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    Thu, Dec 18, 08 - NCIS, House, Supernatural, Always Sunny, Night Court

    05.30 NCIS
    06.30 House
    07.30 Supernatural
    08.30 It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia
    11.30 Night Court

    NCIS. Season 5, Episode 7. "Requiem" An amazing episode. I had tears in my eyes, from start to finish, as Gibbs meets (and bonds with) the best friend of the daughter he lost when she was a child. Gibbs has never recovered from her murder. He never speaks of it. But regular viewers know that if affects him because we are often treated to quick flashes of what Gibbs is thinking about at different times.

    Full praise to Shane Brennan for creating this amazing new character (I hope we see her again). Maddie is someone for Gibbs to talk to, about his daughter. What a stroke of genius. And what great casting! Cameron Goodman is adorable. Her chemistry with Mark Harmon is amazing. They seem like a father/daughter team from the moment they appear on-screen together.

    Harmon does some great work in this episode. Gibbs never opens up, even in these situations, so Harmon has to find other ways to show us what Gibbs is feeling.

    Gibbs goes off-book at the end of the episode. And he nearly pays for it with his life. Interesting that this would happen at time when he runs away from his existing family (the NCIS Team) in an effort to save/create a new family (with Maddie).

    The episode is filled with truly cool/wonderful moments. I love Gibbs at the best of times, but he is especially awesome when playing the protective father to Maddie.

    The episode's use of photographs is exceptionally clever. An old photo of Kelly and Maddie is used a few times in the episode, as is a brand new snap of Gibbs and Maddie standing side-by-side. In the closing seconds of the episode, one photo is thrown on top of the other, so that it creates the optical illusion of Gibbs standing between the two girls: the daughter he lost and the new 'daughter' he has just found.

    A beautiful idea/image/moment.

    Had I not already had tears in my eyes, at that stage, I would surely have started wailing when I saw that.

    House. Season 5, Episode 10. "Let Them Eat Cake" For the second week in a row, Olivia Wilde totally steals the episode out from her cast mates as Thirteen confronts some bitter memories from her childhood. Last week, Wilde was the best thing in the episode because pretty everything else was rubbish. That is not the case this time out. She's still the best thing about "Let Them Eat Cake" but - across the board - this is a great episode.

    When, in Episode 9, House went up a crazed gunman and behaved completely in character, I was a tad bored. In this story, House is face to face with a beautiful woman offering him the chance of a proper adult relationship. He behaves totally in character (ie. he's a jerk) and it's completely riveting. Watching him screw up something this great before it gets started is completely absorbing.

    Kutner and Taub have a hilarious subplot with a great twist at the end, while Taub gets some great scenes with the case-of-the-week patient. The show is great at this: bringing in patients, whose lives/decisions reflect/mirror the lives of one of the doctors. And it's one of the reasons I love this show.

    But this episode belongs to Thirteen, as she remembers her mother's final days.

    Supernatural. Season 3, Episode 7. "Fresh Blood" Stronger than recent episodes. Gordon Walker is out of prison and out to get Sam... dead. A vampire called Dixon enters the picture and - before long - Gordon has become a creature of the night. He's not lost his sense of self, however, and he determines to end his own life... after he kills Sam. So the stage is set for a show-down between the Winchesters and a super-powered Gordon Walker.

    It's a bloody episode. Lots of graphic deaths in this one. Heads being ripped off, and such. There's some nice character work on the brothers (the Dean-decides-not-to-leave-the-motel scene and the fixing-the-car scene at the very end) but the climax is a cheat. Walker has them totally beaten. In particular there is nothing to stop him from killing Sam. Then he goes and blows it all by sending the two of the flying through a wall and out into the open where Sam can get the upper hand.

    Sloppy writing, with regard to the climax, but this is a better episode than many recent ones.

    It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia. Season 3, Episode 11. Another genius idea as we discover that "Dennis Looks Like a Registered Sex Offender"! Where do they come up with this stuff? Once again, it's a very funny episode with great storylines for all the regulars. Picking a favourite character is very hard, but I really loved Mac in this one. Boundless, blind, enthusiasm as he tries to bond with his ex-con father. All to no avail.

    Night Court. Episode 6. "Death Threat" Another omnipotent being visits the courtroom in this one. First it was Santa, this time it is God himself who pops in and dishes out sage advise to Harry during a crisis. He is receiving death threats. The ending is a bit twee, but this is a good episode. It's quite serious as Harry examines his conscience and very funny as a clumsy bomb disposal expert keeps bumping into things.

    Hightlight? NCIS (the pictures at the end)
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    Wed, Dec 17, 08 - Sarah Connor, Hitchhiker, Swamp Thing

    08.00 The Sarah Connor Chronicles
    09.00 The Hitchhiker
    09.30 Swamp Thing

    The Sarah Connor Chronicles. Season 2, Episode 13. "Earthlings Welcome Here" The weakest episode of the season so far. Sarah is off on her own, obsessed with her vision of the three dots and unsupported by the rest of her team. She winds up in the middle of a group of UFO abductees, befriends one of them and ends up getting shot at some secret facility. It lacks the tension and coherence of most episodes of this great show. In general, I'm not enjoying this Sarah-is-obsessed-and-nobody-believes-her storyline.

    The sub-plot, meanwhile, tells us Riley's backstory. It is much as we suspected. It's not great, but it is much better than all the Sarah stuff.

    The Hitchhiker. Season 3, Episode 6. "Ghostwriter" One of the very best episodes. Willem Dafoe fakes his death to make his books sell better. His wife and his agent are happy to find him dead, since they are lovers, but his return complicates things. So a real murder is planned. However, all is not as it seems and the fast-paced script keeps you guessing as to who is really working with whom.

    Swamp Thing. Episode 2. "Falco" It's an odd world, the world of the Swamp Thing. The bad guy of this one is a former bird who has been turned into a man by the evil Dr. Arcane. He makes an attempt on the evil scientist's life and then... does nothing much for a while. He just kinda wanders aimlessly. A bit like the script, really.

    Jim, possibly the most annoying child ever featured in a TV series, falls out of a boat later on. And the bird/man saves him and learns a valuable lesson: it's not so bad being human.

    Swamp Thing appears, too, and talks to the bird/man a couple of times without really accomplishing anything.

    A very strange series.

    Highlight? The Hitchhiker (twists galore)
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    Tue, Dec 16, 08 - Prison Break, Mission: Impossible, The Closer, NewsRadio

    06.00 Prison Break
    07.00 Mission: Impossible
    08.00 The Closer
    01.15 NewsRadio

    Prison Break. Season 4, Episode 15. "Going Under" The weakest episode of Season Four. While it is always nice to see guest stars like Muse Watson, Titus Welliver and Denise Crosby all of the stuff that takes place inside Michaels' head is boring old guff and the stuff that takes place outside his head is too far-fetched to be believed. Even for Prison Break.

    The twist that Linc is now working for The General, and potentially working with T-Bag, Gretchen and Self from here on in, is just too hard to take. It's a huge leap and I'm not sure I'm able to make it.

    Alex gets the best scenes. And his escape is thrilling. But haven't we seen all of this before?

    In it's first three seasons, PB reminded me of 24. This year it's been more like Mission: Impossible than anything else. And with this episode, it made another switch. Now it resembles Alias. Heroes and Villains working side-by-side and nobody trusting anyone. Not sure if I like this new direction.

    And what the heck is all that 'Bargain' stuff about?

    Mission: Impossible. Episode 79. "The Controllers" Leonard Nimoy joins the show as the fourth season gets started with this exciting two-parter. An evil scientist has created a mind-control drug and it's up to the IMF to discredit him and his creation. The pace is fast and there are two moments in supreme tension in this first hour. Barney is driving a fake prison van at one stage and split-second timing is needed (of course) to substitute Willy for a real prisoner. In the middle of it all, the real prison van had engine trouble throwing off the timing.

    Later, Willy has gone undercover and has convinced a room full of observers that he is under the spell of a fake mind control drug. They want to test it. And the suggestion is made that that Willy should shoot himself. The tension ramps up as the viewer wonders how could the IMF be ready for this, and how will Willy get out of it.

    Other trademarks of Mission: Impossible are to be found in this first hour. Two real prisoners are taunted and tested while Willy stands by and does nothing. He can't do anything, really. But if this was another show, then he would. Not on Mission: Impossible. The tone here is always darker and more brutal. Brooke Bundy and Stanley Kamel have several great scenes as the unfortunate couple. He eventually gets shot during a break-out attempt and she gets dragged away screaming.

    In short, the bad guys are truly evil and you cannot wait for the IMF to win the day.

    The cliff-hanger, when it comes, packs quite a jolt.

    The Closer. Season 4, Episode 10. "Time Bomb" Teenagers plan to go on a killing spree in this untypical episode. One of them is dead before the episode starts (it is his death that starts the investigation) and a second one is dead in police custody by the mid-part of the episode. After that, the police assume that the threat is over. But the script leaves enough questions unanswered to keep the viewer (and Brenda) unconvinced. The tension builds until most of the regular characters are caught in the middle of a long, graphic gun battle. Slow-motion violence is not normally what you expect to see on The Closer, but when they go this route they really pull out all the stops. It's stunning television. And makes for a great cliffhanger when Sanchez takes three bullets in the back...

    NewsRadio. Season 3, Episode 1. Jimmy runs for "President" as the third season kicks off. Lisa sets out to bring him down (by uncovering his skeletons) while Bill gets the episodes biggest laughs by being smarmy every chance he gets. The Matthew-grows-a-moustache storyline gets many more laughs than you would expect. All told: a winner.

    Highlight? Mission: Impossible (cool)
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    Mon, Dec 15, 08 - 30 Rock, Jury, Law & Order, House, Wings

    05.30 30 Rock
    06.00 The Jury
    07.00 Law And Order
    08.00 House
    12.00 Wings

    30 Rock. Season 3, Episode 5. "Reunion" Another winner. The Liz high school reunion story is very funny and very clever. It confounds expectations, very nicely, when it reveals that Liz was the mean one at school. She didn't plan it that way, and she doesn't even remember it that way, but... she was mean to everyone and they hate her. Hilarious. Alec Baldwin pretty much steals the episode and it proves, once again, that the show works best when Liz and Jack are teamed up in the same plot.

    The Jury. Episode 4. "Mail Order Mystery" When you tune in to watch The Jury, you are getting two stories in parallel. The story of the case-of-the-week, a typical murder mystery yarn with all the usual suspects, cops and lawyers. You also get the story of what happens in the jury room. This is a much more low-key storyline. But it always proves to be just as interesting as the flashbacks to the murder trial.

    Marlyne Afflack and Jim Gaffigan are the two stand-outs among the jurors. They battle for most of the episode. In the twist-ending we learn that he was right all along, but she makes a much more convincing argument and is able to sway the jury. It makes for fascinating viewing.

    Tom Atkins plays a man who may, or may not, have killed his mail-order bride. A lot of the jury deliberations are focused on whether or not he loved his wife, or whether she was just a companion that he bought. It's a thought-provoking story, and the ending - with the haunting music they always use in the final seconds when they reveal what really happened - is wonderful.

    Law And Order. Season 18, Episode 18. "Excalibur" The show brings the eighteenth season to an ending with one of the strongest episodes ever. The case-of-the-week is good. A man murders his brother-in-law as a means towards getting back into the family business. He's also hiding a dirty little secret: he runs a prostitution ring on the side. And, in the second half of the story, this takes centre stage as Jack and the team discover that one of the clients is the governor (who has appeared on the show before as a political friend of Jack's). This is where the story heads into A+ territory, as we see Jack caught up in all sorts of political games as he tries to see justice done.

    This is one of the episodes where the good guys lose. The killer pleads guilty, so that a trial is avoided, and it is implied that the governor will grant him early release after a few years. In the closing moments Jack and his team take stock of how all the witnesses are disappearing, or being taken care of, in sundry underhanded ways. It's a nice, dark, conspiracy-laden conclusion. I hope the show returns to the story of the Governor and gives Jack a chance to take him down.

    House. Season 5, Episode 9. "Last Resort" The hostage-siege episode. With Hugh Laurie and Zeljko Ivanek in the same room (and a gun between them, too) you expect it to be a truly superb episode with great performances. Not so. It's actually a pretty weak, kinda dumb storyline. And all the acting honors go to Olivia Wilde who blows the two guys off the screen for the majority of the episode.

    The patient is a jerk. And so is House. Watching them endanger everyone else in the room is pretty boring, once you realise that both of them are one-note characters in this little tale. I knew that House would eventually get the gun off the guy, and I knew that he would then give it back. It also made sense, early on, that the patient would continue to be a threat long after House did this, so that rendered most of the episode pointless.

    Olivia Wilde, however, made the episode worth watching. Thirteen starts off not caring about her life and - by the end - she is pleading not to be killed. Wilde brings the character (and the audience) on a wonderful journey and is the only thing worth caring about in this mess of an episode.

    Wings. Season 2, Episode 5. "" Kelly Connell guests as a guy who went to school with Joe and the gang and maintains that Joe was his best friend. Thing is: Joe doesn't remember him. Neither does anybody else. And the guy has shown up on Nantucket to get married and Joe is his Best Man. It's a slim idea, more sad than funny, and the laughs are thin on the ground. Lowell is the funniest character in the show and there is one nice twist when the stripper hired for the bachelor party remembers the guy that nobody else recalls. Nice. But not worth a half-hour of my time.

    Highlight? Law And Order (the good guys lose)
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    Sun, Dec 14, 08 - Pushing Daisies, Kyle XY, Supernatural, Good Morning Miami

    05.30 Pushing Daisies
    06.30 Kyle XY
    07.30 Supernatural
    11.30 Good Morning Miami

    Pushing Daisies. Season 2, Episode 9. "The Legend of Merle McQuoddy" This time out the case-of-the-week is as strong and interesting as the ongoing storyline.

    Emerson Cod and Olive Snook team up to investigate a murder in a lighthouse. They make a great team and provide one of the episode's highlights (at the end, when Emerson told Olive she could come work with him anytime). Olive is even more cute, and adorable, than usual as a tough-talking pi.

    Meanwhile, Chuck's dad proves to be a real jerk. There's a great fight scene between him and Ned and lots of conflict for the young lovers: Ned and Chuck. They weather the storm very nicely and provide another one the episode's highlights (up on the roof, when Chuck grabs the plastic sheeting and kisses Ned passionately).

    This current run of episodes has been the highlight of the series so far.

    Kyle XY. Season 2, Episode 17. "Grounded" For the third week in a row, the show delivers a flawless and wonderful episode. At the end of episode 16 Amanda arrived at Kyle's window and asked to hide out and spend the night (while she figured out how to confront her mother). This episode picks up seconds later as Kyle and Amanda prepare the sleeping arrangements. It's a great opening: funny and sweet and romantic. With a strong undercurrent of teenage sexual tension. Next day, with Amanda still hiding in the house, a social worker descends on the Tragers to ascertain if Kyle is living in a suitable environment. And while Kyle is trying to hide Amanda from everyone, Lori is trying to hide a room full of beer! There's a lot of running around, all very funny, and some nice character work on all of the regulars. Josh, in particular, gets a great scene telling his older sister that it's about time she cut Declan a break. Hear, hear! Well said, Josh!

    Kyle gives a great speech about what family means to him and there's a nice twist at the end.

    Jessi has, in these last few episodes, taken huge leaps towards becoming one of my favourite characters on the show. She's like a lost puppy. Eager and needy... and likely to cause damage if left watched... She has evolved into the perfect baddie for this show. She can cause, trouble, yes but there is the potential for eventual redemption.

    Supernatural. Season 3, Episode 6. "Red Sky at Morning" A very weak episode that finds the boys going up against the ghost of a vengeful sailor. It's another one of those goofy story ideas, in which future victims see a huge ghostly sailing ship hours before they die, but that is not why it fails to entertain. It's a dud because Bela sucks and none of the comedy works.

    Bela is an unsympathetic and boring character. I liked her first episode, but this time out she adds nothing to the story. She has no chemistry with Dean (although the story is written as if she does) and she manages to outwit the boys, even though it is blatently obvious to the viewer that she will steal the cursed object (a hand) as soon as she can. The fact that she succeeds in doing this makes the heroes of the show look like idiots. How could they trust her? Seriously?

    The episode tries to be funny on several occasions. The lack of chemistry between Dean and Bela ruins a few of these scenes (particularly the chewing-gum-in-a-tuxedo scene, which would have been very funny with Sam as Dean's partner instead) while pointless repetition ruins the rest of them. A older lady has a crush on Sam and keeps making advances on him, to his considerable discomfort. It is mildly amusing the first time, but after the show returns to play out the exact same scene several times the idea wears very thin. Oh look, it's that old lady again. And she's still putting the moves on Sammy! And he's still uncomfortable. Yawnsville.

    On the plus side, the climac (ghost against ghost) is clever and looks good on screen. But I must confess that I don't really know what happened. Which ghost destroyed which ghost?

    Good Morning Miami. Episode 11. "I'm With Stupid" One of the best episodes. Jake squabbles with Dylan because she's into crystals and all sorts of 'mumbo jumbo' that he thinks is stupid. He overreacts because, being in love with her, he wants her to match his idea of perfection. Nobody understands why he's taking it so hard, except Penny, because she knows his secret. Penny, however, has a secret of her own... she's in love with Jake.

    This little love triangle yields many good scenes. Some are very funny and some are very poignant.

    The final Dylan scene (where she tells Jake why she is into all this stuff) is a real standout. It fits nicely into her already-established background and helps make the character more real and interesting than ever before.

    Seconds after this wonderful scene, the show delivers another superb moment. Penny has been waiting for Jake to take her out to dinner, but now that he's patched things up with Dylan he cancels on poor Penny, leaving her to fake disinterest, while we know how she really feels about all of this.

    Great storytelling.

    The main cast get some great material, but the supporting characters are royally screwed! Lucia doesn't appear. She's been written out, and will never return from vacation, while Sister Brenda decides to stop being a nun. We will never see her again after this. Frank, of course, remains with the show (and is probably the funniest one in the ensemble) but he's gets almost no screen-time in this outing.

    Constance Zimmer (my favourite cast member) has a tough part in this episode. And she pulls it off with style. Penny has been established as a tough cookie. Cynical and snarky. Yet, we also know that she's fallen for Jake. This episode shows us both sides of her character. It's a tough sell. On one hand she's an iron lady, quick with the witty put-down, and on the other hand she's very girly girly: spraying herself with perfume and hoping, hoping, hoping, that Jake will notice her. I'm not sure many actresses could make it work, but Zimmer pulls it off in spades. Penny is the Olive Snook of GMM and I love her.

    Highlight? Kyle XY (very funny)
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    Sat, Dec 13, 08 - Friday Night Lights, Rising Damp

    04.30 Friday Night Lights
    05.30 Rising Damp

    Friday Night Lights. Season 2, Episode 11. "Jumping the Gun" Smash and Coach Taylor are the two featured characters in this episode. Smash has been overlooked this season, sadly, but this is a great story for him. Eric Taylor is usually well featured in most episodes, of course, but this is one of his best stories and Kyle Chandler is simply fantastic in the role. He should be getting an Emmy (or a Golden Globe) for work like this. Instead, he doesn't even get nominated...

    Smash is trying to decide what to do after High School. His mother and he are in conflict over this. He doesn't want to listen to her, and she is in pain as she prepares to let go of her son. It's a well-told wonderful, very human, storyline. Smash and his mother are two of the very best characters this show has. A Texas version of John Connor and his mother Sarah!

    Life for Eric Taylor is a series of confrontations and apologies in this episode. Conflicts with Tim Riggins, Coach Dickes, Shelley and - even - his wife drive the story. A story of dignity within humility. Tales like this are why FNL is more akin to Homicide or St. Elsewhere than soap operas like 90210. Everything about it is real.

    Best scene? Eric tells Smash to go home and listen to his mother. Watching that gave me tingles at the base of my spine. All television drama should be so good...

    Rising Damp. Season 2, Episode 6. "Last of the Big Spenders" Poverty drives the storyline in this very funny episode. Rigsby is trying to impress Brenda (the new tenant) but he has no money. It's a slim and very depressing premise, but with this writer and this cast it makes for another hilarious half-hour of television. That's the real skill and wonder of shows like Rising Damp and Steptoe & Son. They can take the most bleak of real-world scenarios and make us laugh out loud. Even when we've lived through them ourselves and know that there's nothing funny about them at all.

    Highlight? Friday Night Lights (nobody apologies, and learns from it, like Eric Taylor)
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    Fri, Dec 12, 08 - It Takes A Thief, Due South, Kolchak

    06.00 It Takes A Thief
    07.00 Due South
    08.00 Kolchak: The Night Stalker

    It Takes A Thief. Episode 7. "When Thieves Fall In" Susan Saint James returns to the series for the third time. It's her second episode playing Charlie Brown. She also plays a woman who looks just like Charlie! So... three appearances in seven episodes, playing three characters... One of whom is a semi-regular. That kind of thing don't happen too often!

    As for the episode... it's a delight. The first half is pure padding, and the second one is a bundle of tension cleverly confined to one hotel room. Nice.

    Noah needs Al to steal a coat with something important hidden inside the lining. Al decides he needs the help of former nemesis Charlie Brown, so the boys concoct a story and get the delectable Miss Brown out of prison and onto their team. The next 20 minures are just the three of them on a shopping spree. Malachi Throne gets more to do than in any other episode so far, as Noah gets an up close and personal view of life from Al's side of the law. It's very funny. All three characters are wonderful to watch.

    For it's second half, the episode swithes tone. Charlie replaces the girl, but things immediately go wrong when she is spotted as a fake. Everything happens inside one hotel room. There's a heck of a lot of traffic through that one room over the course of a few short hours and you are constantly expecting Al and Charlie to be uncovered. Even when they are, and are trapped at the airport in the closing minutes, the script delivers are nice twist that makes perfect sense, but is impossible to predict.

    Another great episode.

    Due South. Season 3, Episode 4. "Strange Bedfellows" In every respect this episode is superb. Unlike the first three episodes (which were great in spots, weak in others) this one is without flaw. Every scene, every plot, every character... equals perfection.

    Kowalski must protect his ex-wife's new boyfriend (a powerful politican) when shots are fired at the man in public. Ray is heart-broken about this and it shows (thanks to the amazing Callum Keith Rennie).

    There are many great scenes where he speaks of his ex-wife. My favourite occurs early on, in a parked car, where he is telling Fraser what it's like for him. I love it not just because I identify with Ray, and his situation, but because Fraser shows what a truly great friend he is by listening and understanding. It's a short scene, but it tells us all we would ever need to know about these two men. We can see that Ray is consumed by his love for this woman, and we can see that Benton Fraser is the best friend anyone could ever have when they are feeling sad.

    The casting of Anne Marie DeLuise as Stella blows me away. Right from the first moment she appears she is exactly right for Kowalski. The two actors have amazing chemistry and you believe that they were married, and are still in love. The script never tells us why they split, but we can understand how it came to be this way in the way they respond to one another. Their scenes together, particularly the last major one, are simply wonderful. Two people very much in love, who can't seem to make it work between then, who are still able to be honest with one another.

    The case-of-the-week is good, too. A political scandal and a mad bomber and both of these impact nicely on what Ray is going through.

    Fraser, meanwhile, is hearing things and - in the final scenes - discovers an office that the ghost of his father has made for himself. In Fraser's closet! He has no sooner come to terms with this revelation than Meg Thatcher opens the door and finds him talking to himself in the closet. A classic moment.

    Kolchak: The Night Stalker. Episode 7. "The Devil's Platform" A classic episode. Carl tracks a corrupt politican. One who has done a deal with the Prince Of Darkness and can turn into a demon dog to dispose of his rivals and enemies.

    So how does it measure up to the expected Kolchak formula?

    The Bad Guy. Tom Skerritt is arguably the best foe that Kolchak ever faced. Not only is the performance fantastic, but the idea of a crooked politican doing a deal to enable him to do these things is not as far-fetched as some of the ideas on the show.

    The Authority Figure/Conspiracy. Strangely, considering that this is one of the very best episodes, this story lacks these two vital parts of the Kolchak mythos. There are no press conferences and no stonewalling by anybody. There's also no indication that anybody else has a clue what is going on. Just Carl this time.

    The Experts. This time out the only real experts that Carl goes to are a cop and a doctor. The cop, for once on this show, is more than happy to tall Carl the truth. Off the record, of course. William Mims is only in two scenes, but he is great in both (particularly the scene with Carl).

    The Regular Cast. All three supporting characters are in this episode and all three get some great scenes. Tony is in fine form, and delivers many of the funniest lines every uttered in the series. Miss Emily has a great scene bringing heavy books to Carl. It's a funny scene, and it tells us a lot about Carl. This is also the episode where Emily brings Carl a new hat.

    The FX. There are only a few FX shots in this one. Mostly to do with the way the dog attacks are filmed. The attacks on Carl are important to the story and the shooting/editing does a good job of telling the story of what is happing during each attack.

    The Scare Factor. The climax of this one is a doozy. Carl and his foe face to face... in conversation. The Politican delivers a short paragraph that tells us that he knows exactly who Carl Kolchak is. It also tells us a few very important details about our hero... what he wants, why he'll never get it, and how self-aware he is/isn't about his own flaws. It may well be the finest scene in the series so far.

    The Logic. Carl's deductions make perfect sense in this story, because he is on-site for a very odd event at the very start and merely investigates that to it's logical conclusion. It's old-fashioned research, too. Carl, all alone in the INS offices, reading book after book as he searches, searches...

    It's a noble, heroic, romantic image.

    Highlight? Due South (i love the love story of ray and stella)
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    Thu, Dec 11, 08 - NCIS, House, Supernatural, Always Sunny, Night Court

    05.30 NCIS
    06.30 House
    07.30 Supernatural
    08.30 It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia
    09.00 Night Court

    NCIS. Season 5, Episode 6. "Chimera" The 100th episode of NCIS and one of the very best. The team are all alone on a ghost ship out at sea. As they try to figure out what happened to the crew they realise that someone (or something) on on the ship with them. Then Ducky announces that they may have only have a few hours to live...

    It just does not get any better than this. It's scary and exciting and funny and intense. The chemistry between all the regulars (especially Tony and Ziva) is scorching and - as ever - there isn't a bunch of crime-solvers I'd rather hang out with. Best bit? Gibbs suggests that Tony die like Chaplin in The Great Dictator. How was that, exactly? "Silently". In an episode filled with laugh out loud moments, that was the icing on the cake.

    House. Season 5, Episode 8. "Emancipation" House is a superb detective series. It has a lot going on, and operates on a few levels, but it is also a great detective series. This episode has two patients (two stories) and some great detective work by the doctors in charge (House and Foreman). The House-realises-what-is-going-on bit at the end is simply mesmerising. It pulls you in and delivers the goods, week after week. And this is one of the best.

    Supernatural. Season 3, Episode 5. "Bedtime Stories" This is goofy story. You really have to take a leap of faith to accept this one. But I love stories like this. She-Wolf Of London did an episode somewhat like this, and Kolchak's later episodes were "out there" too. On stories like this, I really admire the creativity of the writers.

    The spirit of a woman in a coma since she was a child is killing people by making them act out horrible bedtime stories. It's a total 'what the frak?' episode, but I really enjoyed it. I don't think it will ever make anyone's top ten list, including mine, but it's fun while it lasts.

    The closing minutes are like something from a different episode. But they fit because the opening minutes tell us that is exactly what is going to happen. Clever.

    Sam goes up against the demon that did the deal with Dean. And, in a very cold blooded way, he kills her.

    Hmm...

    It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia. Season 3, Episode 10. "Mac is a Serial Killer" The gang decided to prove that Mac is a serial killer based on... somewhat flimsy evidence. Charlie hilariously turns himself into a character from Law And Order (to defend his buddy) while Sweet Dee and Dennis decide the get inside the mind of a serial killer... by stalking someone. Dee does this in complete clown costume. Including squeaky shoes.

    And every insane second of it works. Because we accept these characters and their world. Pulling that off, week after week, is work of genius.

    Night Court. Episode 5. "The Eye of the Beholder" Weakest episode so far. Bull is annoyed that people make assumptions about him based on his appearance. His reaction seems too extreme for the realistic tone this show has set in it's early episodes. The story is nicely concluded, but the episode is light on laughs. And it's hard to feel sympathy for Bull, given his childish behaviour.

    Highlight? NCIS (100 episodes and better than ever)
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    Wed, Dec 10, 08 - Logan's Run, Sarah Connor, Twilight Zone, Swamp Thing, Captain Power

    06.30 Logan's Run
    07.30 The Sarah Connor Chronicles
    08.30 The Twilight Zone
    09.00 Swamp Thing
    09.30 Captain Power

    Logan's Run. Episode 9. "The Judas Goat" It's all a bit slow-moving and serious, and there is a logic flaw at the start, but this is a very good story in several respects.

    It starts off in the City Of Domes that Logan and Jessica ran from at the start of the series. The police force (the Sandmen) have created a double-agent (Nicholas Hammond) whose mission is to head out after Logan and fool him into coming back. He does this with ridiculous ease, making you wonder why the Sandmen don't just head out and ambush Logan since he is that easy to find.

    Nevertheless, the stuff with the double-agent is very good. Before he leaves the City Of Domes he is brought to the council of rulers (last seen in the pilot) and learns to his surprise that all is not as it seems in the City. This short scene adds a nice political subtext to the series: corrupt city officials trying to keep the population in the dark, etc.

    Once our double-agent finds/joins Logan the rest of the episode plays out like a typical adventure-of-the-week: the trio (now a quartet) find a hidden society and run foul of it's leader (the excellent Lance LeGault). That fact that one of the heroes is a double-agent (and we know it) makes the story much more interesting than it would normally be. Logan and the new guy have a strong dynamic. And this conflict between the 'heroes' is a nice change of pace for the show.

    All in all it's a solid hour. Logan's Run is such a serious drama series, it's difficult to think of it as being only a couple of years older than Buck Rogers. The two shows are decades apart in style and sensibility. One is fluff and nonsense and the other (while flawed) is a very strong drama series with occasional flair in the storytelling.

    The Sarah Connor Chronicles. Season 2, Episode 12. "Alpine Fields" Another flawless outing. And another example of this show's fantastic storytelling.

    Derek is the main character this time out (with Sarah having a very strong b-plot). The story unfolds on three fronts: one in the far future, and two of them in the present day, but six months apart. It's the story of a family that (first) Sarah and (then) Derek are trying to protect from a determined Terminator.

    Samantha Krutzfeldt almost steals the episode out from under Brian Austin Green, but not quite. Nevertheless, she makes quite an impression as two versions of the same young woman separated in time by six months of experience. The story leaves no opening for the character to return, which is a great pity, but given that Krutzfeldt is exceptionally beautiful she will undoubtedly appear on Supernatural before too long!

    The Twilight Zone. Season 3, Episode 5. "Dream Me a Life" Absolutely superb. J. Michael Straczynski (once again) delivers a really great story, and Eddie Albert delivers a showcase performance.

    Roger is living a quiet live in a friendly retirement home when he starts to have a series of vivid nightmares, when he meets a woman who is terrified of something trying to break down a door and get to her. She pleads for help. Over and over. It all means nothing to Roger until the same woman suddenly moves into the same retirement home. He tries to speak to her, but she speaks to nobody. She just sits there. In silence, shut off from the world. Next time Roger enters the dream to try and save the woman, he burns his hand and wakes to find the same burn on his hand here in the real world...

    The dream sequences looks fantastic and Albert is fantastic to watch. On one occasion the camera just stays on him for a long passionate speech/rant and he covers about 96 different emotions and moods going from line to line. It's pretty cool, and Roger is one of the Zone's coolest heroes.

    Swamp Thing. Episode 1. "The Emerald Heart" A strange concoction. Which probably owes something to Twin Peaks for it's odd flavour.

    There's no story, as such, just a lot of random events involving a mad scientist, a kid and a mysterious 'monster' who dwells within the swamp.

    Some of the cast are very, very weak and the lines they are given are often quite dreadful. There's no logical behind most of what happens. Characters regularly say and do things that make no sense, and don't serve the story.

    It's really odd, and deadly serious.

    Captain Power And The Soldiers Of The Future. Episode 1. "Shattered" Solid opening episode. It opens with a long, exciting action sequence and follows up with a good story of betrayal and loyalty.

    Captain Power (who leads the resistance forces against evil Lord Dredd) gets a message from an old flame. He goes to meet her in the remains of San Francisco. Turns out that it's a trap. But there's more to it than that, and a fairly compelling reason behind her actions. Guest star Ann-Marie MacDonald gives 100% to the role and sells all the horror and pain that is needed to justify what the character does. She's amazing.

    The regular cast comes across very well, too, with Jessica Steen in particular making a great impression as Pilot.

    Highlight? The Sarah Connor Chronicles (blows me away, yet again)
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    Tue, Dec 9, 08 - The Closer, CSI, Prison Break, NewsRadio

    07.00 The Closer
    08.00 CSI
    09.00 Prison Break
    11.15 NewsRadio

    The Closer. Season 4, Episode 9. "Tijuana Brass" Surely this is one of the show's cleverest endings ever? Brenda sends the bad guy to prison under the wrong name. She uses the name of the man that he has marked for death. And when he is killed (which we learn in the closing seconds) it means that his intended victim is free to start a new life with new name. Clever Brenda.

    This is also a good episode for showing us how much she cares about her team. And (in a rare moment of gushing praise) she shows them how much she cares, too. Nice.

    CSI. Season 6, Episode 4. "Shooting Stars" It doesn't look or feel like a CSI episode. Gil and Catherine follow tracks (from a crime scene) out into the desert and find themselves exploring a vast underground complex. With 11 dead bodies. From a cult.

    It's a mesmerising story. And - again - it's always good to see all the cast members working together on one case.

    Clea DuVall only appears in the closing scenes, but she is wonderful in them. She was a highlight of Carnivalé and she was one of the two things I liked about Heroes when I tried to watch it.

    (I gave Heroes a shot when it started. I didn't like it but, being a comic-book reader, I felt I should give it every chance. But rubbish is rubbish no matter how hard you try to like it, so I gave up after four dreadful episodes. But while I was watching I did like DuVall and - of course - the awesome Greg Grunberg.)

    Prison Break. Season 4, Episode 14. "Just Business" Many episodes of Prison Break are full of twists and turns, particularly in the last few weeks. But few are as upsetting as these ones. Every thing that could go wrong... goes wrong. Our heroes are battered and bruised. Surrounded and captured, in various ways by various foes. I have no idea for how they are going to get out of this...

    NewsRadio. Season 2, Episode 22. "Injury" Matthew takes centre-stage for this moderately amusing episode. He injures himself goofing off at work. Dave tries to get him to lie that it was an on-the-job injury. While Mr. James (who thinks that it was an on-the-job injury) tries to get him to lie and say that he was goofing off at work.

    The tug-of-war is... moderately amusing and there's a nice warm bit at the end which reminds us that Mr. James might be an eccentric billionaire but he's a decent guy and he does like the gang at WNYX.

    Highlight? Prison Break (how are they going to get out of this?)
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    Mon, Dec 8, 08 - 30 Rock, The Jury, Law & Order, House, Wings

    05.30 30 Rock
    06.00 The Jury
    07.00 Law And Order
    09.00 House
    10.00 Wings

    30 Rock. Season 3, Episode 4. "Gavin Volure" Steve Martin guests in a hilarious outing. It's hard to pick highlights when every minute of the episode yielded about two, but I particularly loved Liz's idea of a relationship (basically lots of TV watching and 'no funny stuff'). The Tracy story was a winner, too, but the absolute highlight of the episode was Kenneth performing street theatre. That, alone, makes this episode of my favourites.

    The Jury. Episode 2. "The Honeymoon Suite" The case is very interesting (was it a double suicide gone wrong? Or did the man shoot the woman in a lover's tiff?) and the drama in the jury room is more involving than usual. An arrogant lawyer (a superb Neal Jones) has smuggled a phone in, and is more concerned with his own corporate law practice than in any murder case. Even one that he happens to be a juror on! He's arrogant and hard to like and you wait for him to get his commuppance.

    But it never happens...

    As time wears on and the jury loses focus, he is the one to take charge and bring things under control. He starts off a jerk but he ends up as the hero. Not by having any great belief in one side or the other, but merely by being very, very good at getting people to focus on what is important.

    Law And Order. Season 18, Episode 17. "Personae Non Grata" Law And Order normally doesn't make me laugh, but this episode had me laughing out loud all the way through. Why? Partly because the events of the story are so absurd and partly because the guest stars are fantastic.

    A middle-aged (and very ordinary) married man masquerades online as a tough young marine and enters into an online romance with a hot teenage babe. Who isn't... Nope! Turns out that it's just her mom. Her shallow, pathetic mom using sexy pictures of her own daughter to meet and con men online. Yes there is more to it, involving a couple of murders, but that is the core of the story this week. And it is a hoot from start to finish. I loved it.

    Casting was amazing. Melissa Leo owns the episode from start to finish. She's amazing. She's always amazing. I love her work. From Homicide to Veronica Mars, I have always loved what this lady can do with a role. Her opposite number in this tale is Barry Del Sherman. He's hilarious. His character cannot grasp the reality of the situation at all. And still refuses (quite late in the story) to believe that the mother wrote the e-mails to him, not the daughter. His determination to remain deluded is fascinating, tragic and... very, very funny.

    House. Season 5, Episode 7. "The Itch" A major change of pace.

    Jennifer Morrison takes centre stage. And she's wonderful. Cameron seems more mature now. Much more of a grown woman, somehow. Like someone who could be House's equal in a relationship. Over the years, I've changed my mind a lot about House and Cameron as a couple. Sometimes I wanted them together. Other times: I couldn't see it working because she was/is just too young and fragile for someone as tough and mean as Greg House. But this episode made me rethink her. She's very tough in this one. And I like it. And I like having her in every scene. It's about time Cameron and Chase were brought back onto the show.

    The case-of-the-week takes place in the patients home because he can't go out into the outside world. That's novel. And cool.

    And House is genuinely lovesick over his feelings for (and kiss with) Cuddy in the previous episode. I honestly thought House was faking the whole thing to take her mind off the baby fiasco, but the final scene (of him standing on her doorstep) has me convinced.

    Wings. Season 2, Episode 4. "Sports & Leisure" The gang play Trivial Pursuit at the end of this episode and it's very, very funny. All of the characters are perfectly defined on this show. And each one can generate any number of laughs. Pairing Roy and Lowell in the same team was genius. Lowell finds a reason to believe that "Ann-Margret" is a possible answer to every question and watching Roy cope with this insanity is classic television. He finally flips. And changes teams. To find himself faced with a question where "Ann-Margret" is the actual answer.

    Highlight? Law And Order (very, very funny)
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    Sun, Dec 7, 08 - Pushing Daisies, Kyle XY, Supernatural

    05.30 Pushing Daisies
    06.30 Kyle XY
    07.30 Supernatural

    Pushing Daisies. Season 2, Episode 8. "Comfort Food" The best episode so far. Delightful from start to finish. The case-of-the-week (while certainly a lot of fun) is wisely relegated to b-story status, and the main thrust of this week's tale concerns Charlotte 'Chuck' Charles and various members of her family (living and dead). The Chuck storyline (and her pairing with Emerson Cod) is wonderful beyond belief.

    Kristin Chenoweth

    Kristin Chenoweth has never looked more beautiful and Lee Pace is - once again - hilarious as an uncomfortable/unhappy Ned. Whenever they make Ned unhappy it pays huge comedic dividends.

    Kyle XY. Season 2, Episode 16. "Great Expectations" For the second week in a row, the show delivers a flawless and wonderful episode. As much as I love the dark sci-fi conspiracy stuff, I feel that the show is at it's best when Kyle deals with real world stuff. Small stuff. Lots of shows have done the whole conspiracy bit, but few have managed the real world stuff quite so well. Case in point: Kyle thinks his girlfriend might be about to break up with him, and he can't even get to talk to her to find out what's on her mind.

    I love the fact that Lori and Josh pitch in to help and it's really cool to see Kyle having to use his powers to do something as mundane as talk to the girl who lives next door.

    Jessi is really well written in this episode. I feel for her: the outsider, trying to fit in and forever a victim of her past. She does the wrong thing at the end of this story, but I understand why she did it.

    Supernatural. Season 3, Episode 4. "Sin City" Sasha Barrese is yet another beautiful-beyond-belief guest star, the story is more low key than usual and it's fascinating to see the reversal that's happened between the brothers (Dean mellowed, Sam bloodthirsty), but... this is one of the weakest episodes in a while.

    Sasha Barrese

    Sasha Barrese is off-the-chart sexy as she taunts Dean in their prison, and the story being told this week is not the usual SN fare. This time out we have every reason to believe that the bad people in the town are just that: bad people, giving in to temptation that has (skillfully) been put in their path. It should be more fascinating and dark than it ultimately is.

    Good bits, here and there, but it's all a bit 'Blah' overall.

    Highlight? Pushing Daisies (best episode ever)
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    Sat, Dec 6, 08 - Dexter, FNL, Burn Notice, Venture Bros., Rising Damp, Office, Corner Gas

    06.00 Dexter
    07.00 Friday Night Lights
    08.00 Burn Notice
    09.00 The Venture Bros.
    09.30 Rising Damp
    10.00 The Office
    10.30 Corner Gas

    Dexter. Season 2, Episode 11. "Left Turn Ahead" A melancholy and unsatisfying episode of Showtime's drama about a likable serial killer.

    It's a gloomy ride as Dexter puts his affairs in order and prepares to hand himself over to the police for his crimes. In the end he changes his mind after a conversation with his sister. And it's a pretty unconvincing turn of events. Seems like the writers painted themselves with this story and didn't know how to get out of it. A short, flippant comment from Debra is a weak solution. Had it been Rita and the kids (particularly the kids) I might have bought it. This? Not so much.

    Friday Night Lights. Season 2, Episode 10. "There Goes the Neighborhood" Poor Tim Riggins. Guy just can't catch a break, can he? Most of this episode shows how the Taylor household adjusts to having Tim living there full time. And, to my surprise and delight, it adjusts pretty darn well. Eric, in particular, seems happy to have another male in the house.

    But it all turns sour over a misunderstanding and, as the episode comes to a close, Tim has to flee the house in the middle of the night. Very unjust.

    But great storytelling.

    Burn Notice. Season 2, Episode 8. "Double Booked" Burn Notice breaks from formula and delivers one of it's most enjoyable episodes.

    A hit-man calls Michael and offers him a hit! So, rather than having a client from the start, Michael is 'working for' the bad guy. So he has to find a way to save the target, without tipping off the hit-man (Tim Matheson, who also directed the episode).

    The Venture Bros. Episode 2. "Careers in Science" This isn't as funny as the first episode but it's got a much better story and gives you a much better sense of who these characters are.

    Dr. Venture and the gang head to a vast spaceship that his dad built when he was a kid. There's no evil-doer in this episode, but the boys spectacularly mis-interpret almost everything that happens and spend the entire episode cowering from a Space Phantom. All the best laughs come from the H.E.L.P.eR. robot (my favourite character, after Brock) who has a run of incredibly bad luck: he is shot out into space, savagely beaten by the boys and - at the end - completely forgotten as the gang blasts off back to Earth.

    Rising Damp. Season 2, Episode 5. "A Perfect Gentlemen" Rigsby's love for Miss Jones is one of the main engines that drives the stories on Rising Damp, but the show doesn't miss a beat now that the character of Miss Jones has moved out of the boarding house. Some episode's rely on Philip playing a prank on Rigsby (to teach him a lesson), but this isn't one of those. Rather, it goes back to another established trait of the landlord: Rigsby is a sycophant. Place him with someone he considers superior/important and he becomes hilariously obsequious. We saw it in Season One with the policeman, and we see it here again (to great effect) when a con-man moves in and convinces everybody that he is 'somebody'.

    Except except Philip, that is. Long established as the smartest one of the bunch, this episode shows - once again - that he's nobody's fool. Best bit? Rigsby finding the money that Philip planted, putting his foot on it and being caught by Philip.

    The Office. Season 5, Episode 9. "The Surplus" Hilarious. There's a surplus in the budget and Michael doesn't know what to do with it. From that simple idea comes another wonderful half-hour of comedy. Best bits? Pam and Jim on opposite sides. Pam fights dirty. How cute!

    Corner Gas. Season 5, Episode 8. "Classical Gas" Jonathan Zinetta, former foster child from Kenya, shows up at the door of the family who sponsored him: the Leroys. He wants to say thanks. It should be simple, but this is Dog River. Lots of very funny lines in this one, and good plots for everyone. I love the way Hank tries to bolster Brent's ego, after the arrival of his 'better' brother. Inept, yes, but very sweet.

    Highlight? Burn Notice (nice break from formula)
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    Fri, Dec 5, 08 - It Takes A Thief, The Avengers

    06.30 It Takes A Thief
    07.30 The Avengers

    It Takes A Thief. Episode 6. "Totally By Design" This one has a really great story. Once again, we get to see Al doing that stuff that only Al could do: lying his way into a place no other spy could possible get. Watching him is a joy. It's excting and he's funny. But, in the second half, the episode really kicks into high gear. Several guest characters take on extra dimension.

    Al has been pretending to be a designer, so he can get close to a woman (Mari Blanchard) and steal something from her husband. She's actually a very nice lady. We (and Al) are sorry that Al has to dupe her. She's just a lonely woman, who loves her husband and wishes he would pay attention to her again, like he used to do before they were powerful. Everything about the story rings true. Later, Al is forced to save the life of he man he came to steal from (because somebody even worse has revealed themselves) and it serves to re-unite husband and wife is very satisfactory fashion.

    The Avengers. Episode 136. "My Wildest Dream" Lots of neat twists in this one. The bad guys are brainwashing ordinary people to commit murder (as is often the case on The Avengers!). Except that is not quite what is happening. In the end, we discover the person we perceived as the evil mastermind is actually not evil at all (Just innocently doing some amateur aggresso therapy! As you do.) and the person we thought was helping Steed is actually the genius behind it all. We also thought we were witnessing someone help Steed by snitching on the bad guys. Wrong! They, too, are part of the plot. Clever storytelling. Playing with the perceptions/expectations of the audience. It's also great that Steed and Tara (very much working as a team, by now) are never fooled for very long.

    Tara kicks ass, too, in a couple of great fight scenes. And uses her shoe to save Steed at the very end. Really.

    Highlight? It Takes A Thief (good story)
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    Sarah Connor, NCIS, Always Sunny, Supernatural, Larry Sanders, Son Of The Beach

    06.30 The Sarah Connor Chronicles
    07.30 NCIS
    08.30 It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia
    09.00 Supernatural
    10.00 The Larry Sanders Show
    10.30 Son Of The Beach

    The Sarah Connor Chronicles. Season 2, Episode 11. "Self Made Man" Another winner. A slice-of-life tale, taking into the activities of the characters between battles in the war. Derek, Jesse, Ellison, Catherine and Sarah are left out this week, but there are still many things to watch and savour:

    Cameron. This episodes reveals what she does when the others are asleep: She sneaks off to a nearby college library and does research. She also appears to have bonded and formed a friendship (of sorts) with the night watchman! And it is fascinating to watch. Cameron is obviously using the guy, but she appears to have genuine 'concern' for him and his well-being. Yet, I don't trust her. At the end of the episode I half-expected her to put a bullet in him. It is this kind of complex characterization that makes TSCC such a joy to watch.

    The story. The story is cool. But it takes a real leap of faith to make it work. It's awesome to think of Cameron being able to track the activities of this Terminator almost 100 years earlier, but you have to accept that he was photographed at just the right moment to capture what he was doing and you have to accept that she stumbled upon this picture and was able to figure out what it meant and track him down. It's way, way out there. But if you can take the leap and go along for the ride: it's a great tale.

    The action. The battle at the end is great. Not just the action on-screen, but the whole setting and reasons for the battle are cool, too. As Cameron stalks the empty building looking for her prey, the camera angle's capitalise very nicely on Summer Glau's appealing... physique. Nice.

    John and Riley. Again, I have to say that I love the character of Riley and her impact on John. She drags John to a party in this one. And we get see him as a bit of social misfit. This plots paints a dark and lonely picture of life for these two characters.

    NCIS. Season 5, Episode 5. "Leap of Faith" NCIS is not like the other CBS crime procedurals. Witness the scene where Tony and McGee are waiting outside the office of the man they are supposed to be questioning. Tony has an embarrassing picture of McGee on his phone and - while left completely alone - the two men get into a long wrestling matching for possession of the phone. Eventually they are caught and have to identify themselves as NCIS agents on a case. Hilarious, and an example of why I love this show. It's fun.

    Susan Kelechi Watson guests as a germophobe NCIS agent. Watching the others (particularly Tony) react to her quirks is hilarious. Best bit? Tony does a fake sneeze and sprinkles water (from a bottle) on top of her. To her horror and his own great amusement.

    It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia. Season 3, Episode 9. "Sweet Dee's Dating a Retarded Person" Music is the obsession of the week, when everybody decides they want to be in a band. Not the same band, mind you, rather they set up competing bands. Competing bands that are awful. Awful is a delighful-to-watch sense. Best bit? It's almost impossible to pick one. But if I must, I'll go for Charlie Day singing Nightman.

    Supernatural. Season 3, Episode 3. "Bad Day at Black Rock" 'I'm Batman' declares Dean at one stage in this delightful episode, the latest in a long line of very, very funny SN episodes.

    The boys cross paths with a cursed object. One that grants the owner fantastic good luck. Until he gives it away... At that point, his luck turns bad. So bad that, eventually, it kills him. Sam has the object for a brief moment and it is stolen, meaning that his life is in danger. Dean chases the thief, while Sam waits in a motel room to stop him from falling over things, etc.

    Lauren Cohan is the latest in a long line of very beautiful female guest stars. Her scenes with Dean are hilarious.

    Sterling K. Brown returns to cause problems (from prison) and he's enlisted the fantastic Michael Massee to do his bidding. Great development.

    With the boys dealing with a cursed object, for once, this one reminds me of the great Friday The 13th TV series. There is even what appears to be a shoutout to the show at one point, when the boys name the date on which the cursed object was created. Nice.

    The Larry Sanders Show. Episode 2. "The Flirt Episode" With great roles in shows such as The Loop, Jesse Stone and My Boys, Mimi Rogers seems to cornered the market when it comes to playing sexually aggressive older ladies. Back when she was only 36, she played pretty much the same role in this wonderful episode of Larry Sanders. Mimi, as herself, is a guest on Larry's show. They flirt a lot on-air and it causes a lot of problems for Larry. Mimi is a delight.

    Son Of The Beach. Episode 3. "Fanny and the Professor" Harmless sex jokes and robots. Robots?! Yes, this is the episode where Notch and the gang are fired by the Mayor and replaced by three identical robots. Notch doesn't cope well with unemployment and - within 24 hours - is found living homeless on the beach.

    Highlight? The Sarah Connor Chronicles (Cameron)
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    A Briefing With Michael: One Year Ago

    Wed, Dec 3, 08 - Hitchhiker, My Secret Identity

    11.00 The Hitchhiker
    11.30 My Secret Identity

    The Hitchhiker

    The Hitchhiker. Season 3, Episode 5. "Man's Best Friend" One of the best and most memorable of Hitchhiker episodes. Michael O'Keefe is kicked out by his wife (Jennifer Cooke of V) and goes to house sit for a buddy from college. He takes in a stray dog and the two of them form a very close, very strange, relationship: turning the house they are staying in into a giant 'lair' of overturned furniture and rubbish. One by one the man's enemies start turning up dead... victims of a strange animal attack...

    Good performances (especially from Cooke) and nice camera work make this an enjoyable outing, even when you can see the 'twist' coming a mile away. O'Keefe and the dog are never shown in shot together (except in reflection), all of their scenes together are point-of-view shots. Touches like that make this one very enjoyable.

    My Secret Identity

    My Secret Identity. Episode 2. "A Walk on the Wild Side" A few funny lines and winning performances from the leads make this enjoyable, even if the story is lame. Dr. J is robbed of some vital scientific equipment, Andrew stumbles onto the thief and - through a fluke - is asked to join the gang that he belongs to. So Andrew Clements, teenage superhero, finds himself going undercover inside a gang of tough youths, led by David Hewlett (of Stargate: Atlantis).

    It's nonsense, but sweet and amusing. Many, many lines will raise a smile: "I'm trying to cut down on my mugging" is a prime example.

    Highlight? The Hitchhiker (it turns out that the dog is...)
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    Tue, Dec 2nd, 08 - Prison Break, NewsRadio

    11.00 Prison Break
    12.00 NewsRadio

    Prison Break

    Prison Break. Season 4, Episode 13. "Deal Or No Deal" This is a great episode. And a perfect example of three things at Prison Break does really, really well.

    Twists. There are many twists in this story. Particularly anything to do with Senator Dallow and Self's boss. Twist followed twist followed twist. As only Prison Break can do it. The climax, the final twist, was truly spectacular.

    Create bad guys that we hate. Self joins The General as one of the most despicable bad guys that the show has delivered unto us. He is vile. And smug. And cruel. We hate him.

    Create bad guys that we love. Gretchen and T-Bag have followed the same route as Bellick and Kellerman. I like them both, particularly Gretchen (now that the show has told us her backstory).

    All in all this was a flawless hour of TV. And the final seconds were thrilling. Michael is still the smartest one there is.

    NewsRadio

    NewsRadio. Season 2, Episode 21. "Led Zeppelin II" is a great season finale. The break-up between Dave and Lisa fuels a very funny storyline: the building is on fire, so the two of them use it as an excuse for a no-ties make-out session in Dave's office. At least they try to. Because, over and over, they keep getting interrupted by Dave's idiot staff.

    My favourite moment, however, comes at the very end. Mr. James thinks he has found the perfect woman to marry (this has been his quest for many, many episodes). She is perfect in every conceivable way. Except... she confides that she doesn't like the gang at WNYX and doesn't want to hang out with them. So, Jimmy James dumps her in his own stylish way. Hilarious and - somewhat - sweet. One of the cornerstones of this wonderful series is that multi-millionaire Jimmy James hangs out all the time at this radio station that he owns. Why would he do that? Well, based on this one line of dialogue buried in the last minutes of the last season two episode, it's just 'cos he likes the gang who work there.

    I like that kind of stuff.

    Highlight? Prison Break (twists)
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    A Briefing With Michael: One Year Ago

    Mon, Dec 1st, 08 - Law And Order, Raising The Bar, 30 Rock, Keen Eddie, House, Wings

    05.30 Law And Order
    06.30 Raising The Bar
    07.30 30 Rock
    08.00 Keen Eddie
    09.00 House
    03.00 Wings

    Law And Order. Season 18, Episode 16. "Strike" Superb. Rubirosa takes centre stage when a judge compels her to defend a murder suspect. It's a strong case-of-the-week, the main guest star is great, but the episode belongs to Alana De La Garza.

    Connie makes a great lead character. I've loved the scenes where she had conflict with Cutter (who is hopelessly in love with her) and it's a no-brainer that I would love an episode where she goes up against him in court. And runs rings around him. Even better, towards the end, she finds out that her client is very, very guilty and has to figure out how to continue her defence in good conscience.

    It's great stuff. Particularly the scenes where Connie goes to Jack for advice. Great stuff from Jack McCoy in this one. In fact, all three lawyers come off as great characters in this episode.

    Brad William Henke (of October Road & Dexter) is stunningly good as the murder suspect. We believe in him every step of the way. Except, it turns out that he is a very, very clever murderer. Great twist. It works because the actor is superb.

    Raising The Bar. Episode 5. "Bagels and Locks" Last week I wondered if every client on this show was gonna turn out to be innocent. This week, both are guilty. Pretty much. An admitted child-rapist is accused of murder. He did the rape, yes, but not the murder. So he's written/played as being beyond sympathy. But Jerry still pulls out all the stops to make sure the guys gets fair treatment from the system. In this one, the cops have ignored the real murderder, in favour of this guy, and Jerry has hours to find the real killer. Things fall into place a little too easily, but it's still a pretty decent story. And I like Jerry.

    I've now stopped liking Michelle. She's relentlessly written as a heartless bitch. So, I'm finally on board with that. I like Melissa Sagemiller (from Sleeper Cell) but I can learn to hate her character, like the writers obviously want me to.

    Bobbi's husband shows up. And he turns out to be a jerk? What a shock that is! Given the fact that Jerry and Bobbi have had 'chemistry' since she first appeared. They are a lock to end up in bed together. But I wish he's end up sleeping with Judge Trudy. That would be interesting.

    Bobbi's case, in this episode, is uninvolving. Probably the weakest one this show has thus far delivered. I didn't care about the guy who was covering up for the drug lord so that his family would be taken care of. And when he got 25 years in prison, I still didn't care.

    30 Rock. Season 3, Episode 3. "The One with the Cast of 'Night Court'" is the first funny episode this year. Tina Fey rocks. I loved the scene where she tried to lure her wild and crazy friend away from Jack with promises of a wild and crazy night on the town. Liz's idea of a wild and crazy night, and her faked enthusiam, are the highlight of the episode.

    Jennifer Aniston (such a funny, funny lady) is perfect for this show. Highlights include: her Happy Birthday song and any time she freaked out on Jack. Alec Baldwin is a perfect foil to her actions. Loved their stuff together, and all his scenes with Tina/Liz.

    Also great to see the Night Court gang back on screen. For the oddest of reasons.

    Keen Eddie

    Keen Eddie. Episode 13. "Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité" Keen Eddie ends with another good story and another great episode.

    Anton. This one is the story on Anton. A dangerous gangster. Who has had all his charts done, and believes in them. Believes in fate. So he is giving himself up to the police. And going to prison. Because the charts have told him it is to be that way. And he totally accepts that. But there are conditions. A woman from his past has to have dinner with him first. Or her boyfriend will die. Eddie must find a way to protect the lovers and convince the gangster that he is misreading his fate/destiny...

    Along the way we get told what Eddie fate/destiny is, and who his true love is. And, in the closing seconds we learn that that person is... Fiona.

    Sienna Miller

    Ah, Fiona. Wonderful Fiona (Sienna Miller). So cute. And her chemistry with Eddie. Amazing. Their friendship is one of the key appeals of this series. They started as enemies, but they got under each other's skin week-after-week and - in the final scene - when we see them walk down the street together we know that they will be lovers someday, because they clearly love one another. I loved, loved seeing that relationship grow.

    I miss this show so much. I watch it every couple of years. Now, sadly, I have to wait a while again until I forget various details and can enjoy it 'fresh' again.

    House. Season 5, Episode 6. "Joy" I love the dark stories on House. I love when they show people being selfish and wrong. In this episode Cuddy is told she is going to be able to adopt a child. But the mother is a horrible weak person. And she makes all her decisions for the wrong reasons. And, in the end, she takes the baby back from Cuddy. It's heart-breaking to watch. But it is great storytelling. My heart broke for Cuddy in this one. Her desire to have a child, this past few seasons, has been extremely well-realised.

    The kiss at the end was great. But what is House playing at? Giving in to his true feelings for Lisa Cuddy? Or just doing this to distract her from crippling emotional heartbreak. Or doing it to distract her, but actually having feelings for her as well?

    Wings. Season 2, Episode 3. "A Little Nightmare Music" David Ogden Stiers guests, and Helen chases him (on his honeymoon) to get an audition. Everytime Thomas Haden Church utters a word, he sends me into peals of laughter. This is also the one where Faye thinks that she reads in the cards that Roy is doomed.

    Highlight? Keen Eddie (Eddie meets his true love on a red bus)
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    Sun, Nov 30, 08 - Pushing Daisies, Kyle XY, Supernatural, Good Morning Miami

    05.30 Pushing Daisies
    06.30 Kyle ZY
    07.30 Supernatural
    03.30 Good Morning Miami

    Pushing Daisies. Season 2, Episode 7. "Robbing Hood" Another delightful visit to the fairy tale world of Pushing Daisies. For the second week in a row, there is a balance between the case-of-the-week and the backstory of all the characters. And the result is fantastic.

    Why, oh why, did they have to waste time sending Olive away to that convent? They should have come back swinging (with Stephen Root and this storyline) and maybe they would not have been cancelled. Seriously. These last two episodes have been two of the very best. Ever.

    That intro alone (Ned and his friends two pets) was one of the very best. I was laughing out loud within a minute of sitting down to watch. That can't be bad. And the show delivered another great laugh later on (when we heard the bear come back to life).

    But humour was not the big hook this week. Neither was the case-of-the-week. No, this was was all about the regular characters and their stories. I'm so hooked.

    Kyle XY. Season 2, Episode 15. "The Future's So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades" A total winner. Recent episodes may have changed the status quo of the series, and brought some ongoing storylines to an ending, but this is a much better episode. In fact, this is one of the very best episodes the show has thus far delivered.

    The a-plot is a tale you can't tell on any other show: Jessi is using her super-powers to gain attention, and it is putting Kyle's secret in jeopardy. And it's not just a great story, the writers manage to infuse it with depth and meaning. Jessi and Kyle have this great conversation about human nature and the lure of celebrity. It's wonderful. Well written. And superbly performed (especially by Matt Dallas. Someone give that man an Emmy!).

    Now that the whole family knows about Kyle we get lots of cool scenes of them trying to figure out ways to protect him and keep his secret. I love that stuff. It's an example of the show avoiding false conflict and writing the characters really well. They do this, too, with Amanda and her relationship with Kyle. There have been several moments where it could have gone wrong and the could have written Amanda as having a fight with Kyle over something that had happened, that she didn't understand. Instead, they write Amanda really well. And now they are doing it with the family. Where each one is shown to be on Kyle's side and willing/wanting to protect him at all costs.

    Hillary and Andy (two character that normally irritate me and lead to embarrassing scenes) are good in this episode, too. For once, Hillary's excesses are toned down somewhat and she seems like she could (almost) be a real person. Josh opting to become a doctor, so he could cure Andy's cancer, was well handled.

    It's a great show. But it's about time the writers/producers figured out how to use the character of Tom Foss. Nicholas Lea is underused. The character vanishes when the story has no need of him. It would be more interesting to keep him around. He's so at-odds with the world that Kyle lives in, it would be a weekly joy to watch him try to adjust.

    Supernatural. Season 2, Episode 2. "The Kids Are Alright" Wow. Where do I begin? What do I write about first? I loved everything in this episode.

    The guest stars. Cindy Sampson is the most beautiful guest star the show has ever had (together with Taylor Cole). I was smitten with her when she appeared in Reaper last season (and I hope she returns). Kathleen Munroe carries most of the episode alone and she is terrific. Her best scene is the one where she drowns her child. Haunting stuff.

    The story. This was almost like an episode of "The Twilight Zone" or "The Hitchhiker". Most of it was devoted to Katie and her mum alone in their house. And the brothers, when they did appear, were split up. So, in all respects, it didn't feel like an episode of Supernatural. And, again, let me say: that stuff with the mother driving her child into the water... haunting stuff.

    Mini-Dean. How great was all that stuff? The kid was terrific and the idea that Dean would have a son that was exactly like him is totally inspired. I wish the child had turned out to be his. It would be great for the character to have to learn to adapt to being a father. The child could appear every few episodes and it would give Dean insight into his father's point of view and - even better - it would give the series a nice end-point for the future. Dean would have some place to go, somewhere to call home if he ever stopped hunting. I found myself wishing at the very end of the episode that Lisa was lying to Dean to protect all of them. I kept watching closely to see if their was any hint of this, but I saw none. Darn. I want to see her and the kid again. Particularly her.

    It was scary. Right from the opening death (the guy with the motorised saw) this was a scary episode. Creepy kids are... creepy. And these creepy kids were extremely well cast. Margot Berner was superb. If she popped up beside me, and spoke in that monotone, I'd scream too.

    The blonde chick is a demon! Wow. I never saw that coming. And it really opens up the show's backstory and storylines once again. Clever, clever stuff. Just when I thought they had moved on from Sam's background they drag me back in. I love it. Katie Cassidy doesn't strike me as very tough, though. More like a girl who is pretending to be tough. Not sure that that is what the producers were going for with the character.

    Cindy Sampson, the story, mini-Dean, the scare-factor and the shocks and twists. I loved everything in this episode.

    Good Morning Miami. Episode 10. "If It's Not One Thing, It's a Mother" One of the most imporant episodes of GMM. It is well written/performed, it's does a great job with all of the characters and it is funny.

    Unlike early episodes, which wrote Jake as selfish and Gavin as nice, this one makes Jake seem like a very decent guy - who happens to be falling in love with a co-worker - and Gavin as an arrogant jerk who doesn't know when to shut up and doesn't really appreciate what he has in Dylan. Matt Letscher is playing against type, but he pulls it off.

    Frank gets a great storyline. He gets his tie caught in the photocopier and won't cut it (to cut himself free) because it was given to him by his ex-wife. His dilemma is funny, and heartfelt. Lucia is nice to him, and tries to help. A bold advancement for a character that is usually used for one-note jokes.

    Sister Brenda doesn't appear, and Penny is under-used. Which, I suppose, goes a ways towards explaining how two of the regular characters were cut after 13 episodes. The show didn't need them. Penny could easily have substituted for Lucia in this episode and it would have worked just as well. Better, actually.

    But, even as it stands (Penny-lite and all) this is still a very good episode.

    Highlight? Supernatural (mini-Dean)
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    Sat, Nov 29, 08 - Rising Damp, Cavemen, Corner Gas, Venture Bros

    10.30 Rising Damp
    11.00 Cavemen
    11.30 Corner Gas
    12.00 The Venture Bros.

    Rising Damp. Season 2, Episode 4. "Moonlight and Roses" While this is still a very funny episode, it is much different to most other episodes of RD. It's a bit more sad. Rigsby wears his heart on a sleeve a bit more than usual in this one, he tries very hard to win Miss Jones and plays a very mean trick to try and derail her impending marriage. But it fails: Miss Jones still moves out at the end to get married.

    Most of the humour in Rising Damp comes from the tenants (mostly just Philip) playing tricks on Rigsby. Rigsby (mostly) deserves it, because he's a know-it-all and should be taught a lesson from time to time. But this one is a bit different. He really is in love with Miss Jones. To their credit the boys try and shield him from heartbreak at the very start of the show, but - when that fails to work - Philip goes all out and sets him the landlord up for a fall. It's very, very funny. But, for the first time in the series, you cannot help but feel very sorry for Rigsby. He might have his flaws, but the guy did love Miss Jones.

    His trick to ruin her marriage is very mean (funny, but mean). Seldom does he do something so out of character. Desperation, I suppose, drove him to it...

    Gabrielle Rose (of Robson Arms) joins the cast in this one and makes a great first impression. When Brenda shows up in a very revealing top and tells Rigsby that she is a nude model, the show delivers one of it's best-ever moments. Watching the inept advances of the lecherous landlord is a real delight.

    Cavemen. It's a bit too preaching (which can get embarrassing) but this is still one of the very best episodes. In this one, Joel is trying to bounce back from his break-up with Kate. When he hears that she hated his clothes he gives his wardrobe a total overhaul, and the entire plot thread yields many laughs. It's a good storyline. It captures truth: The moment after a relationship has ended when you still bump into your ex a lot and try to give yourself a total make-over so they will take you back. Highlight? Kate's mom talking about Joel's clothes.

    But Andy gets most of the scenes in the episode. This is good for two reasons: Andy is coming close to overtaking Nick as my favourite character in the show, and his girlfriend (Stephanie Lemelin) is both hot and adorable. In equal measure. Not an easy one to pull off. I know. I do it every day :)

    Andy takes a stab at stand-up comedy. It's a wild ride. He sucks, gets great, becomes a huge hit, learns a lesson about racial stereotypes and goes back to sucking again.

    When it gets preachy (on race issues) this episode veers into the territory of embarrassment but when it stays funny, it is very, very funny.

    Corner Gas. Season 5, Episode 7. "Buzz Driver" Written by series creator/star Brent Butt this is a strong contender for funniest ever episode of Corner Gas. It seems as if every line of dialogue is a fresh joke, and the situations are inspired. Not only are the plots great in isolation, Butt is able to make them collide to great effect whenever he wants.

    And his cast are a dream. Nancy Robertson has almost overtaken Eric Peterson as my favourite cast member. Wanda is 'jacked-up' on energy drink in this one, and Wanda is hilarious. Easily the funniest thing in the episode. And I say this about an episode which also has Oscar turning a bunch of kids from a Church Group into a dangerous mob, while Hank decides to turn his truck into a advertisement for The Ruby. His 'aggressive' marketing involves parking across two lanes of traffic so everyone has to read his sign!!

    Yes, Oscar and Hank are great in this episode, but Wanda steals the show. Highlight? Emma (knowing a good thing when she sees it) asks Wanda to call over over to her house and give her some help with the gardening. Jacked-up Wanda (brimming with energy) immediately agrees and announces that she will jog on over. Next we see her run off at high speed. And the camera (wisely) lingers as tiny (adorable) Wanda runs away so fast she pretty much rises a cloud of dust in her wake.

    So Corner Gas. Five season in and they deliver (probably) their best episode. Not bad, not bad at all...



    The Venture Bros. Episode 1. "Dia de los Dangerous" A good episode. But not a great episode. And certainly an odd way to start the series. The Venture family (and Brock, their protector) are in Mexico. And they cross paths (by accident) with super-villain The Monarch, whose henchmen kidnap Dead and Hank. There are lots of laughs to be had, but it's unusual (I feel) for a first episode to showcase the untypical episodes in a series. Even more unusual, it starts with the four heroes split apart and doing their own thing rather than arriving together (and being introduced to the viewer) as a team.

    Never mind. This is still a good episode. The best bits revolve around The Monarch and Dr. Venture's total apathy towards his sons. Brock (the show's best character, voiced by the awesome Patrick Warburton) is sidelined in this one. He only appears for a few scenes. Maybe that's why it's not one of my favourite episodes...

    Highlight? Corner Gas (Wanda running)
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