Friday, August 12, 2011

Grey's Anatomy - Song Beneath the Song, 7.08

In Defense of What Is Still the Highest-Rated Drama on Network TV, Thank You Very Much:

This should be one of the dumbest, corniest episodes of anything ever: surgeons Glee-ing it up to The Fray while performing surgery as the ghost/astral projection of the woman they're operating on watches from above. Those are some shark jumping shenanigans. But Grey's has always taken that route. It's never shied away from ferry boat near-drownings and bus crashes full of lovesick teenagers; Seattle Grace's high casualty rate is matched only by its high drama quotient.

My first thought about Song Beneath the Song was that it was ridiculous. But then, duh. Grey's heightens everything, that's why it's as popular as it is. It's exaggerated and emotional and that's how it gets to you.

My second thought, as Sara began to sing her second song, was that Grey's has truly earned this. Seven and a half seasons in, it may not be novel as it was, but it's still well-written and occasionally as evocative as its earlier seasons. It has some of the best actors on network television. Sandra and Kevin? They're some legit HBO material.

And there was Ellen's performance in the elevator this episode. Season 7's baby storyline kept her sidelined with Derek, who didn't seem to have much to do after he stepped down from Chief. But they're still the heart of the show. I don't want to do too many "remember when"s, but remember when she was dark and twisty and she drowned and then built a house in candles? That was excellent acting. That was fantastic television.

So this musical episode, then. Doing songs that are fun and also advance the story is tough. Buffy's the only show that's pulled that off successfully. Grey's didn't quite, but I think this episode was more of a mixtape than a vehicle for plot: Grey's has always been known for its use of licensed indie music. This episode was a tribute to that.

Hearing the cast in chorus singing The Fray's How to Save a Life was silly, but I was moved! That was the song. Grey's pretty much singlehandedly catapulted that record to immense popularity.

That was also true for Brandi Carlisle's The Story, one of my favorite songs to come out of Grey's. And Sara sang the hell out of it, dear god. She is so fantastic. She's so clearly a Broadway star. Out of all of Grey's leads, she's the one that really draws you in: her performances are unfailingly powerful and moving. Seeing her belt it out, crying, moving through the hospital halls is simultaneously ridiculous and ridiculously terrific.

Grey's earned its right to indulge both Shonda and its loyal audience. This episode wasn't perfect, but it was a great "remember when" that I thoroughly enjoyed.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

TV To-Watch Aug-Dec 2011

It's 2:45am on a school Monday and I'm updating my dead TV blog. Such is life.

WHAT HAPPENED IN JULY:

Caught up on Chuck, Fringe, Glee, Luther, The Office, Raising Hope, Running Wilde, and Skins. That just leaves Grey's (7 eps to go), Modern Family (8 eps to go), and V, which I'm probably moving to the back-burner because I don't need to "catch up" on it in time for fall premieres.

Life on Mars UK was over quick. Adored it, as I thought I would. That scene in the finale -- you know the one -- was impeccable: Simm, cinematography, Bowie, everything.

Terrific Unplanned July TV: Big Train, The Thick of It series 3 re-watch
Disappointing Unplanned July TV: Grandma's House

WHAT'S HAPPENING IN AUGUST:

So the plan for August is, while still clinging to comfort food television, Grey's and MF, to begin my TV 101 viewing. If I had a time machine I'd go back and tell my 14-year old self to WATCH MORE TELLY so I won't end up a 20-year old self-proclaimed TV enthusiast who hasn't seen Alias or Cracker. I'm a disaster.

Realistically, I won't get through full seasons of anything if I start too many at once. So I've decided on the first season of The Wire, which I hear is the toughest anyway. How Do You Want Me? and Father Ted are benchwarmers if I finish Grey's and MF soon, which is likely.

Of course, this is all going to shit once fall shows start premiering next month. Perfect.

Next Up: Ashes to Ashes, Daria, Lights Out (should really take a weekend and just bang this out...), The Street, State of Play
Next Next Up: Curb Your Enthusiasm, The Shield, Deadwood, Six Feet Under

TV Currently On-Air in August: Shooting Stars (Aug 8), Torchwood, The Hour, Breaking Bad, Childrens Hospital, Louie

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

TV To-Watch July-Dec 2011

Organized my TV watching for the next six months today... eep.

Catching up on Chuck, Fringe, Glee, Grey's Anatomy, Luther, Modern Family, The Office, Raising Hope, Running Wilde, Skins series 5, and V. Yes, I am just watching The Office and Glee so I can complain about them. Continuing with Chuck because it's only got one season left and I've come this far... the next season of Grey's will probably be my last: when Meredith's out, I'm out. Running Wilde and V have been canceled, so it's matter of just wrapping those up. I hate that I'm such a completionist. Is that a thing?

Starting: Life on Mars UK, Ashes to Ashes, The Wire, Daria, Lights Out, Curb Your Enthusiasm, The Shield, Six Feet Under, and Deadwood.

It's gonna be tough. My bread and butter recently has been 20-30 minute British comedies, 6 eps a series, etc. Sketch shows and surrealism. I'm not big into cop shows (WHY AM I STARTING FOUR OF THEM THEN) but I admit they're important to the TV landscape and I'm way lacking in the area.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Upfronts 2011: The CW

Green TV: Watch.
Yellow TV: Try pilot and see.
Red TV: Nooope.


Ringer -- SMG, always.

Hart of Dixie -- Scott Porter is charming and Southern!! That's enough for me.
H8R -- Will probably watch YouTube clips after the fact.


The Secret Circle -- I don't do CW fantasy.
Remodeled
The Frame

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Upfronts 2011: CBS

Green TV: Watch.
Yellow TV: Try pilot and see.
Red TV: Nooope.

I'll preface this by saying I'm not a big fan of CBS shows at all. I hear The Good Wife is good, though. But as of now I don't watch anything on this network.

Person of Interest -- J.J.'s new joint. Stylish and intriguing.


Unforgettable -- Cop drama with a twist, a la anything on the USA network. Looks like it'll be very character-driven, which I do like. If the cast is good and the writing carries them through believable arcs (rather than a bland open and shut COTW) then I'm in.
A Gifted Man -- They had me at "supernatural love story." An American Randall and Hopkirk-y premise. I'm totally into this sort of show (and because I love the genre, I could list the problems this show is inevitably going to run into...), but how are they going to draw this one out for a season, let alone a full series?


2 Broke Girls -- Above average writing and acting can transcend an overdone, tired premise and/or title (See: Cougar Town). From the looks of the trailer, this unfortunately doesn't look like it will be the case for Kat Dennings' new venture.
How to Be a Gentleman -- David Hornsby (It's Always Sunny's Rickety Cricket), Mary Lynn Rajskub, and Rhys Darby are reasons to watch. Script, from the preview, is questionable.

Upfronts 2011: FOX

Green TV: Watch.
Yellow TV: Try pilot and see.
Red TV: Nooope.


I like FOX. They gave us some good stuff in the past. And then they canceled it.

Terra Nova -- Hmm. I had so many FEELINGS watching this trailer. First: I gotta respect FOX for giving us the quality genre shows no one else will (Dollhouse, Fringe... oh. Maybe that's it.). Second: filling the gap LOST left. Will it live up? Green lighting a show like this is clearly a risk because Nielsen has showed dozens of times over that your average American likes his cop/lawyer/doctor shows but is undecided on colonizing new planets in the Future. If you're the least bit science fiction-y and not created by J.J. or Joss, you're on cable. And this one's got dinosaurs.
Alcatraz -- J.J. again. If Giacchino scores, I am so in. (Ah. Even if he doesn't!)


The Finder -- I don't watch or like Bones but I'm willing to try any crime shows TV offers up next season. Turning over a new leaf. Trying things I know I won't like just to prove I don't like them. Maybe I'll be surprised.
Allen Gregory -- I don't regularly watch any of the FOX animated lineup, but they're good every now and then.
The X Factor


Napoleon Dynamite
I Hate My Teenage Daughter -- Unfunny trailer with Neon Trees in the background. The last American show with a laugh track that I liked was probably Friends.
New Girl -- Sorry, Zooey! You're such a dear, bringing your quirky alternative self to network TV, but I'm 99% sure I'll find it just really really annoying.

Upfronts 2011: ABC

Green TV: Watch.
Yellow TV: Try pilot and see.
Red TV: Nooope.

Making Fall TV more accessible for you since May 2011. AKA right now.

In which ABC takes on thirteen new shows and all I do is watch one minute clips from each of them and be judge-y, because to my knowledge there are no official trailers yet:

Subergatory -- What won me over was the trailer. If it's written well and given time, everything else can fall into place and overcome a dumb premise.
Apartment 23 -- Yes, yes, yes. Krysten Ritter and James van der Beek? Sharp dialogue delivery and New York setting? Meta Dawson jokes in the preview clip sealed the deal.



Pan Am -- Is it more than an ABC-ized piggyback on Mad Men success?
Charlie's Angels -- Hands up: who thought, "What we really need right now is a Charlie's Angeles revamp." Anyone at all?
Once Upon A Time -- Among the rest of the new shows, this fantastical show sticks out in a strange way. When's the last time ABC had a legit fantasy genre show? So weird.
Man Up -- Just seems to me like a potential dark horse. If it's funny, it's funny, and the clip was promising.
The River -- V and FlashForward were flops, but maybe this won't be? Maybe the comparison isn't justified. I hope it's not.
Scandal -- It's funny: from the first two lines of dialogue, I found myself thinking, "Wow, this sounds so Shonda Rhimes" without any prior knowledge. And it is.



Last Man Standing
Revenge
Work It -- No. This isn't groundbreaking social commentary about gender roles (let me know ASAP if it turns out to be, but judging by that trailer...); it's probably dumb drag jokes. Probably. If I wanted to see men dress up as women in a quality comedy program, you know where I'd be.




Clips MIA: Missing, Good Christian Belles