Year: 2006 (Page 44 of 228)

Jericho, Episode 4: Dark Is The Night For All

WARNING: If you missed this episode, head over to CBS’s Innertube and watch it now. Otherwise, we’re getting ready to spoil it all to hell for you.

So we’re four days after the bombs have dropped and one day after the fallout has cleared; people are finally starting to run out of gas, and the attempts to gather more are the major goings-on in the background of this episode.

Eric and his wife continue to have their problems; he pisses her off by having a beer at the bar rather than coming to help her at the clinic, then when he runs around town to get gas to power the clinic’s generators but is beaten to the punch by brother Jake (who, I swear, I hear someone call Jimmy this episode), she basically says, “Yeah, whatever.” So he promptly turns around and – figuratively speaking – spits in the face of her profession as a saver of lives by allowing the out-of-towner with radiation poisoning to have a drug administered that leads to his death. Hopefully, these two will just cut the ties that bind sooner than later and be done with it. Oh, and about the aforementioned out-of-towner, it was a little odd that Gail (Jake and Eric’s mom) seemed to latch onto the task of caring for him so adamantly; I’m wondering if there’s some reason for that.

The ongoing saga of Robert Hawkins and his family is unfolding too slowly for my liking; he’s become progressively more unsympathetic with each episode. In fact, he’s barely the same guy we met in the first episode. Since arriving in town, he’s quickly gone from Mr. Gung Ho to Mr. I-Don’t-Think-So. Obviously, he knows more than he’s willing to reveal – as further evidenced by the fact that he turned out to know the guy with radiation poisoning – but as a character, I wish they’d write him more consistently.

There’s a throwaway line in the episode that I really liked, where Jake and Stanley are trying to figure out who’s going to put the gas in the steel tank, and one of them says, “Remember those pacts we made to live to be a hundred?” It’s about time they once again touched on the fact that these guys have been friends for years upon years. (It was indicated when Jake first returned to Jericho.) I also wish they’d focus more the pairing of Jake and Heather, as we saw a bit of tonight; the flirtation between Skeet Ulrich and Sprague Grayden is nice and realistic.

Additional observations:

* Mark my words, Mayor Green’s cough is a death rattle.
* That paranoid deputy who’s suggesting that the tanks spotted last episode might be Chinese or Korean? He’s gonna end up killing somebody.
* The guy at the gas station being concerned about the fact that his bosses might show up and get mad that he’s given away the fuel was just silly.
* And as far as the complete stupidity of the rich teenagers having a big-ass party…well, I’ve made my annoyance of this subplot pretty clear. To paraphrase “Say Anything,” bitches stay with bitches, and, hey, what do you know? The bomb went off, and their mutant genes DID still form the same cliques!

I was legitimately surprised when Jake led the townsfolk to where the 20 sick people were, only to find them all dead. That was dark. But the way-too-motivational speech by Mayor Green took away any edge it had. Talk about getting CBS’ed.

Guess that injured hand’s still good for something, anyway…


“I am not afraid of McDreamy, and I will beat his ass.”

“Grey’s Anatomy” star Isaiah Washington, apparently fuming with jealousy over the cover photos and other publicity lavished upon fellow cast member Patrick “Dr. McDreamy” Dempsey, reportedly lashed out at his perfectly coiffed co-star in a recent on-set skirmish. According to a source on the scene, tensions boiled over while the cast was waiting out an unspecified delay in shooting:

“What are we waiting on?” said Isaiah.
“Not me,” said Patrick. “I’m always ready.”
“At that point,” said the source, “Isaiah said something mean to T.R. Knight” (who plays mild-mannered Dr. George O’Malley).
“That’s when Patrick told Isaiah, ‘Pick on somebody your own size.’
“Well, that did it. Isaiah became enraged and grabbed Patrick by the throat and shoved him back a few feet.

While we are thrilled for Dr. Burke that the nerve damage in his right hand appears to have healed enough to form a perfectly good choke-hold, we encourage him to seek anger management counseling before any future outbursts threaten to blacken the “pretty blue eyes” of our nation’s favorite neurosurgeon.

Three fantastic clips from “Mazes and Monsters”

“Mazes and Monsters” is a movie from 1982 starring Tom Hanks. According to the Internet Movie Database, the synopsis is as follows:

Bound together by a desire to play “Mazes and Monsters,” Robbie (Tom Hanks) and his four college classmates decide to move the board game into the local legendary cavern. Robbie starts having visions for real, and the line between reality and fantasy fuse into a harrowing adventure.

What follows now are three great clips from the flick. Oh, Tom. I wish you still made movies like this.

I heart Tina Fey.

Seriously, I really do. She’s totally the kind of woman who I’d make a fool of myself over if I were still single…but I’m not, so I won’t. And I was very proud of myself for keeping my cool when I got to talk to both Fey and her “30 Rock” co-star, Jane Krakowski, about their new show. Clearly, I was more focused on Tina than Jane, but, honestly, that’s more because – as I explain to Jane – I hadn’t yet seen the new version of the pilot when I was talking to the two of them. (Krakowski was added after the fact, as you’ll read below.) In closing, let me just say that it’s a good thing it was a phone call rather than an in-person conversation; it allowed me to get away with victoriously pumping my fist in the air whenever I succeeded in making Tina Fey laugh.

Bullz-Eye: Tina, do you happen to recall the obscenities that you uttered when you first heard about “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip”?

Tina Fey: (Laughs) I swear so much all the time, anyway, that it probably wouldn’t even have interrupted my constant flow of swearing. That was probably happening over just the quality of my lunch.

BE: Did you find yourself a little disconcerted knowing that there was going to be a similar-premised show on the air at the same time?

TF: Well, it’s funny, because I had friends coming up to me, saying, like, “Oh, I’m so sorry that you’re not going to get to do your show!” And I said, “Well, y’know, I haven’t really heard anything…” And, really, within the same day, (NBC President) Kevin Reilly called me at home to assure me that we were still…because we were in pre-production for the pilot, and he assured me that we were still going to shoot the pilot and that he believed in both shows, and so I took him at his word. And so far, so good.

BE: And I’m one of those who has not seen the revised pilot yet, but I’m led to understand that, Jane, you’re taking over the role that more or less belonged to Rachel (Dratch) in the original pilot…?

Jane Krakowski: Um, well, I’m playing the star of “The Girlie Show,” which is the fictional show within the show. The role has been quite rewritten, I would say, and made a little bit different, but I love the show so much, and I was so thrilled to be asked to join into the cast.

TF: And what sort of what happened was, once we realized after doing the pilot that we were never going to see sketches, then we wanted to take Rachel, who’s a sketch player, and use her differently. She’s still in the show and she’s going to play a series of characters; if you do get a chance to see the revised pilot, you’ll see she plays a cat wrangler in that pilot, and then she’ll come back another week as a different character, and a week or two after that, she’ll come back as a different character.

BE: How much of Tracy Morgan’s character is inspired by Dave Chappelle?

TF: Well… (laughs) …I will say that I don’t know Dave – I’ve barely ever met him – but I do know Tracy, and, so, I would say that it’s primarily Tracy if Tracy were nuts, more than anybody else. But I think anything any celebrity does, let alone an African-American celebrity, is gonna be fair game for Tracy to do. Maybe Tracy will leave a bag with a million dollars in jewelry in the airport, I don’t know!

BE: Will “The Girly Show” have guest hosts or celebrity guests?

TF: I don’t think it will. I don’t think it’s that kind of show…unless all of us change our mind and it does. But I don’t think that’s really on the horizon right now. I’ve spent nine years writing for celebrity guest hosts, and I’m very excited to write for just my cast.

BE: Tina, what “Saturday Night Live” joke or sketch are you the most proud of?

TF: Oh, that’s a good question! Most proud of… (Pauses) I wrote a sketch once called “Census.” It was about a census taker, and it was just Christopher Walken and Tim Meadows, just the two of them, and that was maybe my favorite sketch that I ever wrote. Unfortunately, it was on the same show as “we need more cowbell,” so it has long since been forgotten! But that was maybe the best show that we had in the whole nine years that I was here, that show with Christopher Walken.

BE: Was there ever a sketch that didn’t make it on the air that you were really thought should’ve?

TF: Usually, the ones that don’t make it, it’s for very good cause! They’re usually pretty stinky!

BE: And a throwaway closer: has anyone ever approached you that was writing an unofficial biography of Lindsay Lohan, looking for dirt from the set of “Mean Girls”?

TF: (Laughs) No…but I am open to offers if they’re extremely lucrative.

“Don’t try this shit at home.”

(Note: This is an early review of next week’s episode. If you have HBO On Demand, watch it now. Otherwise, wait until Sunday to avoid spoilers.)

Let’s get right to the good stuff, shall we? After a rigorous election trail that was nearly crushed by incumbent candidate Royce’s last-minute smut campaign, Tommy Carcetti pulled out the upset he needed to become Baltimore’s newest mayor. With this now over, however, it’ll be interesting to see if the newly elected family man really will make the necessary changes to turn the city around. And on that same note, whether Royce’s forfeit will effect some of the characters.

What will become of Herc’s fast track to Major? He’s going to need all the help he can get after his first-rate botch-up with Marlo this week. Confident that Baltimore’s number one gangster had finally slipped up, Herc planned a big bust that would land Marlo with a boatload of cocaine (or “the skinny lady,” as was recorded on the surveillance camera). Instead, Herc literally found him with a skinny lady. D’oh!

And what of Burrell’s temporary posting as Commissioner? I can’t help but think that Carcetti will want to remain loyal to Burrell, but after Rawls’ speech from last week’s episode, it looks like he might just change his mind. Plus, we already know that Rawls does frequent the gay bars (it was only a quick reveal at the end of season three, but I remember it vividly), and what better way to return to that subplot than naming him as the new Commissioner?

The second major development this week was the arrest of Omar, and though it seemed like the shotgun-toting stick-up man had finally met his demise, it was encouraging to discover that the two men sent to his holding cell weren’t there to kill him, but rather protect him. Of course, the question still remains: how will Omar prove his innocence? The answer is actually quite easy: McNulty. The recently reformed beat cop hasn’t had much to do this season, but we all knew that his eventual return was imminent. He knows that Omar has never (and probably will never) kill a citizen in cold blood, and he’ll most likely be the one that helps set him free. As a result, Omar will no doubt go searching for revenge, so prepare to say goodbye to Marlo, Chris and Snoop, because they’re about to get a couple shotgun shells unloaded in their asses.

It also looks like I was wrong on a couple of my predictions last week. Randy (not DuQuan) is going to be the kid who gives up the Marlo murders, but at what cost? Also, Prez did take the information to “someone he trusts,” but it wasn’t Lestor. Nu-uh. How about Major Daniels? Yeah, he’s still on the show too.

Actually, I was perusing some web forums after watching the episode, and I came across a poster claiming to have seen the entire season. Of course, he just had to disclose some seriously major spoilers, and I just had to read everything. Sucks for me (I know), but I will say this: if this dude’s only half-right, we’re all in for one helluva season.

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