Archive: May 2010 (1-10 of 49)

May 31 2010 11:34 PM ET

'Hoarders' new update edition: Failures pile up. The show helps almost no one.

The Monday Hoarders marathon culminated in a new, first-season update episode. It followed up on the progress of five of the show’s grottiest hoarders. The results were not heartening: Four out of five were still jamming their houses with READ FULL STORY »

May 31 2010 10:46 AM ET

Is 'The Boondocks' the best cartoon on TV right now?

Last night, The Boondocks offered an episode entitled “Stinkmeaner 3: The Hateocracy,” which offered the show’s usual family-sized helping of socio-political criticism and humor. It also took full advantage of the series’ anime cartoon style by offering some very adroit martial-arts fight scenes… involving little Huey and some very old people.

Col. Stinkmeaner, who died in an earlier episode, sought to avenge his death from the grave by having his “crew” of senior citizens attack the family he deemed responsible for his demise: our heroes, the Freemans. What followed was not merely a lot of wild jokes and action sequences, but a complex take on black-on-black violence from creator-writer Aaron McGruder.

Much of the episode’s debate about the roles blacks are compelled to play in society used the n-word in a way I won’t repeat here, but that doesn’t diminish McGruder’s arguments about racial self-image, plus a very clear reminder that not all black people are fans of President Obama.

I come away from most episodes of The Boondocks (and I say most — I thought last week’s “The Story of Johnny Rebel” was clunker) thinking two things: How did McGruder get away with this? Also: Boy, am I glad he got away with that.

How do you think The Boondocks compares with other animated shows you watch? Did you watch last night’s episode?

Follow: @kentucker

May 29 2010 12:03 PM ET

Which TV cancellation hurts the most? My choice: 'Better Off Ted'

As we head into summer, it’s time for barbecuing, swimming, and mourning the loss of TV shows that have been canceled. Yes, for you it may be Ghost Whisperer; for me, it’s Better Off Ted:

The fact that network television can cancel Ted and renew Rules of Engagement seems cruel, but then, if there’s one thing among many that Ted taught us it’s that life is cruel… well, that and it’s probably not a great idea to make up a language:

Here’s a little bit of holiday-weekend info that might cheer up you Ted fans: If the NBA finals don’t go to a seventh game, ABC is likely to air the remaining two unaired episodes of Better Off Ted on June 17, 8-9 p.m.

Which shows’ cancellations are you bummed about?

Follow: @kentucker

May 29 2010 08:30 AM ET

'Friday Night Lights' recap: Hunting, bars, and death

Friday Night Lights had some heavy moments last night, but everything was trumped by the sight of Tim Riggins in that hunting cap he wore with intentional ironic goofiness while on a hunting trip with Matt Saracen. (The number written on Tim’s deerstalker cap, “33,” was his football jersey number.) This was superb.

The hour started out exceptionally well. I liked the way READ FULL STORY »

May 28 2010 11:30 AM ET

The Mall of America's 'Mall Cops' and 'Police Women of Memphis': Hard work. Good TV.

Mall Cops, a TLC reality that premiered last night, covers the 2.5 miles of stores inside Minnesota’s Mall of America. Being a mall cop is no Paul Blart breeze: In the two back-to-back episodes, one mall cop lost a toenail breaking up a brawl; another one had to chase down the “ringleader” of what the cops had dubbed “the handbag mafia,” a shop-lifting crew.

Most intriguing was a man hustled out of the mall for having too weird READ FULL STORY »

May 27 2010 08:46 AM ET

'Criminal Minds' season finale and Simon Cowell's exit: The night of the living dead

Criminal Minds finished out its season last night with a scenario that was creepy even by Criminal Minds standards, featuring guest star Tim Curry as a filthy, smelly killer bent on dragging down every life into which he came in contact.

Similarly, American Idol finished out its season with an equally grisly spectacle: the departure of Simon Cowell, with Idol bent on dragging down his life on the show by drowning his memory with mawkishness.

Tim Curry and Simon Cowell — two dead men walking, still able to READ FULL STORY »

May 26 2010 08:15 AM ET

'The Good Wife' season finale recap: 'Running'

It was couples-night on the season finale of The Good Wife: Not just Alicia and Peter and Alicia and Will, but also Will and law-student Giada, Diane and Gary Cole’s McVeigh, Kalinda and FBI agent Lana, and even Eli Gold and READ FULL STORY »

May 26 2010 07:31 AM ET

'Parenthood' season finale review: 'Lost and Found'

Few shows this season premiered as more of an underdog than Parenthood. An ensemble family drama arriving just after shows in that genre had peaked (I’m [not] looking at you, Brothers & Sisters), the series had to do a crucial bit of re-casting, with Lauren Graham replacing Maura Tierney, who had to leave for health reasons.* And while we know families can be diverse, would it be possible to believe in a series in which Craig T. Nelson is the father of Dax Shepard?

As it turned out, Parenthood steadily developed into one of the most engrossing, adventurous family dramas in years. Credit creator Jason Katims, who’s worked on good stuff ranging from My So-Called Life to Friday Night Lights, with knowing how to juggle multiple story lines while keeping the big cast evolving emotionally.

Last night’s finale was a good example of everything Parenthood does right. Adam and Kristina (Peter Krause and Monica Potter) had their hands full and their eyes bugging out as their “good girl” daughter, Haddie (Sarah Ramos), dyed her hair black and smeared on black lipstick in an adolescent reaction to her “bad girl” cousin, Amber (Mae Whitman) making time with Haddie’s ex-boyfriend. The ever-less-unlikely duo of dad Zeek (Nelson) and Crosby (Shepard) got drunk together and commiserated over their women-problems.

Julia (Erika Christensen) and Joel (Sam Jaeger) tried to help Zeek out of the financial hole he’s in with his bad real-estate investment. Julia did what Julia usually does — tried and failed to avoid being judgmental about everyone around her. (Christensen has the trickiest role in Parenthood, in many ways, and nearly always pulls it off in a manner that only leaves you wanting to throw a pie in her face every other week, which I assume it how Katims wants you to think about Julia.)

The family secret that has set Zeek’s wife, Camille (Bonnie Bedelia), finally engaged in a juicy subplot), off on a middle-aged-angry art career — i.e., Zeek had an affair years ago — is now common knowledge among all the adult siblings. Sarah (Graham) had a lovely awkward moment when she gave her mother what must have sounded like Sarah as sage advice — “You don’t need an invitation to your own life” — only to hear it curdle into unintentional smugness even as it left her mouth. (Lauren Graham is great at playing abashed compulsiveness.)

If the drama that gave the hour action was the search for runaway Amber, Parenthood proved that it doesn’t need a lot of action to be excellent. The dialogue, the unexpected mixtures of one sibling with another (I found the tension between Sarah and Kristina especially choice) combine to give the show a richness that’s going to make it one of the show’s I most look forward to seeing again in the fall.

So what did you think of Crosby’s impulsive decision to move to New York to follow Jasmine and Jabar? How about the brief return of Jason Ritter to offer soft-spoken advice and pull at Sarah’s heartstrings one more time? Can we agree that if there’s another marriage in trouble next season, it’ll probably be that of Adam (the guy tries so hard to be laid-back, he gets tense) and Kristina (she’s not just tense, she’s wound-tight to the breaking-point)? And for any baby-boomer women out there: Could you possibly be won over by a man serenading you with a Herman’s Hermits song played on a ukulele?

And what do you think, in general, of Parenthood?

*(The encouraging news there is that Tierney is reportedly in good health, has appeared in a play in New York, and will return in the upcoming season of Rescue Me in her recurring guest role.)

Follow: @kentucker

May 25 2010 10:00 AM ET

The final '24' review: The show is over. 'Shut it down.'

Stop and think about it: The last chunk of 24 ended between the hours of 2 and 4 p.m. That’s the middle of the afternoon. Such a sleepy, winding-down time, for most of us. A time for an afternoon cup of coffee or soda to get through the rest of the work day. But not for Jack Bauer.

The last half of this final season set Kiefer Sutherland’s Jack Bauer loose as what he was trained to be and always tried to transcend: a remorseless killer. And it couldn’t come too soon, as far as I was concerned. I’d gotten used to only half-listening to any of the high-flown prattle about either the peace treaty (“the most important diplomatic action in generations!”) or the death of Hassan (he was handsome, he was a rake, he died — get over it). This eighth season of 24 was uneven — part dud, part exciting action-adventure. By this measure, one of the clear high points of last night was when READ FULL STORY »

May 25 2010 08:59 AM ET

The last 'Law & Order' review: How can we miss you if you never go away?

The central plot of last night’s final new episode of Law & Order mattered less than all the stuff going on around it. It was the unexpectedly abrupt conclusion of the series after NBC unveiled its fall schedule last week, and L&O was nowhere to be seen. It gave us some closure to the season-long subplot about the cancer READ FULL STORY »

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