Tag: C.S.I (Page 2 of 2)

Bullz-Eye’s TCA 2009 Winter Press Tour Recap

Wait, didn’t I just go to one of these press tours…?

Actually, that was back in July, when the networks were busy pimping their new fall schedules; this time, they were presenting us with an idea of what we can expect to see on our favorite broadcast and cable channels from now until they premiere their next fall schedule.

Going out to L.A. in January was a new thing for me, though. It was my first winter tour since becoming a member of the Television Critics Association in 2007 – last year’s was canceled due to the writers’ strike – and, if the rumblings throughout the ballrooms at the Universal Hilton were any indication, it may well prove to be my last January tour. I’m hopeful that this presumption turns out to be inaccurate, but given the current economic climate and an increasing tendency for newspapers and publications to only send their TV critics out for one tour per year, there’s every reason to suspect that the networks will join suit and only be willing to pamper those critics once per year.

Sorry, did I say “pamper”? Of course, I meant, “Treat with the utmost respect.”

It feels a bit odd to be doing a wrap-up of my experiences at the tour before I’ve even had a chance to write up all of the panels I attended while I was out there, but, hey, when you get a good spot on the calendar, you make it work however you can. So still keep your eyes open for my ongoing pieces on the various shows you can expect to find on the broadcast networks during the next few months, but in the meantime, here’s a look at some of the best and worst bits from the January ’09 tour as a whole.

Most enjoyable panel by a cable network: “Rescue Me,” FX.

I’ve been a big Denis Leary fan every since No Cure for Cancer, so I knew the guy was inevitably going to go off on a profanity-filled rant before the end of the panel. What I didn’t expect, however, was that Peter Tolan – who co-created the show with Leary – would start the proceedings by telling Leary to watch his mouth, adding, “If you were going to say ‘cunt,’ don’t.”

From there, the two of them seemingly battled each other in an attempt to offer up the most memorable line. Leary complained about his salary. (“I had a crazy idea of getting paid, like, $250,000 an episode. They put limits on that, let me tell you. That’s Kiefer Sutherland money right there.”) Then Tolan claimed that he was at fault for the show’s fourth-season slump, blaming it on a drug problem and that “I was heavy into a kazillion hookers that year.” Then Leary bitched about how Michael J. Fox was going to guest on “Rescue Me” and get the Emmy that Leary himself has yet to earn. (“Five fucking episodes, he comes in. God damn, $700 million from ‘Spin City.’ He never asked me to do the show. He’s going to walk away with the fucking Emmy. That son of a bitch.”) Then Tolan started mocking Hugh Laurie’s American accent by talking about how he could do a British accent. (“Aye, pip, pip, mate, aye! ‘Allo, Mary Poppins!”) And…well, as you can see, there was really no contest: this may well have been the greatest panel ever.

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Grissoms’s Last “CSI” A Rough Day for Wallace Langham

If you’ve seen the commercial promoting William Petersen’s final episode of “C.S.I.” (and if you’ve had a TV tuned in to CBS at any point in the last few weeks, you can’t possibly have missed it), then you know that the character of lab tech David Hodges earns an emotional moment with Gil Grissom, proclaiming, “The bad guys will win more if we don’t have you.”

Having seen Grissom’s farewell in its entirety, I can tell you that the entire scene between Grissom and Hodges is so great that you’ll find yourself wondering who Wallace Langham had to bribe to get such a wonderful moment in such a momentous episode.

“Every day’s a gift here at ‘C.S.I.,’ I’m telling you,” says Langham, with a grin.

In all seriousness, the show’s writers came up with the idea of Hodges’ emotional farewell to Grissom, and they couldn’t wait to tell Langham about it. “The character that they thought would be the most devastated about Grissom leaving would be Hodges, so they let me play that out,” said Langham. “And I tried to be as human as I possibly could in the context of Hodges, because he doesn’t always get those opportunities. He never gets within ten feet of an emotion. That part wasn’t necessarily that hard to play, but it was still weird for me, just because, as Hodges, I don’t really get to play it that often!”

As it happens, however, the shoot turned out to be a rough one for Langham for reasons beyond those of Petersen’s departure.

“It was a really tough day to shoot for all the usual reasons,” said Langham, “but, sadly, my father was passing away…and, actually, after we had finished filming, I got the call that he had died. It wasn’t a surprise, but…you know, I knew that would be the day, oddly enough. Once I got the call where they said, ‘Okay, you’re going to be shooting on the 10th,’ I just had a feeling. I thought, ‘Okay, the irony of life has always served me well,’ and true to form, it was a very heavy day on all levels.”

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