Category: TV (Page 339 of 595)

The Next Food Network Star: Competition Spicing Up

First of all, thanks to Will Harris for filling in last week while I was on vacation, and I am not surprised that you’re now hooked on this show. I still think it’s one of the best reality shows on television.

On to business. Last night the remaining eight contestants had two challenges. The first was a point of view challenge, where they had to show what they could do with a potato, and then present their dish in one minute of camera time. For the second challenge, they had to come up with a packaged product and then present that product to food buyers and to special guest judge Martha Stewart.

To streamline my summary, I’m going to go through each contestant individually Continue reading »

Battlestar Galactica: “Revelations”

For months, we’ve been pondering on this blog about what state Earth would be in when the fleet finally found it. But my own personal light bulb didn’t go on until about halfway through this episode – which was called “Revelations” – when I thought about the apocalyptic nature of that part of the Bible, and I said to myself, Earth is probably going to be a nuclear wasteland.

You could just feel the weight of this looming unknown as the fleet made its final jump to Earth and its descent to the planet. (On a side note, it was a big surprise that they jumped to Earth at the end of this set of episodes. I thought for sure that the remaining 10 episodes would be dedicated to the final journey to Earth, as the fleet tried to hold together an alliance with the Cylons.) The truce with the Cylons happened about two-thirds the way through the episode, so with that much time remaining, it was clear that the creators had a big revelation in store for us. Given all the positive vibes when the fleet found Earth, there was no way that the final revelation would be a good one. This show is too dark for that.

“It has all happened before and it will happen again.”

So are we to believe that this cycle continues over and over? The human race started elsewhere (or Earth, I guess), developed enough technology to colonize other planets (or Earth, I guess), then created Cylons, which eventually turned on the humans and chased them back to Earth, which has already been destroyed by the humans living there? Now the human fleet will (possibly) colonize Earth again, build everything back up, and the cycle will continue, over and over? Is this what the hybrid meant when it told Cara that she would lead the humans to their doom? To make things even more interesting, there’s a photo on the show’s homepage that is clearly meant to resemble Leonardo Da Vinci’s painting, The Last Supper.

All right, as for the rest of the episode… I thought it was great. The final four revealed themselves pretty quickly, which was a little surprising, but it was interesting to see each relationship change. Adama had a breakdown trying to deal with the truth about Tigh and there was a huge shift in power between Roslin and Torry. It was especially compelling to watch Tigh struggle with his conscience and ultimately make the decision to reveal his true identity. Then Baltar had to step in on the basestar and negotiate with D’Anna on the behalf of what was left of humanity.

So where do we go from here? We have a planet that looks pretty fracking unlivable and we still don’t know the identity of the final Cylon. Will the fleet still colonize Earth? Will we find out what happened there? Will the final Cylon take the fleet to some other Promised Land?

This show is slated for another 10 episodes and I have no idea where it’s headed.

A former costumed crimefighter guest-starring on “Heroes”? Who could it be?

Believe it or not, it’s just William Katt, late of “The Greatest American Hero.”

According to an interview with Newsarama.com, Katt says he plays “a really, really wonderful, seedy, smarmy-mouthed reporter that goes after Ali Larter. It was a lot of fun.”

Katt will also be appearing on the annual TV Land Awards this Sunday, where rumor has it he’ll actually be wearing his old costume and flying over the audience. Time to go set the TiVo, ’cause there’s no way I’m missing that.

The Next Food Network Star: Train in Vain

It’s damned intimidating to step into the shoes of Mike Farley on one of his food-related blog shows, given his long and profound history in writing up the adventures of Gordon Ramsey for Premium Hollywood, but the man has more than earned himself a vacation (as has his wife, for that matter), which is why I’m more than willing to blog both this series and “Hell’s Kitchen” for him in his absence.

First, however, an admission: not only did I miss the premiere episode of this, the fourth season of “The Next Food Network Star,” but I’d also missed every episode of the preceding three seasons. Or, to be more precise, I didn’t even know there was such a show as “The Next Food Network Star.” Fortunately, however, my wife and I are easily suckered into these things if we just sit down and give them a chance, so it was easy to convince her to join me on this viewing experience.

This week’s challenge found Robert Irvine (“Dinner Impossible”) waking the contestants up at 3 AM and sending them on a quest for ingredients at various specialty food shops while testing their culinary knowledge. The guys and gals were divided into three teams of three…

Blue Team: Lisa, Nipa, and Shane
Green Team: Jeffrey, Kelsey, and Kevin
Gray Team: Aaron, Adam, and Jennifer

…and instructed to go on a quest for their ingredients. At each stop – one for bread, one for meat, one for cheese – they would be asked a question, and if they got the question right, they’d be able to pick their ingredient and head off to their next stop. If they got it wrong, however, a member of the team had to earn their ingredient by doing some sort of food prep. So, okay, the delay is is painful, but at least it’s educational, right? Plus, this is a really important challenge because the winner gets to appear in a piece in USA Today’s Weekend Edition.

Continue reading »

Battlestar Galactica: “Hub”

Week in and week out, this show does a tremendous job of inching us closer to the end without giving too much away in any given episode. Occasionally, we’ll get a filler episode that doesn’t really move the big storyline, but this wasn’t one of them. We knew that the plan was retrieve D’Anna and destroy the hub so that she would be compelled to reveal the identities of the final five Cylons, and ultimately reveal the way to Earth. But all D’Anna has is information and she’s not giving it up until she returns to the human fleet, so we have to wait at least another week to find out the identities of all the skinjobs. Of course, last week’s line to Roslin about her being one of the Cylons turned out to be a joke… a joke! Damn you, Ronald D. Moore!

Roslin kept having visions every time the basestar jumped, and I guess the point was for her to come to the realization that she couldn’t let Baltar die, even after he (finally) admitted that he (unknowingly) gave the security codes that allowed the Cylons to destroy Caprica and the other colonies. Roslin really wanted him dead, but after her last vision she apparently saved his life. The priestess said something interesting after Roslin admitted there might be something for her there (presumably, Galactica). The priestess said, “Maybe even closer.” What the hell does that mean?

We saw Roslin reading that book that was eventually found in a destroyed raptor, and I guess that was meant to explain how that book got there. Was that the same raptor that jumped away in the middle of the battle, eventually to be found by Galactica? It was finding that book that sent Adama over the edge last week, so it’s nice that they explained how it happened to be there.

The dynamic between Baltar and Roslin (when they were trying to communicate with the hybrid) was really funny. There’s a weird tension between the two of them; I dare to call it sexual, which was kind of confirmed by Baltar’s compliment of Roslin’s beauty when he was all hopped up on drugs. I also thought his interaction with the Centurion was humorous, especially when the robot tilted his head like a dog who has just heard a strange noise.

Lastly, I have to hand it to the creators once again for the wonderful special effects of the battle scene. It’s amazing to see how far these effects have come over the past thirty or forty years.

Based on the scenes from next week, it looks like we’ll have another big step forward in discovering the identities of the Cylons in the fleet and finding a way to Earth. It is the 10th episode of the season, and I’m pretty sure there will be a break before the final 10 episodes, so I’m betting we’re in for a doozy.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2026 Premium Hollywood

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑