So it's now official. The three TV shows I watch on a regular basis - Lost, Supernatural and Veronica Mars - are all coming back, and all staying (for now) in the same time slots they were in. Odds are I will be perptually behind on at least one of these, since we tend to tape them and watch them a bit later, but at least there are no conflicts right now.
Odds are, meanwhile, that I won't be adding anything to my short list anytime soon. There is one new show on all five networks' schedules that sounds good to me - a midseason crime drama on NBC about an NYC Irish family, created by Paul Haggis. Haggis, long before he did Crash and after he did
Odds are, meanwhile, that I won't be adding anything to my short list anytime soon. There is one new show on all five networks' schedules that sounds good to me - a midseason crime drama on NBC about an NYC Irish family, created by Paul Haggis. Haggis, long before he did Crash and after he did
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So it's now official. The three TV shows I watch on a regular basis - Lost, Supernatural and Veronica Mars - are all coming back, and all staying (for now) in the same time slots they were in. Odds are I will be perptually behind on at least one of these, since we tend to tape them and watch them a bit later, but at least there are no conflicts right now.
Odds are, meanwhile, that I won't be adding anything to my short list anytime soon. There is one new show on all five networks' schedules that sounds good to me - a midseason crime drama on NBC about an NYC Irish family, created by Paul Haggis. Haggis, long before he did <i>Crash</i> and after he did <Due South</i>, created a show called <i>EZ Streets</i> for CBS, about good cops and bad Irish gangsters in a decaying city. . The show was brilliant and lasted two months. Is it too much to hope that lightning will strike again?
Otherwise, we get a vast number of shows using limited timeframes and massive arcs. That is, everyone wants to create the next 24 or Lost. But then, what else is new?
Odds are, meanwhile, that I won't be adding anything to my short list anytime soon. There is one new show on all five networks' schedules that sounds good to me - a midseason crime drama on NBC about an NYC Irish family, created by Paul Haggis. Haggis, long before he did <i>Crash</i> and after he did <Due South</i>, created a show called <i>EZ Streets</i> for CBS, about good cops and bad Irish gangsters in a decaying city. . The show was brilliant and lasted two months. Is it too much to hope that lightning will strike again?
Otherwise, we get a vast number of shows using limited timeframes and massive arcs. That is, everyone wants to create the next 24 or Lost. But then, what else is new?
(no subject)
Date: May. 19th, 2006 01:33 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: May. 29th, 2006 12:45 am (UTC)