Category: External TV (Page 289 of 419)

Final season of “Battlestar Galactica” begins on Friday

With the writers’ strike throwing the TV schedule into a tailspin, it has been difficult to keep up on when our favorite shows are returning. “Battlestar Galactica” begins its fourth and final season on Friday at 9 PM (ET and PT) on SciFi. If you want to watch last season’s finale again, SciFi is running the two-parter, “Crossroads,” at 1 AM and 2 AM (ET and PT). If you live in the middle of the country, check your listings as the time changes depending on which SciFi feed you receive.

Remember to check back on Saturday for my blog of premiere episode.

TV’s Back! – The Post-Strike Return

Michael Franti once described television as “the drug of the nation, breeding ignorance and feeding radiation.” As such, we’re guessing he isn’t nearly as excited as we are that we’re finally beginning to see the fruits of Hollywood’s writers at last being able to put pen back to paper. CBS clearly got the jump on everyone else with the premiere of their new episodes, but as you can see, the other networks will soon be joining in the fun as well, offering up all the fresh new comedy and drama we’ve been craving for so very long. Okay, maybe it hasn’t been that long – as soon as the strike wrapped up, you probably noticed how some series magically “found” a few episodes they’d unabashedly been sitting on – but it’s damned sure been long enough.

Check out our coverage here, then head back over to tell us what shows you’re most psyched to see return!

1982 World’s Fair TV spot

I lived only 30 miles away from Knoxville, Tennessee when I was a lad, so the fact that the World’s Fair was coming to town was a big friggin’ deal. Lemme just be the first to tell you how lame it actually was. The glorious Sunshphere still stands in K-Town, a decrepit monument to a decrpeit event. Enjoy the commerical!

“Fifteen”

Good God, I remember watching this crapfest on Nickelodeon back when it was new and thinking it was the most overdramatic, poorly acted piece of hack work to come around in a long time. Still, you can enjoy a young Ryan Reynolds as “Billy,” one of the many overly sensitive shmucks on this teen soap opera.

The Departure of “Jezebel James”

After a mere three episodes, Fox has opted to yank “The Return of Jezebel James,” the sitcom created by Amy Sherman-Palladino (“Gilmore Girls”).

Although Sherman-Palladino’s skillful dialogue-writing abilities are well-documented, even stars Parker Posey, Lauren Ambrose (“Six Feet Under”), and Dianne Wiest couldn’t save this thing…mostly because it was saddled with a God-awful laugh track which never gave the rhythm of Sherman-Palladino’s writing an opportunity to breathe nor Posey a chance to really let loose. The chemistry between Posey and Ambrose was more than acceptable, but, honestly, I can’t tell you how Wiest fit into the proceedings because she didn’t appear in either of the episodes on the screener that had been sent out by Fox, and neither of those episodes were funny enough to inspire me to try and seek out the show in its regular timeslot. But don’t ask me when that timeslot was, because I didn’t bother to look for that, either.

Yes, it was just that disappointing…and this is coming from someone who owns every single season of “Gilmore Girls.” If this experience doesn’t sour Sherman-Palladino on television, I’ll still be curious to see what she produces in the future, but what I’m really curious about is what she’ll have to say about why “The Return of Jezebel James” went so horribly wrong.

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