made sense, his actions didn’t. They seemed forced, like he was reading a speech, and never mind the fact that he just had not only Jack but his own daughter ordered to be tied up in an empty airplane hangar. WTF? Secondly, we have to remember that the schematic of the natural gas plant was encrypted on DOD software, which still points us to one of the two Hellers.

Okay, one last thing: when Heller was talking to Chicken Little about what Logan had done – with Logan confessing everything – he held his arms folded across his chest, with his coat in his arms, and he refused to shake the President’s hand. Was I the only one that thought he was holding a recorder of his own underneath that coat? And who knows, maybe he was, and he just didn’t want to let on while Logan’s goons were escorting him off of the premises.

And if Heller doesn’t prove to be Logan’s undoing, there are about half a dozen people who could be. Mike Novick, who’s been inexplicably absent the last few hours – shooting a scene for the “Sin City” sequel? – gets a tip from Karen at HTU that Logan’s acting not funny ha-ha but funny different, and after a chat with a military general, he realizes that Logan has just lied to him about the “special forces” going after Bauer. Novick asks Logan about it, gets a Samwise Gamgee-esque “I don’t like your tone” reply, and immediately knows that Something Is Up. Little does he know that he has a support group all around him.

If only they don’t come up missing. Marty presses Old Yeller for info, and Old Yeller tells Marty that he’ll meet her behind the stables (as soon as those words left his lips, I thought, “Uh oh”), and when Marty goes to meet him and he’s not there, she calls his cell…and hears it ring right next to her. Did Old Yeller get hijacked, or was his coyness part of a bigger plan to get Marty out of the way? Until I have irrefutable proof that Old Yeller is rabid, I will assume that he’s still a good dog. But where did he go?

Buchanan was finally brought back into the mix, taking in Wayne Palmer and even Chloe after she snaked Miles’ keycard from him (oh, the irony). Chloe’s confrontation with Harrassment Girl was a joke, since she’s clearly a company player and would have done whatever HTU wanted, evidenced by her wearing a wire to implicate Chloe in the first place. One question, though: why didn’t we see Wayne Palmer at Buchanan’s place? And how on earth did Chloe even get out of the HTU parking lot? They had to have known she was gone within a matter of minutes. They’re making this martial law thing a mockery.

Lastly, there’s the exchange between Robocop and Jack over the recording and Audrey. What a stone cold motorscooter Robocop is for handing over Audrey, but only after severing one of her arteries and giving her minutes to live. Jack used to work for this guy. This guy tazered him and, hello, tried to blow him up just a few hours ago. How on earth did Jack think that any negotiation with Robocop would be on the level? Even Audrey’s going, “Don’t do it, Jack!” Still, they show a shot in the scenes for next week with Audrey holding a gun to Robocop’s head, but we all saw what happened the last time someone tried to kill him. The girl’s bleeding to death. She has to be pretty weak.

So many lives in the balance. There are hints that Marty’s been disposed of. We don’t know what happened to Old Yeller. Audrey is bleeding to death. Big Balls is being forced to resign. They still haven’t dealt with the unconscious Warlock, who may be able to implicate Logan in a way that he hadn’t anticipated. But then again, Logan never anticipates anything, does he? Buffybot and I were laughing out loud when Logan was openly dismissing all of the advice Mike Novick had given him earlier in the day. Well, sure, Cluck Cluck Chuck, if you had ever wanted to do the right thing at any point during the last 18 hours, then he could have helped you. Pity you were too busy laying siege on your own country.

Scratch that last comment… I hate TiVo

Mere hours after commending TiVo for a job well done, I’ve experienced television recording hell; that moment in your life when you realize that you’ve just missed the only showing of your favorite television series due to a technical glitch. In my case, I missed two of my favorite shows: “Prison Break” and “24,” a little slice of heaven also known as Monday Nights on FOX. I still don’t understand why FOX doesn’t rerun these episodes sometime later in the week (and I’m pretty sure they used to years prior), but that’s hardly the issue at hand.

What is disappointing, however, are the countless years that I’ve stuck with, and stuck up for, TiVo despite cheaper options (through cable companies) and numerous glitches such as the one that occurred tonight. Well, I say no more! No longer will I pay 12.95/month for glorified TV recording! No longer will I listen to the wonderful “beep-beep” noise that can only be heard from fast-forwarding through unwanted commercials! No longer will I belong to a DVR cult made up elitist television fanatics whose sole purpose is to get the most out of their viewing experience!

Who else has given up TiVo for a cheaper option? Feel free to post your horror stories below…

Why not just call it “The David Blaine Project”?

The Sun newspaper in London is reporting that a new music reality show is in the works called “Band in a Bubble” where, well, a band is placed inside a bubble for one month while they write and record a new album. So far, The Darkness has been approached as the maiden band for the project, but nothing official has yet to be announced.

Is there a genuine audience for something like this, and if so, how much further can the reality show genre sink before television is destroyed forever?

My TiVo is a pimp

I’m sure it will come as no surprise that even the fine people at TiVo can’t claim 100% satisfaction from their product, and while we’ve all had our share of problems with the little love box, the following story certainly takes the cake:

A San Franciso man reportedly recieved over $2000 in phone bills for a line at his vacation home in Michigan. Having been previously connected to TiVo before the subscription was cancelled, the man was shocked to hear from his phone company that it was his disconnected TiVo service dialing the long distance numbers. Oh, and they weren’t just normal long distance calls, either, but 1-900 sex lines to Singapore.

I find this difficult to believe, since all it takes is a quick yank of the phone cord out of the wall to disconnect your subscription, but TiVo has still agreed to pay the man’s insanely expensive phone bills in full. Now that’s customer service!

Box Office Roundup: Boo

Based on Sunday’s estimates:

1) Scary Movie 4: $41 million (first week)
They were smart to include the scariest thing we saw in the last year: Tom Cruise on Oprah.
2) Ice Age: The Meltdown: $20 million ($147.1 million, third week)
In fairness to Denis Leary, the next installment should be “Ice Age: Diego Gets Peckish.”
3) The Benchwarmers: $10 million ($35.9 million, second week)
We’d take this moment to make fun of the ridiculous wig David Spade wears in this movie, but then we remember: he’s dating Heather Locklear. Damn.
4) The Wild: $9.5 million (first week)
When our guy was assigned to cover this, he said, “Just take my ‘Madagascar’ review and replace the title.”
5) Take the Lead: $6.7 million ($22.5 million, second week)
Never underestimate the power of dance. Or something.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2026 Premium Hollywood

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑