Pilot Inspektor: An Advance Review of FOX's "Sons of Tucson"

I really wanted to like FOX's comedy series Sons of Tucson.

After all, I loved the pilot script for Sons of Tucson, written by Tommy Dewey and Greg Bratman, which I found to be really witty and fun and had the same sort of enthusiasm and madcap action as the early episodes of FOX's own Malcolm in the Middle.

For those of you not in the know, Sons of Tucson, which will launch on FOX in midseason, is about sadsack hustler Ron Buffkin (Reaper's Tyler Labine), who works at a local sporting goods store (and I use the term "works" extremely loosely) and lives out of his car. In the course of a day filled with his usual small-time grifts and general shrugging off of both determination and honesty, he comes across Robby (How I Met Your Mother's Davis Cleveland), Gary (Doubt's Frank Dolce), and Brandon (Entourage's Troy Gentile). The Gunderson boys have turned up in Tucson after their banker father was imprisoned for stock fraud and given a sentence of twenty years. Rather than end up in foster care, they've opted to move into one of his safe houses and, flush with cash, trick the authorities into thinking that they have parental supervision.

Which is where Ron comes in. The boys--short fuse Robby, street-smart Gary, and thick-as-two-short-planks Brandon--want Ron to pose as their father in order to enroll them in the local school. Ron meanwhile needs some kids to pose as his children in order to convince his elderly grandmother that some valuable military figurines would be in good hands... so he can sell them off and use the proceeds to get a menacing money-lender off his back.

So what went wrong? For one, the completed pilot diverged strongly from the script draft that I read, opting for middle-of-the-road obvious physical humor rather than the droll wittiness that was inherent in the original script. A subplot about a loan shark (Jake Busey) whom Ron owes money to--and who keeps him and the boys hostage at Ron's grandmother's house--was so over the top and unfunny (and went on for so long) that it nearly hijacked the entire episode.

Additionally, I couldn't shake the feeling that instead of Ron being some sort of hustler mastermind, the people around him were just plain stupid, a situation that gets really old, really fast. A sob story about the boys' mother drowning during Hurricane Katrina seems not only in poor taste but also doesn't make any sense whatsoever. (Which could be the point, but really this shtick will turn sour quickly.) Given that Katrina happened years ago, how is this really an excuse as to why the kids don't have any school transcripts or records?

Likewise, Ron meets hyperactive troublemaker Robby's hot teacher Maggie Morales (Saints and Sinners' Natalie Martinez) at the sporting goods store early on in the episode and spins a web of deceit where he tells customers that his brother's family was hacked to bits in a freak chainsaw accident in the Pacific Northwest and he has to jump on a plane. Maggie recognizes him at the private school later but seems to have amnesia about Ron's whole cock-and-bull story about his family. Nor does she wonder how a man with an ill-fitting suit and a job at a sporting goods store is affording to sent three kids to private school without tuition assistance.

It would be one thing if Ron were so quick-witted and charismatic that his lies simply slid off of the minds of his con victims but, as I said earlier, the result just makes the people around him--whether it's his grandmother, Maggie, or the school principal--just seem really naive, gullible, or just plain stupid. And that's a problem. Yes, Ron is a class-A loser but I was hoping that he'd also come across as an unfocused criminal genius who's not rich because he hasn't applied his grifting skills appropriately.

Ultimately, Sons of Tucson tries so hard to be clever and quirky that it fails to be winsome. The series should aim for sly smarts rather than cartoonish absurdity. If the writers could learn anything from Labine's Ron, it's that they shouldn't have to push the con quite so hard.



Sons of Tucson will debut in midseason on FOX.

Channel Surfing: Comedy Central Resurrects "Futurama," Shawn Ryan Back at FX, "Mad Men" Returns (and Runs into 11 O'Clock Hour), and More

Welcome to your Wednesday morning television briefing.

Who said dead means dead? Comedy Central has signed a deal with studio 20th Century Fox Television for twenty-six new episodes of long-dead series Futurama, which it will launch in 2010. "When we brought back Family Guy several years ago, everyone said that it was a once in a lifetime thing -- that canceled series stay canceled and cannot be revived," said 20th Century Fox TV Chairmen Gary Newman and Dana Walden in a joint statement. "But Futurama was another series that fans simply demanded we bring back, and we couldn’t have been happier when Matt and David agreed that there were many more stories yet to tell." Series, which features the voices of Billy West, Katey Sagal, and John DiMaggio, ended its run on FOX in 2003 and has since aired repeats on Comedy Central, as well as the DVD-based episodes. "It's sweet, and basically everybody who has worked on the show wants to come back," said co-creator Matt Groening. "I choose to believe it's more than the economic situation. People had a good time working on this show." And it's worth noting that the studio still has an option to license the new installments to a broadcast network... like FOX. (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files, Variety)

FX has ordered a pilot for one-hour dramedy Terriers from writer/executive producer Ted Griffin (Ocean's Eleven) and executive producer Shawn Ryan (The Shield). Series, from Fox 21 and Ryan's MidKidd Prods., revolves around a former cop turned private eye who forms a partnership with a younger hotshot who "solve crimes while trying to avoid danger and responsibility." (Variety, Hollywood Reporter)

AMC will launch Season Three of award-winning period drama Mad Men on Sunday, August 16th at 10 pm ET/PT and the seaspm premiere will air with limited commercial interruptions. And the cabler has been able to reach a compromise with creator Matthew Weiner about the additional two minutes of commercial ad time they sought to include in Mad Men's upcoming season, with the episodes now slated to run over into the 11 pm hour in order to accommodate the additional ads. "It's wonderful to have partners who can respond to both a business and creative challenge in such a satisfying way," Weiner told Variety. "We're thrilled that we've crafted a way to maximize our business and at the same time meet everyone's demands -- those of our marketers and advertisers, those of our creative team and those of our viewers," said Joel Stillerman, SVP of original programming, production and digital content at AMC. (Variety)

Casting roundup: Michael Kenneth Williams (The Wire), Dabney Coleman (Heartland), and Paz de la Huerta (Amsterdam) have been cast in Martin Scorsese's HBO period drama pilot Boardwalk Empire, which started shooting yesterday. Elsewhere, Adam Jamal Craig (The Office) has come aboard CBS' upcoming drama series NCIS: Los Angeles as a regular; he'll play Dominic Vale, a new young agent at the Office of Special Projects. (Hollywood Reporter)

Showtime has renewed Nurse Jackie for a second season... just a day after launching the series to the highest rated premiere numbers in Showtime's history. (Televisionary)

Going to Comic-Con San Diego this year? E! Online's Watch with Kristin has an up-to-the-minute roundup of the TV-related panels that have so far leaked out ahead of the official announcement. They include panels for Psych on Thursday, The Big Bang Theory and Past Life on Friday, Chuck, Eastwick, V, Fringe, Human Target, Vampire Diaries, and MythBusters on Saturday, and Smallville and Supernatural on Sunday. There's also a Wednesday evening WB Pilot Preview Night planned. Still to come: days and times for such series as Dexter, Dollhouse, Flash Forward, Ghost Whisperer, Legend of the Seeker, Lost, and True Blood. (E! Online's Watch with Kristin)

ABC yesterday announced via press release premiere dates for their new and returning series this fall. They include:

Saturday, September 5
8-11:30 pm: Saturday Night Football

Friday, September 11
10-11 pm: 20/20

Monday, September 21
8-10 pm: Dancing with the Stars
10-11 pm: Castle

Tuesday, September 22
8-10 pm: Dancing with the Stars (special two-hour episode)
10-11 pm: The Forgotten

Wednesday, September 23
8-9 pm: Dancing with the Stars the Results Show (special day and time)
9-9:30 pm: Modern Family
9:30-10 pm: Cougar Town

Thursday, September 24
8-9 pm: FlashForward
9-10 pm: Grey’s Anatomy

Sunday, September 27
7-9 pm: Extreme Makeover: Home Edition (two-hour season premiere)
9-10 pm: Desperate Housewives

Tuesday, September 29
8-9 pm: Shark Tank
9-10 pm: Dancing with the Stars the Results Show (regular day & time period premiere)

Wednesday, September 30
8-8:30 pm: Hank
8:30-9 pm: The Middle

Sunday, October 4
7-8 pm: America’s Funniest Home Videos
8-9 pm: Extreme Makeover: Home Edition (regular time period premiere)

Friday, October 9
8-10 pm: Ugly Betty (two-hour season premiere)

Friday, October 16
8-9 pm: Supernanny
9-10 pm: Ugly Betty (regular time period premiere)

SAG members have ratified the two-year feature-primetime contract with an overwhelming vote of support of 78 percent in favor of the new deal. The announcement of the vote's outcome ends the year-long conflict between the guild and the studios. "This decisive vote gets our members back to work with immediate pay raises," said SAG intermin national executive director David White, "and puts SAG in a strong position for the future." (Variety)

Stay tuned.

Paging Jackie Peyton: Showtime Renews "Nurse Jackie" for Second Season!

It's as simple as drawing blood.

Just a day after airing the season premiere of new comedy Nurse Jackie, pay cabler Showtime has renewed the Edie Falco-led series for a second season.

The news about the second season pickup of the series, produced by Lionsgate Television, was broken by TVWeek.com's Josef Adalian, who reported that "Jackie earned the best premiere ratings for any Showtime debut since 2004, when Nielsen changed the way it computed premium cable average. The Falco comedy attracted 1.35 million viewers in its two combined Monday runs, according to the ratings company."

In other words: wowsers.

If you couldn't tell from my glowing reviews of Nurse Jackie (and, oh, here), I'm already madly in love with this beautiful and hysterical series and am pleased as punch that Showtime would give the series such a ringing endorsement by picking it up for a second year so soon after launching it. Something very happily tells me we'll be hanging out with Jackie Peyton for many, many years to come.

Nurse Jackie airs Monday evenings at 10:30 pm ET/PT on Showtime.

Pilot Inspektor: An Advance Review of CW's "The Beautiful Life"

Imagine a series that features some very beautiful people indulging in some very dubious behavior in Manhattan. Picturing Gossip Girl? Guess again.

The Beautiful Life, launching this fall on the CW, does approximate the decadence and excess of that other drama series but it takes place in the demimonde of the modeling world rather than in the privileged corridors of power on the Upper East Side... and it does so with a flair and distinctive filmic style all its own, creating a darkly frothy series about the downside of famous faces and fast-made fortunes.

Written by Adam Giaudrone (Swingtown) and executive produced by Mike Kelley (Swingtown), Carol Barbee (Jericho), and Ashton Kutcher, The Beautiful Life follows the personal and professional lives of some of New York's modeling elite as they head out to go-sees, walk the runway, issue catty remarks, and crowd together (among other things) in an underlighted New York apartment building with a picturesque view of the Brooklyn bridge.

I had an opportunity to watch the pilot presentation for The Beautiful Life and was struck by how much more gritty and compelling it was than I had anticipated. It also balances a soapy plot about superhot models with a cutting look at what really goes on behind the catwalk. It certainly doesn't hurt to have Zak Posen himself turn up playing himself to lend the proceedings some authenticity.

As for the models, they are motley bunch of bristly personalities, jaded egos, and killer cheekbones. For the most part, anyway. There's newly crowned It Girl Raina (Last House on the Left's Sara Paxton) who gets the opportunity of a lifetime when she gets to wear Posen's showstopper of a dress in his fashion show, ripping the coveted slot away from scandal-laden supermodel Sonja (The OC's Mischa Barton), who's been out of commission in Rio the last six months. (Was it drugs? A vacation? Rehab? I'm not telling.) Despite Sonja's protestations and the jealousy of fellow up-and-comer Marissa Delfina (Secret Diary of a Call Girl's Ashley Madekwe), Raina does make it out there in that dress... and suddenly becomes the talk of the fashion business after wowing the crowds.

Meanwhile, Iowa farm boy Chris Andrews (The Line's Benjamin Hollingsworth), in New York on a family vacation (which his farmer dad says he'll be paying off "for the next three harvests") gets discovered by lecherous agent Simon (Dusan Dukic), who has more on his mind than just modeling when it comes to Chris. Not surprisingly, Chris and Raina get thrown together on several separate occasions and their shared good nature and affability make them fast friends, though there are definite sparks between them, even as Raina conceals some secret from her past.

Yet not is all right in model world. Sonja is determined to claw her way back to the top if she has to, especially as the head of Covet Modeling Agency, Claudia Foster (Friends' Elle Macpherson), seems to regard her as little more than a has-been. But a Versace campaign beckons... that is, if the job doesn't go to Raina. Meanwhile, the rest of the models, including Egan (As the World Turns' Jordan Woolley), Issac (High School Musical's Corbin Bleu), and Kai (Twelve's Nico Tortorella) make life as difficult as possible for newcomer Chris, who winds up making his feelings towards Simon clear enough at the agency's anniversary party.

While there's a certain shakiness to the start (not helped at all by the fact that some of the exposition--especially that surrounding farm boy Chris and his family--is laughably over the top), the pilot presentation quickly finds its feet even as it dazzles with an elegant grittiness that's miles away from the glossiness of Gossip Girl. (Special kudos go out to director Christian Duguay for the backstage scenes at the fashion show, Chris' photo shoot, and Raina's runway moment.)

Anchoring the cast is the remarkable Paxton, who manages to charm with little more than a smile and a tilt of the head. That she manages to come off as sunny and optimistic (though devious in her own way) without seeming Pollyanna-ish is no small feat. And the always delightful Ashley Madekwe (so memorable as Bambi on Secret Diary of a Call Girl's second season) brings an energy and edge to her role as Raina's frenemy Marissa, a girl prone to offering "advice" just cutting enough to make you take a misstep in your Jimmy Choos. I'm hoping that subsequent episodes will give Benjamin Hollingsworth's Chris more to do than glower and reluctantly take his clothes off but here he's affable enough that you buy his fish-out-of-water spiel. (I'm less than sold on Misha Barton, who seems to be channeling a slightly older yet just as spoiled Marissa Cooper here.)

Ultimately, The Beautiful Life is a surprising treat: a rare combination of grittiness and glamour filled with heaps of potential. It's a slick and stylish production that doesn't forget our obsession with pretty faces... or the pettiness that often lurks behind such glittering facades.





The Beautiful Life will air Wednesdays at 9 pm ET/PT this fall on the CW.

Talk Back: Showtime's "Nurse Jackie"

"I don't like chatty. Quiet and mean; those are my people." - Jackie Peyton (Edie Falco)

I've been spreading the word the past few weeks about the beauty and grace (not to mention dark humor) of Showtime's comedy series Nurse Jackie, which finally premiered last night. You've read both my advance reviews of the first two episodes of Nurse Jackie AND the first six episodes as well but now that the premiere episode has aired, I'm curious to hear what you thought of this series.

Did you fall head over heels in love with this series as much as I did? Are you rooting for Edie Falco's deeply flawed Jackie Peyton? Did you love the supporting cast? Are you entranced by Jackie's world? Were you surprised by the ending in which she returns home to her husband (!) and kids (!!!)? Did you gasp when she flushed that psychotic diplomat's ear down the toilet?

And, most importantly, do you plan to watch Nurse Jackie again next week?

Talk back here.

Pendragon Aflight: Anthony Head Talks "Ripper," "Buffy," "Merlin"

Wonder just what ever happened to Joss Whedon's Buffy prequel Ripper?

Speaking on a press call last week to promote his new series Merlin (which launches later this month on NBC), former Buffy star Anthony Head addressed some questions about that long-stalled Ripper project, plans which Head says were "sideswiped by Dollhouse."

Head, who plays Uther Pendragon on the NBC/BBC series, was candid about the likelihood of donning Rupert Giles' specs for another go-around as the much-beloved Watcher, created by Joss Whedon.

"Ripper is a kind of a - it's a funny old thing," said Head. "Whether it ever gets made or not... if it does ever get made, I'll probably be an octogenarian by the time it does. But it is something I actually introduced Joss to [Doctor Who producer] Julie Gardner, who was a producer with the BBC. She has long wanted to do something with the project. There are obviously complications with Ripper because there are lots of tie ins. There's FOX, there's the Kazuis. There's all sorts of stuff that, basically it isn't just a simple question of Joss making a series that he wants to make as far as anything concerned with Buffy. There are a lot of people down the line that would have a say. And that's part of the equation."

"We've had conversations about working together again," said Head about future collaboration with Whedon. "It's, I don't know, something that may happen again in the future. I hope so. [...] He came up with an idea, pitched it at lunch with Eliza and from that moment on it was a done deal. I don't think, I may be wrong, but I don't think any of the Buffy crew could really, well not crew because there's a lot of Buffy crew working on Dollhouse, but actors would really fit comfortably in Dollhouse because you'd automatically be, you know, you'd be taken to Faith."

"And Eliza is not Faith in Dollhouse," he continued. "She's a fascinating character that, you know, lives a totally different life from Faith and it came out through the life of Faith that, you know, she'd like to - she'd like to play something different than what Eliza is usually asked to play. And he came up with the idea that she could play something different every week. And from there Dollhouse was born. But I would love to work with him again. I think he's a fascinating writer, fascinating director. He's a lovely, lovely guy. I'm very, very fond of him and I would - I'd, you know, I don't use the word genius lightly but I think he is one."

"I think [Joss] really is a great writer," said Head. "I would like to see him make more movies. I think, you know, I thought Serenity was a funny film and actually it was hugely well received by critics and at the same time was not possibly marketed as well as it might have been. It was a great film. He makes writing really count. It's not just writing for writing sake. He gives everything a life and a reason. With Dollhouse, I think he had problems initially with Fox because they wanted one show and he was sticking readily with his guns. And I think they've gone with it now because they realized that ultimately it's wonderfully complex and i all the characters have got all sorts of neuroses and problems. I mean it's a fascinating world that he's created with Dollhouse."

"And it's what they've done with Merlin; by creating a world in which magic is forbidden on pain of death, they've created a very, very interesting world for a young Merlin to exist or not to, you know, basically fight for his life," said Head. "A good drama is about conflict. And if like Joss Whedon you can allow comedy to come through to support your drama, it makes the thrills and spills that much more pertinent and that much more poignant when you do get it. When you get the shop horror it gives you a bed to feed it in. You know, and then ultimately that's what makes its appeal so wide."

So, given how much time has passed since Whedon first approached Head about Ripper, have their plans changed significantly?

"Originally when he pitched [Ripper] to me, he didn't have to pitch it very fast, I was like yes," remembered Head. "It was a series. And it was Giles as this sad lonely man in England without a real reason to be. And it was pretty much ghost stories. Week-by-week, some ghost story would somehow affect him."

"And then he said that he didn't [feel]--I mean he by that time I think he had been affected by Angel--the need to write a weekly story," he went on. "I think he found at that point the drive was different. And so he suggested this one film he was going to make. And he told me the story that he'd written and it's absolutely beautiful. And I hope that one day it gets made whether it's the guise of Ripper or whether we just sell it as a story, a one-off TV movie. It's a lovely, lovely story. It's kind of a ghost story. It's also about a man investigating his own soul and it's fascinating and lovely and sad and it's classic ghost reading. I hope we get to make it one day. And from there on in he was going to, you know, if it was successful maybe he could have been convinced to do a series. And as I say he's back in the seat of doing a weekly series with Dollhouse. Maybe he can be convinced otherwise. But never say never but at the same time, I think it's on the shelf for a while."

"I don't think we'll every really know [what Ripper means]," said Head. "I think Ripper just means it's the darker side of someone that suddenly see that you never every knew existed. And it's a very dark side. And we got to see some of it in Buffy. You know, he's the only guy who killed an innocent man in Buffy. Well Faith did. But Faith is bad. But he smothered somebody who ultimately was a innocent bystander. And so [had] some darkness. That's Ripper."

So is Head still surprised by all the attention he gets from Buffy fans years after its cancellation?

"It wasn't cancelled. It was never cancelled," said Head, chidingly. "Just we took a bow and decided to basically that he had said enough. Although having said that and I haven't seen it all, but Season Eight is alive and kicking in comic book form."

"No, I'm not surprised [by the continued support of Buffy fans] inasmuch as ultimately Buffy was an extraordinary piece of writing," he continued. "And because of that, the fact that it was used by universities as an example of modern writing. I'm amazed when I got to LA and I go and meet producers who came up as writers and Buffy was almost their bible and they almost genuflect. So it's always very flattering but it's nothing to do with me. It's because I worked with Joss Whedon. What does amaze me, and the fact that I love, is that I'm constantly met by young people and I think that they've seen something else I'm in, Little Britain or Merlin and Buffy goes - I don't know what it does in the States but it goes round and round. It's cyclical here and it keeps garnering young audiences. And long may that be so because it is great TV."

"But one of the things that appeals about Buffy was the fact that it was so multi generational," Head reflected. "It was - even though FOX didn't market it this way, FOX marketed it for 15-year-olds to 25-year-olds. [...] It is truly universal appeal and that is the secret of Merlin as well. It has this extraordinary general, multi-generational appeal that people come up to me in the street and say thank you. I go it's nothing to do with me. I didn't write it. But they say this is truly a show that we can sit down with our kids and everybody loves it. Everybody - it's a truly family show. And there's not that many shows that parents and grandparents and brothers and sisters, teens, 25-year-olds down to the age of six can actually enjoy a show together. There's something in it for everybody. And it's once every few years a show like it comes along... It's kind of very simple, very basic premise but it's a very clever premise. And as I say, it somehow appeals to everyone."

Has Head been typecast then since he first played Rupert Giles on Buffy?

"Actors generally, you get a recurring role in this and a recurring role in that," said Head. "I mean I've been very, very fortunate to play leads in a number of series; and very different types of things. And to a certain extent I've worked quite hard not to be typecast. You know, when initially when I came back from Buffy there were quite of offers of professors and the occasional librarian but they were largely professors. There was an episode of Doctor Who that I did. And initially I balked at it because it was headmaster and then I read that it was a headmaster who ate children and ultimately was actually a demon who flew. I kind of - I went one round and it was a great episode and it was great fun to do."

"But it's more than that," he continued. "You know, trying to find something, which will develop your career, will take you on to something new and will open people's minds up. I mean Giles for me was a huge, huge turning point because it was the first character role that I had played. And up to that point in England I was playing romantic leads. You know, that to a certain extent was not limiting but it basically it was just going in one direction. And the thing that Buffy gave me was an opportunity to show people that I did other stuff and it was the first time I'd really been - even though Giles wasn't necessarily a comic role, there was a lot of comedy in it."

"And so it gave the producers of Little Britain the idea that I could play a straight man in a comedy and he plays it absolutely straight down the line. But there has to be some comedy. Do you know what I mean? So Matt and David, I think, basically saw something in me that they thought would work in a comedy. So since then I've done quite a lot of comedy, per se. And it's great fun to be allowed to go from one genre to another. And go, you know, to do musicals the same as well. I'm very, very fortunate."

Merlin premieres Sunday, June 21st at 8 pm ET/PT on NBC.

TV on DVD: "Mistresses: Volume One"

Mistresses isn't quite a relationship drama, although it does focus on the romantic--and often illicit--entanglements affecting four female friends. Rather, it's something more akin to a thriller: sleek and seductive with a hint of menace.

The first volume of British drama series Mistresses, which encapsulates the series' two season run earlier this year on BBC America, is available today for sale as a four-disc set. It tells the story of four very different women who find themselves dealing with complicated and complex relationships as they juggle the dual specters of career and personal fulfillment.

But don't let the title put you off from enjoying this complex and provocative series. Yes, the twelve episodes contain more than a heaping dose of sex and scandal but there's also a perilous throughline that runs beneath the surface, giving Mistresses the feel of a noir thriller that asks questions about coincidence, fate, and manipulation.

Brilliant physician Katie (Blackpool's Sarah Parish) falls for a married patient with a terminal illness and mercy kills him... only to come face to face with his twenty-something son Sam (The Tudors' Max Brown) who knows that his father was having an affair and wants to unmask his father's lover. And, against her better judgment, Katie soon finds herself increasingly drawn to Sam sexually, despite their vast age difference and the burning secret Katie strives to conceal from him.

Kindly Trudi (The Inspector Lynley Mysteries' Sharon Small), widowed after 9/11, keeps receiving strange phone calls that she believes could be her missing husband, whose body was never recovered. When she receives a £1 million check from the 9/11 fund, she also happens to get asked out by divorced dad Richard (The Office's Patrick Baladi). Is this the start of a new era for Trudi? Could be. Or are the two incidences related? Trudi questions whether her relationship with Richard is built on truth or something far more nefarious.

Ambitious attorney Siobhan (Shark's Orla Brady) discovers that her sex life with her husband Hari (Spooks' Raza Jaffrey) has been transformed into a never-ending effort to produce a child. Despite being in love with Hari, she quickly finds herself drawn into a series of sexual escapades with her co-worker Dominic (Sensitive Skin's Adam Rayner). She learns that Hari is infertile but then she becomes pregnant... with Dominic's child. Can she tell her husband the truth? Or will she keep this fact to herself?

Sexually irrepressible Jessica (Party Animals' Shelley Conn) works as a party planner. She's involved in a mindless affair with her married boss Simon (Adam Astill) and is satisfied with her life as the other woman... until she's assigned to plan a wedding for a lesbian couple, Alex (Fringe's Anna Torv) and Lisa. Thrown together with Alex, Jessica feels an instant connection with her, though Jessica is thrown by her attraction to another woman. But she's tempted to give into the spark between them and throw caution to the wind.

Ultimately, Mistresses: Volume 1 is compelling, dark viewing and the perfect addition to the DVD library of any fan of British television, relationship series, or indeed haunting thrilers.



Mistresses: Volume One is available today on DVD with a suggested retail price of $59.98. Or pick it up in the Televisionary store for just $44.99.

Channel Surfing: Katee Sackhoff Clocks in for "24," Dominic Monaghan Presses "Flash Forward," "Earl" Could Live on TBS, and More

Welcome to your (very early) Tuesday morning television briefing.

In a rather major casting coup, FOX's 24 has cast former Battlestar Galactica star Katee Sackhoff as a series regular in Day Eight, where she will play Dana Walsh, a "highly respected and down-to-earth data analyst at the new and improved New York branch of CTU" who is romantically involved with Freddie Prinze Jr.'s Davis Cole and has a "skeleton in her closet she's trying desperately to keep hidden." Sackhoff joins such Day Eight players as Prinze, Mykelti Williamson, Jennifer Westfeldt, Chris Diamantopoulous, John Boyd, and Anil Kapoor. (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

It's now believed that Lost's Dominic Monaghan will be joining the cast of ABC's Flash Forward this fall. IGN's Eric Goldman is reporting, citing reports from an undisclosed insider, that Monaghan will be joining Flash Forward and that the actor, who played Charlie Pace on Lost, will "likely have a major role" on the series. Still, ABC isn't commenting at this time. "There is a lot of speculation out there right now," said an ABC spokesperson, "but we're not confirming any casting at this point." (IGN)

Reports of My Name is Earl's demise may have been premature. Variety's Cynthia Littleton is reporting that studio 20th Century Fox Television is in discussions with cabler TBS about a possible thirteen-episode run. "The talks for new episodes are said to be in the very preliminary stages," writes Littleton, "and it's far from certain that a deal will be reached, insiders cautioned." (Variety)

Rufus Sewell (Eleventh Hour), Ian McShane (Kings), Matthew Macfadyen (Spooks), Sarah Parish (The Holiday), Eddie Redmayne (The Other Boleyn Girl), Hayley Atwell (Brideshead Revisited), and Donald Sutherland (Dirty Sexy Money) have signed on to star in Tandem and Muse's eight-hour international mini-series Pillars of the Earth, based on Ken Follett's novel of the same name. Shooting begins June 22nd for a launch date in the later part of 2010. So far, no US or UK broadcast networks have come on board to co-produce though the production has a US DVD sales deal with Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. (Hollywood Reporter)

USA is launching Season Four of Psych and Season Eight of Monk (the series' last) on August 7th while Burn Notice will wrap the first half of its season on August 6th before returning in early 2010. (Futon Critic)

In other Burn Notice news, producers are trying to lure Sharon Gless' former Cagney & Lacey co-star Tyne Dale to guest star in an episode slated to air in early 2010, according to Michael Ausiello. (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

David Letterman is said to be in talks about remaining at the helm of CBS' Late Show for three more years, through the 2011-12 season, though the series will see a reduction in license fee. (Variety, Hollywood Reporter)

Lifetime is launching original drama series Drop Dead Diva, starring Brooke Elliott, Margaret Cho, Jackson Hurst, Kate Levering, April Bowlby, and Josh Stamberg, on Sunday, July 12th at 9 pm ET/PT. Series, created/executive produced by Josh Berman (Bones), hails from Sony Pictures Television. (via press release)

More recasting on NBC's comedy series 100 Questions, which will see the roles played in the pilot by Elizabeth Ho and Joy Suprano recast. The news comes on the heels of the announcement that Amir Talai would be recast as well, which leaves only three of the series regulars--Sophie Winkleman, David Walton, and (creator) Christopher Moynihan--on board. Meanwhile, Alex Hardcastle (Krod Mandoon and the Flaming Sword of Fire) has come on board 100 Questions as the house director and will likely also retain some sort of producer credit. (Hollywood Reporter)

Daytime syndicated talk show Rachael Ray has been renewed through the 2011-12 season. (Hollywood Reporter)

Entertainment Weekly's Michael Ausiello is reporting that producers on CBS' Ghost Whisperer are considering moving the series's storyline five years in the future, in order to "introduce Jim and Melinda's son as a pre-schooler instead of as a newborn," said Ausiello, citing an unnamed insider. (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

Season Three of The Bill Engvall Show will kick off on Saturday, July 18th at 9 pm ET/PT. (via press release)

Former Crown Media Holdings President/CEO Henry Schleiff has been named president and general manager of fledgling cabler Investigation Discovery. (Hollywood Reporter)

Stay tuned.

Pilot Inspektor: An Advance Review of ABC's "The Forgotten"

It's impossible to keep track these days just how many police procedurals there are so it's hardly a surprise that each development season several writers try to crack a new way of doing the familiar cop drama without following the same formula.

This year, that project is ABC's The Forgotten, created by Mark Friedman and executive produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, which the network will launch this fall. Rather than focus on detectives attempting to solve cases, The Forgotten focuses on a group of amateur crime-fighters who work John and Jane Doe cases after the police have given up on identifying the victim, in order to solve the case, catch the killer, and give the dead back their names.

It's an interesting conceit but The Forgotten doesn't quite follow through on its potential. For one, the motley group of amateurs approaches the crimes in much the same way that the police would. (It's as though they've all been watching episodes of CSI and Cold Case round the clock.) Yes, there are reasons why each of them would join the self-styled Identity Network (some of them groan-inducingly obvious) but the pilot episode never quite gets inside their heads to see what really makes them tick. After all, these are men and women from very different walks of life--including an ex-cop, a wife of a criminal, a sculptor with forensic experience and a record, an office drone, and a telephone company repairman--so why exactly have they chosen to devote their time to this particular endeavor with these particular people?

I have a hard time understanding why we jump into their ongoing investigations with this precise case, the so-called "Highway Jane," a young woman found murdered and faceless in a highway ditch. Yet rather than show us how the Identity Network came together, we are thrown into what seems like a rather standard case for them. The introduction of vandal/artist Tyler Davies (Anthony Carrigan) is, I believe, meant to serve as the audience's entry into this story but Tyler is so aloof and standoffish that he's not really the right Virgil to lead us into the plot. (Tyler would also appear to be some sort of sculptor wunderkind; despite his protestations that he's never sculpted a dead woman before, he manages in a single night to craft a facsimile of her face without breaking a sweat.)

It's worth noting that two of The Forgotten's leads--Rupert Penry-Jones and Reiko Aylesworth--will be recast before the series hits the airwaves. It's a smart move as Penry-Jones and Aylesworth remain doggedly dour throughout the pilot episode, creating a vacuum of downbeat energy. (And I say that being a huge fan of Penry-Jones' run on Spooks, a.k.a. MI-5.) As former cop Alex Donovan and reclusive Linda Manning, Penry-Jones and Aylesworth lack the spark and energy to anchor this series.

We're told (rather than shown) that they both have serious internal demons to battle; Donovan's eleven-year-old daughter went missing and was never found and reclusive Linda's husband was a notorious murderer whose exploits were unknown to her. While both are valid reasons for being a part of the Chicago chapter of the Identity Network, the two characters are so devoid of animation and vitality, that they might as well be ghosts flitting through the action.

The rest of the cast is serviceable, though their characters take a definite back seat to the case at hand. Rochelle Aytes's Detective Russell is Donovan's former partner on the force and she accepts his help solving these cases even as she resents his constant intrusion back into the precinct. Michelle Borth's Candace Butler is a put-upon worker bee who chafes at the office politics at her company, preferring to flip off her co-workers even as she solves crimes during work hours. Bob Stephenson's Walter Bailey is the sort of sad sack blue-collar worker who isn't usually seen in these types of crime-solving series; his expertise is the stakeout, though he doesn't seem all that good at keeping his cover. Still, all of the characters need significantly more depth than they are given here.

I'm not really sure why the Identity Network uses a sculptor (such as Tyler, who's only there to fulfill some community service obligations stemming from his arrest) rather than using some computer-generated facial reconstruction software. Sure, this stuff is expensive but sculpting, while cheap, feels depressingly low-tech in an age of such sophisticated crime-fighting technology such as that used on Bones or any other procedural series. Yes, these are meant to be amateurs rather than the real-deal police but I couldn't shake that comparison the entire time I was watching The Forgotten. Surely, there's someone in the Identity Network that could hook them up with some imaging software?

It's little things like that which irk throughout the pilot episode, compounded with the ham-fisted use of narration, provided here by Highway Jane herself. One has to assume that subsequent episodes would be narrated by that week's deceased and nameless victim. The intended effect is something akin to an aura of "The Lovely Bones," but in actuality the narration is more grating than gratifying. The narration as a whole is overwrought as the tireless Identity Network sleuths seek to reconstruct the deceased's "story," which is then brought to life by the actor playing the John or Jane Doe in flashbacks and corpse shots. It lends the entire affair a dismal note that seems to be carried through the entire piece. Efforts to inject humor fall flat and seem wholly out of place.

These things are all the more obvious because the central mystery--unmasking the killer of Highway Jane--is so blatantly obvious. Anyone who reads even boilerplate detective stories or watches any mystery series will immediately peg the likely suspect in Jane's murder... who sure enough ends up being the culprit at the end. If we're going to care at all about these characters and the victims they investigate, the cases need to be smart, twisty, and provocative but the plot of The Forgotten's initial case is anything but.

All in all, The Forgotten definitely needs some retooling if it has any hopes of attracting an audience. Jettisoning Penry-Jones and Aylesworth is a start but a lot of the problem is the surface-level characterization, the obvious suspect, and the depressingly bleak tone, which will likely keep many away, especially on a Tuesday evening, where the series will compete with legal drama The Good Wife, starring Juliana Margulies. Right now, victory will likely go to The Good Wife while The Forgotten will likely be, well, forgotten.



The Forgotten will air Tuesdays at 10 pm ET/PT this fall on ABC.

Stakeout/Makeout: Love, Dam Rubies, and Other Crimes on "Pushing Daisies"

Each airing of Pushing Daisies is like another knife in my heart and Saturday's airing of the penultimate episode, "Water and Power," was like another slash from a bitter dagger.

I reviewed the final three episodes of Pushing Daisies back in April but I've been watching them again as they air on Saturday nights on ABC, just so I can squeeze just a little more enjoyment out of them before they disappear into the television graveyard forever. And no magical touch from Ned is going to bring them back to life.

This week's installment of Pushing Daisies ("Water and Power"), written by Peter Ocko with a story by Lisa Joy and Jim D. Gray, provided some answers about Emerson's mysterious past... specifically his relationship to his baby-stealing baby mama Lila Robinson, who was played with delicious flair by the incandescent Gina Torres. Even as our stylish gumshoe finally found happiness with dog trainer Simone Hundin (Christine Adams). Meanwhile, Chuck and Ned debated whether their love was hearty enough to withstand the many obstacles placed in their way and Olive pondered whether a rebound with Randy Mann (David Arquette) would be just the thing to help her get over Ned.

So what did I think of this week's episode on a second viewing? Grab yourself a piece of pie, put on an inordinately large hat, cut yourself some glow-in-the-dark flowers, and let's discuss "Water and Power."

While this week the Pie Maker and the Alive-Again Avenger took a backseat, plot-wise anyway, their relationship was still a strong throughline for the episode, which investigated three very different relationships: that of Emerson and Simone (Adams), Emerson and former flame Lila (Torres), and Olive and Randy. Each is complicated by a series of events beyond their control, just as Chuck and Ned's own unconsumated relationship is bound by the fact that they can't touch. While their relationship would sure end in death by any shared (physical) intimacy, it's the others who remain separated by emotional chasms that they can't quite cross.

For Emerson and Simone, it's the fact that Emerson hasn't come clean about the fact that he has a daughter, Penny, and his guilt over this error of omission is clearly eating away at him, though it's also brought to the fore all the more by the return of the dastardly Lila, who absconded with Penny years before. Did Lila truly love Emerson or was their relationship yet another con in a long line of grifts for this drop-dead drifter? After all, we learn that they fell in love under some rather suspicious circumstances, as Emerson was assigned to keep an eye on Lila, then engaged to the Papen County Water and Power magnate Roland Rollie Stingwell (Fred Williamson). The duo quickly fall in love and Lila becomes pregnant with Emerson's child, even as she attempts to get her hands on the fabled Dam Ruby.

So why doesn't Emerson tell Simone about Penny's existence? I think it's a combination of factors but really it's a secret he keeps from everyone because it reveals that the cocksure gumshoe is weak when it comes to matters of the heart... and Lila well and truly pulled the wool over his eyes.

And yet Olive's doing the same thing to Randy Mann, attempting to convince him that she's in love with him and that his objections to being a rebound guy are absolutely insane. (Love the bit about the dog whistle.) It's clear that Olive's feelings for Ned have prevented her from finding love with someone who returns the gift, even though Randy stands there offering himself to Olive. Can she get over Ned and finally find the happiness she deserves? Let's hope so because our girl Olive Snook deserves romantic fulfillment just as much as everyone else on this delightful series.

So what did I love about this episode? The flashback to Young Emerson (sadly, the last we'll ever have) as he became a lovelorn fool, constantly in the hopes of catching a glimpse of the gorgeous principal; Ned and Chuck folded up in Lila's trunk; Lila's final con; Emerson finally getting a publisher to agree to publish "Lil Gumshoe" in the hopes of Penny finding him; the aforementioned dog whistle speech; Simone saving Emerson's life at the dam; Robert Picardo dropping by as Detective Puget; Chuck's line about having two birthdays; the glow-in-the-dark flowers; the photograph of Stingwell surrounded by his white employees, the Mennonite lawyers who have taken a vow of honesty; Penny waving at Emerson as Lila took off. (The list goes on and on, really.)

All in all, a fantastic episode that's a bittersweet reminder of why many of us fell in love with Pushing Daisies in the first place. Throughout the series, we've been treated to some memorable and well-crafted characters, each of whom gets to shine in this episode, along with some madcap mysteries, and some of the very best screwball comedy writing on television (or anywhere) today. Sigh. I'll miss the pies, puns, and paper chases.

Next week on the series finale of Pushing Daisies ("Kerplunk"), The Darling Mermaid Darlings get an opportunity to come out of retirement when one-half of the synchronized swimming duo The Aquadolls meets with an unfortunate end that may have been murder-by-shark; Ned, Chuck and Emerson go undercover to solve the murder and encounter a slew of suspects at the Aquarink.

Channel Surfing: "Ashes to Ashes" Renewed for Third (and Final) Season, Gilles Marini to "Brothers and Sisters," Bates to Chase "Alice," and More

Welcome to your Monday morning television briefing.

Ashes to Ashes has been recommissioned for a third and final series by BBC One. Series, which airs in the US on BBC America, will return next year with its final season, which will offer "intriguing twists and turns to keep viewers guessing about the final outcome," said co-creator/writer Ashley Pharoah, and will complete the journey of Alex Drake (Keeley Hawes) as well as reveal just who Gene Hunt (Phillip Glenister) really is. (BBC News)

Catch this interview with Glenister speaking to BBC Breakfast this morning about the third and final season of Ashes to Ashes:



Dancing with the Stars' Gilles Marini will be sticking around on ABC. The Dancing runner-up has signed on to a multiple-episode story arc on Brothers and Sisters, where he will play a potential love interest for Rachel Griffith's Sarah Walker. (Variety)

Kathy Bates (The Day the Earth Stood Still) will co-star in Sci Fi's upcoming mini-series Alice, Nick Willing's reimagining of Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" and "Through the Looking-Glass," which will provide the basis for a dark journey into a strange realm, much like Willing did with Sci Fi's Tin Man. Joining Bates will be Crash's Caterina Scorsone, Colm Meaney (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine), Tim Curry (The Colour of Magic), Alessandro Juliani (Battlestar Galactica), Philip Winchester (Crusoe), Matt Frewer (Watchmen), and Primeval's Andrew Lee Potts. (Chicago Tribune's The Watcher)

Matt Letscher (Eli Stone), William Fichtner (Prison Break), and Scott Caan (Ocean's Eleven) have been cast in multiple-episode story arcs on Season Six of HBO's Entourage. Letscher will play arrogant studio executive Dan Coakley who is assigned to Johnny Drama's TV series, Fichtner will play Phil Yagoda, "a slick TV producer who had a hit teen series in the 1990s and is trying to remake it with Drama," and Caan will play Scotty Lavin, a "cocky and highly competitive manager who acts tough and trash talks to cover up how insecure he is and sees E (Kevin Connolly) as a threat." (Hollywood Reporter)

Wondering why Dominic Monaghan popped up in those new ABC promos and if it's in any way related to a possible return to Lost? Entertainment Weekly's Michael Ausiello has the scoop: "The real reason Monaghan is featured in that cheeky spot is because he's actually joining the cast of another hour-long ABC drama series as a full-time series regular. And the net's brass want it to be a surprise." So what series could it be? Grey's Anatomy? Flash Forward? Hmmm... (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

Producers of drama series In Treatment will meet with HBO executives this week to discuss the possibility of a third season, though HBO Programming Group president Michael Lombardo stressed that no decision has been made about renewal. Meanwhile the pay cabler will begin shooting new series Treme in New Orleans this fall, production begins on the pilot for Martin Scorsese-produced period drama Boardwalk Empire this week, and HBO is developing a series based on Steve Bogira's non-fiction book "Courtroom 302" with executive producers Tom Fontana and James Yoshimura. This summer the channel will feature the launch of Hung and the return of True Blood and Entourage. “We had unwittingly maneuvered ourselves into a little bit of a box,” said Lombardo about HBO's post-Sex and the City years. “Our programming started to skew a little ponderous. We are as excited about a show like Treme as we are about Hung, and they're very different shows.”(Broadcasting and Cable)

ABC will be launching reality competition series Shark Tank (the US version of British format Dragons Den) on Sunday, August 9th at 9 pm ET/PT, in order to use the return of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire as a lead-in. Series will then run on Sundays through August 23rd, after which it will move to its regular timeslot of Tuesdays at 8 pm on August 25th. (Futon Critic)

Days of Our Lives' Rachel Melvin will guest star (with the option to recur) on Season Four of NBC's Heroes, where she will play Annie, another college roommate of Claire Bennett (Hayden Panettiere), along with Californication's Madeline Zima. (Hollywood Reporter)

Nick at Nite has acquired rights to all 151 episodes of FOX's Malcolm in the Middle from 20th Century Fox Television, which it will air Sundays through Thursdays at 8 pm ET/PT beginning July 5th. (Variety)

The CW has opted not to launch its unscripted series Blonde Charity Mafia on July 7th as planned but will instead hold off on the series launch until later next season. (Futon Critic)

Picture This Television has signed a production deal with 14-year-old chef Greg Grossman to develop an unscripted series based around the life of the professional teenage chef. (Hollywood Reporter)

Stay tuned.

Link Tank: TV Blog Coalition Roundup for June 3-5

Televisionary is proud to be a member of the TV Blog Coalition. At the end of each week, we'll feature a roundup of content from our sister sites for your delectation.

This week, I offered advance reviews for the first six episodes of Showtime's Nurse Jackie and the first three episodes of Season Five of Weeds and reviewed the pilots for CW's Melrose Place and ABC's The Middle.

David Tennant and Michelle Ryan discussed Doctor Who: Planet of the Dead, I talked to the first four chefs competing on Bravo's Top Chef: Masters, and I reviewed USA's Royal Pains and NBC's The Listener (and offered talk backs here and here), and discussed the latest episode of ABC's Pushing Daisies.

All this and news about Better Off Ted, Torchwood: Children of Earth, Brian Austen Green on One Tree Hill, FOX's Virtuality, Lost, House, and more.

Elsewhere in the sophisticated TV-obsessed section of the blogosphere, members of the TV Blog Coalition were discussing the following items...
  • Buzz gathered up her favorite quotes from the TV season in a mega "Who Said That Line?" quiz. How many do you remember? (BuzzSugar)
  • This week, Sandie got a chance to interview Stephen Moyer who plays Bill on HBO's True Blood. (Daemon's TV)
  • Scooter spent most of his week still dancing with the GrooGrux King and the Dave Matthews Band. (Scooter McGavin’s 9th Green)
  • Vance chats about the newly announced Season 5 Top 20 So You Think You Can Dance dancers with his new bsytycdff LowResJoe, TwoP Lauren S and ABChau. YAY! It's STARTING!!! (Tapeworthy)
  • Marisa's liking Conan so far on The Tonight Show, but it's only been a few episodes. Let's not get too excited. (TiFaux)

Nightingale Syndrome: An Advance Review of the First Six Episodes of Showtime's "Nurse Jackie"

I think I'm in love.

Back in early May, I had reviewed the first two episodes of Showtime's addictive dark comedy series Nurse Jackie, starring Edie Falco, and waxed ecstatic about the brilliance and humanity of the series' opening installments. Since then, I've had the opportunity to watch the first six episodes of this emotionally resonant and bleakly hysterical series.

It's rare to be captivated by the very first minutes of a new series but it's a deft feat that Nurse Jackie not only manages to do so but, once it's grabbed onto you, it never lets go. The energy and drive of the opening episode continues throughout the first half of the series' first season run.

And what a run it is so far. In the hands of the supremely talented Edie Falco, Jackie Peyton is a brutally flawed individual, a woman whose sole purpose in life is to provide care for her patients but lacks the gentle discipline to do so for herself. And yet despite--or because of--those flaws, we can't help but root for Jackie even as she makes some horrific personal decisions that involve prescription drugs, fidelity, mendacity, and morality.

Likewise, the subsequent episodes go to great lengths to shade the supporting characters, giving them layer upon layer of development as they insidiously worm their way into your heart. By the third or fourth episode, you feel as if you've known each of these people for years, so well-crafted are the series' emotional beats and so nuanced are each of the performances.

Merritt Wever's trainee nurse Zoey could be cartoonish in the hands of a less skilled actor, but Wever makes her so adorably naive, so worshipful of her imperfect mentor Jackie, that it's impossible not to fall in love with her. In any other series, she'd be a whipped puppy dog and the punchline of every joke, but Wever gives her an inner strength that's at odds with her sunny disposition and fearful nature. (Look for the episode where Zoey attempts to retrieve her stethoscope from a doctor who has stolen it from her and her verbal stance against a certain situation she views as morally wrong.)

Likewise, emotionally stunted British doctor Eleanor "Ellie" O'Hara (Eve Best) could be a walking cliche but Best's blissfully languid performance and her devotion to Jackie, her polar opposite, make Ellie one of the most fascinating characters, even as she goes out of her way to torment poor Zoey. Funny and fiercely loyal, her performance as Ellie is a masterclass on how not to overact nor make a character all smooth surfaces instead of rough edges. (It's those edges and her inability to come to terms with emotion that make her so damn compelling.)

Paul Schulze's Eddie offers Jackie an oasis of tranquility and calm amid the chaos of the hospital (not to mention feeding her hunger for prescription medication to sooth her back pain and providing her with a noontime quickie every day) but he too wants more from Jackie than she's prepared to give and their relationship takes an uncomfortable turn as we realize just what Jackie is doing to him. And Peter Facinelli's Dr. Fitch "Coop" Cooper has some secrets of his own, besides for his supposed sexual Tourette's like reactions to stress. (In the pilot episode, he grasps Jackie's breast after she gives him a talking-down.) In a twist I won't reveal here, we learn a surprising fact about Coop's past that I didn't see coming at all.

And most series would have made gay male nurse Mohammed "Mo-Mo" de la Cruz (Haaz Sleiman) a gay stereotype but the writers go to great lengths to adroitly shade his character, offering him a tragic backstory that he recounts not to Jackie but to Zoey even as he holds vigil over a severely injured young boy for personal reasons unknown to his most trusted confidantes. Plus, look for such notable guest stars as Swoosie Kurtz and Blythe Danner to deliver some memorable and gripping performances.

In fact, my only complaint about characterization is that of Anna Deavere Smith's hospital administrator Gloria Akalitus whose steely character seems at odds with the pratfalls that she's forced to endure. In just six episodes, she inadvertently swallows Jackie's painkillers and is accidentally tasered; what follows is so over the top that it's jarring. I almost feel as though the writers haven't quite decided what to do with Akalitus; there's a bittersweet moment that passes between her and Jackie but it doesn't quite feel earned yet as Akalitus still needs some major character development. And I'm still not sold on Dominic Fumusa's performance as Kevin Peyton.

But those are minor complaints in a series that's nearly perfect in every other respect. Nurse Jackie defies description, offering black humor, tenderness, solemnity, contemplation, and acid wit in every installment. It's an honest look at what makes us human from the inside out, heart, guts, and all. And in Falco's Jackie Peyton, television has found a female character that's aware of her flaws, revels in her humanity, and looks for the strength to do the right thing... even as she does some very bad things.

Ultimately, Nurse Jackie is a testament to the creative risks that pay cable embraces, offering us a series that speaks to the complex tangle of humanity within all of us, flaws and all. You'd do well to tune in Monday night to watch this imaginative, hysterical, and poignant series kick off. You'll thank me in the morning.







Nurse Jackie premieres Monday, June 8th at 10:30 pm ET/PT on Showtime. Or you can watch the entire first episode online right now here.

Riding on the Wind: David Tennant and Michelle Ryan Discuss "Doctor Who: Planet of the Dead"

Following the recent announcement that BBC America had acquired first-run rights to the five Doctor Who specials featuring David Tennant's swan song as the Doctor, the digital cabler has announced that it will air the 2008 Christmas special, entitled "The Next Doctor" on June 27th.

This will be followed closely by this year's first Doctor Who special "Planet of the Dead," which aired on BBC One this past Easter and will make its US debut in high-definition on July 26th. The special stars David Tennant, Bionic Woman's Michelle Ryan, and Lee Evans. It was written by Russell T. Davies and Gareth Roberts.

So, what is Doctor Who: Planet of the Dead about exactly? Let's turn to series lead David Tennant for the answer.

"Well, it’s about a bus that ends up on an alien planet, it’s about an international jewel thief who meets the Doctor and is quite intrigued by him. And it’s about two alien races, one of which is just doing what comes naturally and one of which is trying to get home," said Tennant, who will depart the series at the end of the year. "And all of those elements kind of combine into a story that is a bit bonkers, very fast moving, very exciting, and sort of on a scope. Bigger than we've managed before, which is very exciting. It’s very exciting having done the show for four years and still finding new stories to tell and ways of telling those stories, it’s great, and it’s what makes it such a great show to work on."

Tennant's Doctor will also cross paths with a rather unusual bus passenger, Lady Christina de Souza, played by Michelle Ryan.

"Christina is a mysterious, adventure-seeking aristocrat and she is very much a loner, she’s off in her own little world," said Ryan. "And she’s very daring and exciting and smart and sassy. She’s a cool character."

"I first heard about the part just before Christmas and it appealed to me," said Ryan, speaking about how she got involved with the project. "I was reading lots of different scripts at the time and then I read this one and I was so engaged with the character, with her journey, and it was just a really interesting, dynamic script and few of those come along for young actresses, so I was kind of like, 'yeah, I’d like to be a part of this.'"

And the million quid question: what is it like working with David Tennant?

"It’s amazing, he is genuinely one of the most professional, lovely, brilliant actors I’ve ever worked with," she said. "And he has such a good vibe, and he gives a great energy to everyone, he’s really cool. It’s quite family-like and fun – it’s been such a laugh to work on. The rest of the cast, the supporting cast as well, have been brilliant, Daniel, David, Vicky and Reggie and everyone, it’s been brilliant."

So can we expect to perhaps see some romantic sparks flying between the Doctor and Lady Christina as they're thrown together on this mission of survival?

"There is a little bit of a romantic spark between The Doctor and Christina," said Ryan coyly. "I think Christina feels like she’s met her equal, and The Doctor feels like he’s met his match with Christina. Christina doesn’t come across many men that intrigue and inspire her the way The Doctor does."

"He manages to show her that actually she can use her skills to help other people, and that actually it’s more fun when you’re part of a team rather than being a loner," she continued. "She goes on a journey with him and I think she’d like it to be more, and he’s quite closed off to that because he’s been hurt in the past – he’s off doing his thing and she’s like, ‘well, okay’ and off on her next adventure!"

Still, filming "Planet of the Dead" wasn't exactly a walk in the park as the production moved from South Wales to Dubai in order to capture the stunning desert vistas that viewers will see in the special.

"I think we get slightly more time to film the specials. I don't know if that's even true – we get four weeks to film an hour-long special whereas we get about two-and-a-half weeks to film a normal 45-minute episode," said Tennant. "So we've got a little bit more time to play with but then they tend to be a bit more ambitious. Certainly this one was, and you know the fact that we wanted to film in an actual desert and there aren’t a lot of them in South Wales."

"So we had to find somewhere in the world that we could get to that, had an infrastructure that we could use to film in and that would have us, you know," he continued. "Some of these deserts exist in some less than friendly regimes."

"We went to the desert and we got some incredible shots, I mean I think you'll notice it on screen that we went a long way, and that the director and the camera particularly made it count," said Tennant. "I think it’ll look like an alien planet in a way that nothing we've ever done before has ever quite managed, just because it is an extraordinary...it is an extraordinary sight, just miles of sand and the blue skies, the sun beating down, it is like being in another world really, so quite useful for us!"



Doctor Who: Planet of the Dead will air Sunday, July 26th at 8 pm ET/PT on BBC America.

Talk Back: USA's "Royal Pains"

One of the biggest surprises so far this summer to me is the charm of USA's new dramedy series Royal Pains, which kicked off last night with a 90-minute pilot episode.

You had the chance to read my positive advance review of the series, created by Andrew Lenchewski, but now that the episode has aired, I want to hear what you thought.

Were you as enchanted by the series as I was, even after a little bit of a shaky start? Do you find Mark Feuerstein's Hank Lawson a compelling character? Do you like the wealthy excess of the tony Hamptons setting and the use of concierge medicine? Think Paulo Constanzo's Evan nearly steals the series away altogether?

And, most importantly, do you plan to watch Royal Pains again next week?

Talk back here.

Talk Back: NBC's "The Listener"

Despite my telepathic warnings to you, my readers, did you still tune in last night to NBC's new supernatural/medical drama The Listener?

You had the chance to read my advance review but I am curious to know if you tuned in to watch either of The Listener's two episodes last night and what you thought of the series overall.

Did you think that Craig Olejnik's Toby Logan was compelling? Did you cringe when that woman actually thought, "If only he could read my mind"? Did you like the juxtaposition of medical emergencies and telepathic crime-solving? Did you find it all tired and hackneyed or slick and engaging?

And, most importantly, would you tune in again next week?

Talk back here.

Channel Surfing: Lin-Manuel Miranda Checks into "House," Zoe Green Mines "Diamond" for Sci Fi, "Heroes" Nabs Two More Actors, and More

Welcome to your Friday morning television briefing.

Tony Award-winning actor Lin-Manuel Miranda (In the Heights) will appear in at least two episodes of FOX's House next season, where he will play the roommate of Gregory House (Hugh Laurie) at the psychiatric facility where House is currently living. Miranda's first appearance is slated for House's sixth season premiere, which kicks off this fall. (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

Zoe Green (Book of Shadows) has been hired to write the script for mini-series The Diamond Age, an adaptation of Neal Stephenson's 1995 novel "The Diamond Age: Or a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer," for Sci Fi and executive producers George Clooney and Grant Heslov. Mini-series tells the story about a father and daughter who live in a futuristic society that stifles all creativity; the man creates an interactive book for his daughter, who uses it "as a guide through a surreal alternative world." (Variety)

NBC's Heroes has landed two additional actors, with Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace's Ray Park to join the cast of the drama series in a multiple-episode story arc playing one of the characters at the four season's carnival. Additionally, Deanne Bray (The L Word) will play a hearing-impaired love interest for one of the main characters. (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

FOX has ordered a pilot for marriage-themed reality series I Married A Stranger from production company A. Smith a Co. Each week, a marriage-minded woman in her late 30s has her friends and family wheedle down five prospective grooms until one is left; as each man is eliminated, the bride-to-be gets a look at who she won't be marrying... and will finally get to meet her betrothed, right before the on-air wedding ceremony. Project will be executive produced by Arthur Smith, Kent Weed, and Scott Jeffress. (Variety)

BBC America has acquired rights to long-running UK talkshow Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, which it will launch on June 12th at 8 pm ET/PT. The digital cabler plans to pick up airing the series with the 18th episode of the current season, which features actors Dustin Hoffman and Hugh Laurie and British band Gossip. Future installments will feature such luminaries as Ben Stiller, Eminem, Hugh Jackman, William Shatner, Glenn Close, and Lionel Richie. “The wit and wry humor of Jonathan Ross is the perfect addition to the BBC America schedule," said Richard De Croce, SVP Programming for BBC America. "His interviews with A list guests – from Tom Hanks to John Travolta to Nicole Kidman – are always candid and frequently unpredictable. Best of all he fosters an atmosphere which allows guests to relax, open up and allow the viewers in.” (via press release)

The Television Critics Association announced the nominees for its annual TCA Awards, with such The Shield, Battlestar Galactica, Lost, Mad Men, and Saturday Night Live vying for program of the year while Fringe, The Mentalist, No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, and United States of Tara are competing for best new program; comedies 30 Rock, The Big Bang Theory, The Daily Show, How I Met Your Mother, and The Office are in the running for outstanding achievement in comedy while Breaking Bad, Friday Night Lights, Lost, Mad Men, and The Shield are competing for outstanding achievement in drama. (Hollywood Reporter)

A&E's Abbe Raven will oversee the new joint venture that is being formed between Disney, Hearst Corporation, and NBC Universal which will act as an umbrella for their cable channels Lifetime, A&E, and History. New company will encompass 10 channels in 145 countries and 15 websites. Lifetime's Andrea Wong will now report to Raven, according to reports, while other management restructuring has yet to be decided. (Variety)

ABC has opted to shift the second season premiere of I Survived a Japanese Game Show up by several weeks, from July 8th to Wednesday, June 17th at 9 pm ET/PT, while the network will shift comedies Surviving Suburbia and The Goode Family to Friday nights beginning June 12th. (Futon Critic)

BET has picked up talk show The Wendy Williams Show, which it will launch on July 13th in syndication and on BET, which will be running the series day-and-date with the syndicated telecasts. (Variety)

Sony Pictures Television has signed a new two-year overall deal with writer/producer team Cathy Yuspa and Josh Goldsmith, who created 'Til Death. Under terms of the deal, they will develop new projects for the studio while receiving executive producer credits on the FOX series they created. (Hollywood Reporter)

Former NBC executive Jamila Hunter has landed a position as head of programming at OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network. She will replace Robin Schwartz, who left the channel earlier this year. (Variety)

Stay tuned.

Up in Smoke: An Advance Review of Season Five of Showtime's "Weeds"

Is it just me or has Nancy Botwin become really unlikable?

What always worked for me on Showtime's dark comedy series Weeds was the fact that while Nancy seemed to be floundering morally, she was always attempting to keep her family together in the face of increasing adversity, trying to hold on to the American dream of a house in the suburbs with a pool and an endless supply of caffeinated beverages.

So what quite went wrong? Season Four of Weeds found Nancy (Mary-Louise Parker) becoming increasingly shrill and unsympathetic and taking bigger and bigger risks, even after leaving Agrestic following her decision to burn down her house and jumping into bed with a Mexican drug lord (Demian Bichir). When we last saw Nancy, she was about to be killed by Esteban for ratting him out to the federali and she pulled out her ace in the hole: a sonogram depicting her unborn child, the result of her union with Esteban.

Does the last-ditch ploy work and is Nancy able to save her own life? (Well, it sort of has to work as, without Nancy Botwin, there really wouldn't be a series.) I had the chance to see the first three episodes of Season Five of Weeds, which kicks off on Monday evening, and I have to say that I'm curious just where the assorted kooky plots are heading, even as I'm still scratching my head about how showrunner Jeni Kohan will manage to make me care about Nancy again. (Beware: SPOILERS AHEAD!)

After last season's game-changing set-up that moved the Botwins to Ren-Mar, Season Five finds Nancy and her makeshift family reeling from the events of the last few months. Nancy herself is on a knife's edge with her kingpin boyfriend Esteban, who not only has political aspirations but also wants proof that Nancy is in fact carrying his child... and that it's a boy. It soon becomes clear that Nancy's greatest asset at the moment is not only keeping her safe from murder at Esteban's hands but it's also placing her and her family in even greater jeopardy as an imprisoned Guillermo (Guillermo Diaz) seeks to have his revenge against the woman he calls Blanca.

Even as a suddenly much-older Shane (Alexander Gould) moves into the family business, Nancy tasks Andy (Justin Kirk) with shipping Shane off to her estranged yuppie sister Jill (Jennifer Jason Leigh) for his own protection. Not that Andy's very pleased with Nancy after she comes clean about being pregnant as he's only now finally come to terms with his own feelings for his sister-in-law.

Jennifer Jason-Leigh is a hoot as Nancy's polar opposite Jill. While Nancy has survived all these years in spite of the abject chaos around her, Jill's whole existence is about precise order and rigid routine. (Just look at the scene where she serves her adorable blond moppet twin daughters breakfast to see what I mean.) Yet, Nancy's returned presence in her life (even from far) throws off this delicate balancing act and pushes Jill into taking a risk for the first time in her entire life. Look for some major sparks between her and Andy as they bond over their mutual love/hate for Nancy, whom they blame for all the wrongs in their life.

I'm much less thrilled, however, about the return of Hayley Hudson's long-lost Quinn to the series in an extremely cartoonish twist that sees Quinn and her Mexican rebel boyfriend kidnap Celia (Elizabeth Perkins) and hold her hostage... only to discover that Celia is so universally loathed that no one will pay the ransom, much less even speak to her kidnappers.

I didn't really feel that Celia's storyline last season meshed very well with that of Nancy and the Botwins (not to mention Doug, Dean, and Isabelly) and I'm not really sure what her reunion with Quinn (look for the latter to consider chopping up her mother and selling her organs) will portend for her participation this season. Dean (Andy Milder) and Isabelle (Allie Grant) still seem somewhat tangential to the plot and I'm not sure it really makes sense for them to even be in Ren-Mar much less moving in the same circles as Nancy Botwin. Doug (Kevin Nealon) at least seems somewhat more back on his game than last season and is pushing Silas (Hunter Parrish) to include him in his latest business venture: a secret pot farm in a national park... which then transforms into a medical marijuana dispensary after a run-in with some well-armed thugs.

I think Weeds works best when it reins in a little of its out-there OTT energy and grounds the series a bit more. It's become somewhat manic in recent seasons and it's harder and harder to find characters to root for amid the madness and chicanery. As noted before, Nancy has become even more tough to like and these opening episodes do little to make me root for her, especially as she crosses some lines that should not be crossed, endangering herself, her unborn child, and her family.

All in all, the first three episodes of Season Five of Weeds demonstrate a marked increase in tension and danger as Nancy attempts to keep spinning a growing number of plates even as her original impetus--keep her family together--seems threatened by her own actions. Will this season miraculously make us fall in love with Nancy again? I'm not sure but I do hope that Kohan and Co. at least find a way to make Nancy sympathetic again.



Season Five of Weeds launches Monday night at 10 pm ET/PT on Showtime.

Tuning Out (the Voices): An Advance Review of NBC's "The Listener"

It seems that most broadcasters these days are investigating how to make international co-productions work for them. CBS has scored with Flashpoint, FOX is attempting to make Mental work as a summer series, and NBC is about to debut the latest international co-production, The Listener, tonight.

The Listener, which kicks off with two back-to-back episodes tonight, is co-produced with Canada's CTV and Shaftesbury Films. It stars Craig Olejnik (The Timekeeper) as Toby Logan, a generically handsome twenty-something paramedic who is concealing a deep secret: he's actually a gifted telepath able to read people's minds.

Toby has had to keep this ability a secret for quite some time. In fact, the only person who is aware of his gift is his mentor Dr. Ray Mercer (24's Colm Feore), who found Toby when he was a boy and urges him to keep his telepathic abilities a secret from everyone, including those closest to him, like his partner Oz (Billable Hours' Ennis Esmer), ex-girlfriend Dr. Olivia Fawcett (Da Vinci's City Hall's Mylène Dinh-Robic), and potential love interest Detective Charlie Marks (Diary of a Mad Black Woman's Lisa Marcos).

But Toby can't help himself from using his powers to help people, given his particular line of work, and he's seen either voluntarily scanning people's minds to gain information about their condition or situation (as in the pilot episode when he realizes that a car accident victim has had her son kidnapped) or is overwhelmed by their raw emotion and pain and is summoned to the scene.

All of which could potentially give the staid medical drama a jolt of adrenaline, except for the fact that The Listener is perhaps one of the cheesiest and most predictable dramas that NBC has aired in a very long time. It's the type of series where everything is so spelled out that within the opening minute of the series, Toby "overhears" an attractive woman look him over and think "If only he could read my mind." Yes, it's exactly that type of series.

There's not a minute in the opening episode of The Listener that isn't bogged down in medical or supernatural drama cliche and further adding insult to injury is the fact that Olejnik's affable Toby is surrounded by a bunch of bland, one-dimensional characters right out of central casting. There's the female detective with a chip on her shoulder, the paramedic partner who says everything that's on his mind, an ex-girlfriend who bemoans Toby's intimacy issues and wishes he would tell her what he's thinking.

What follows is a rather dour and formulaic medical procedural where Toby attempts to save lives, solve crimes, and fix problems for strangers using his mental abilities while also attempting to blend into the background for fear of being discovered for what he really is. And rather than have his inexplicable abilities open the door for intriguing subplots or quirky plot twists, it seems to only further oppress the action; Toby's abilities are never used for anything other than crime-solving/life-saving and he comes off as a bit of a stick-in-the-mud.

Production values are exactly what you might expect from a series such as this and the entire thing just feels tired and dated. There's absolutely nothing innovative or exciting about The Listener, which is a shame as it's one of the few scripted series being launched this summer on the broadcast networks. Instead, The Listener reeks of being a cheap co-production that can fill the timeslot for a few weeks before NBC does away with the 10 pm hour altogether.

Ultimately, The Listener is a bit of a throwback to late 80s/early 90s Saturday early evening syndicated programs. There are no real stakes here, no emotional connection to the characters or their situations, and nothing that will get me to tune in again to find out what happens next. You don't need a mind-reader to gather that.



The Listener launches tonight at 9 pm ET/PT on NBC with two back-to-back episodes before settling in at 10 pm ET/PT next week.

Channel Surfing: Emilie de Ravin to Return to "Lost." Jeff Bell Joins "V" as Showrunner, Knepper Lends Hand to "Heroes," and More

Welcome to your Thursday morning television briefing.

Emilie de Ravin is set to return to ABC's Lost next season as a series regular after her character Claire Littleton was absent for most of Season Five, leaving her character's fate tantalizingly ambiguous. (It's still not clear, in fact, whether Claire is dead or alive after disappearing and then being spotted in Jacob's cabin with Christian.) "Damon and I are very excited to bring Claire back to the show," said showrunner Carlton Cuse, "and even more excited for people to experience just how she will return." (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

WBTV has signed an two-year overall deal with writer/producer Jeff Bell (Angel), under which he will come on board ABC's midseason sci-fi series V as showrunner/executive producer. He'll also develop new series projects for the studio later on as well. "Like many people, I have fond memories of whatching the original miniseries, And to see how they did it now, it's epic. (Exec producer/scribe) Scott Peters did a fantastic job relaunching it. It seems like there are so many ways that you could go with this story," said Bell. "Especially when you look at our current times, with the economy, wars and social strife, it's the perfect time for a force like this to come along. In many ways this is a very American show, about the individual vs. society. It's about how America can appreciate and question things that seem to be too good to be true." (Variety)

Prison Break's Robert Knepper has joined the cast of NBC's Heroes next season, where he will appear in at least six episodes of the series as the season's putative villain Samuel, described as "a Jim Jones type -- charismatic but evil, with a twisted sense of humor -- who will veer into the lives of all heroes." The character had previously been referred to as Carnival Barker in casting breakdowns. Production on Season Four of Heroes is set to begin this week. (Hollywood Reporter)

Disney, NBC Universal, and Hearst Corporation are said to be in talks about creating a joint venture that would encompass cable channels A&E, History, and Lifetime. "The partnership would appear to fit well with NBC U's strategy of targeting female consumers via a cross-the-board corporate effort dubbed Women@NBCU," writes Variety's Clarie Atkinson. "Owning a piece of Lifetime could also help the Peacock goose traffic for its femme-centric iVillage website." (Variety, Hollywood Reporter)

Bravo has announced its summer plans, which include the launch of Season Three of docusoap Flipping Out on Monday, August 17th at 10 pm ET/PT and the return of The Real Housewives of Atlanta on Thursday, July 30th at 10 pm ET/PT. The two series will replace Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List and The Fashion Show, which will wrap their runs in August and July respectively. Additionally, the cabler will air a Top Chef special on August 26th at 10 pm, a week after Top Chef: Masters wraps its run. (Futon Critic)

Variety is reporting that A&E has canceled drama series The Beast, starring Patrick Swayze and Travis Fimmel, and will not bring the series back for a second season. (Variety)

Former Dawson's Creek showrunner and current Californication writer/executive producer Tom Kapinos lashed out at the stars of the WB hit series. "The experience was miserable," said Kapinos. "But it was a four-year boot camp. It was like going to TV grad school and learning how to run a television show. Anybody on that show who could make a decision was allowed to run it at some point. I inherited the very awkward college years, and I almost ran the show into the ground. But I learned everything that I needed to know about how to run a show." When asked what made his experiences so difficult on Dawson's Creek, he replied: "It was the four monstrous actors at the core of it." Ouch. (E! Online's Watch with Kristin)

Entertainment Weekly's Kate Ward checks in with Top Chef contestants Fabio Viviani, Carla Hall, and Jeff McInnis to find out what they're up to a few months after the end of the fifth season of the Bravo culinary competition series. Viviani is opening two more restaurants, has a cookbook coming out in the next month or so, and is embarking on a 16-city book tour... and possibly a television series. McInnis has completed a memoir of sorts and is shopping it to publishers. (Entertainment Weekly's Hollywood Insider)

Stay tuned.