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Wednesday, Aug 9, 2006

...to me, but obviously in the area of comedy in particular I have different tastes than some of the people reading my reviews.

That's good! First of all, someone is reading my reviews. Second, someone is thinking (hopefully) about what I have said and made an effort to agree or disagree.

But of 10 reviews, four of them generated at least one disagreement. I guess that is because I haven't bothered to review anything that I didn't feel strongly about, for good or for ill. I loathe Fear Factor and Two and a Half Men, and unsurprisingly, someone disagrees. I REALLY love Raymond, and unsurprisingly, someone disagrees.

I love The 4400, but I just hated the episode called The Ballad of Kevin and Tess.  I hope the series will get back on track.

That's ok, maybe all this disagreement will get somebody's juices flowing enough to write a review of their own.

Feel free to comment!  I can be persuaded.


Posted by momathome, 5:07pm
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Sunday, May 21, 2006

I am having a really hard time with rating shows. It all started when I decided to add Columbo to my list of favorites. I watched every episode, and every TV movie, and even refused dates to watch Columbo when I was growing up. So I rated Columbo a 9.5, alongside NCIS, Fawlty Towers and a few others. But is it really better than Mission Impossible in absolute terms? And not as good as Zorro?

I admit to being perplexed when I see the lower ratings of some of the classic shows that I consider superior, and then I remember how many of the people who are rating the shows never saw them in their prime but have only seen them in syndication or on DVD. They are relics of "ancient history" in the same way Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca and Edward R. Murrow are to me.

Hmm, there is more to this rating stuff than I thought.

There are shows on my list that are favorites right now like Cold Case, Crossing Jordan, and NCIS that nevertheless cannot hold a candle to some of the classic shows that deserve to be a 10 for all time, like Sherlock Holmes with Jeremy Brett, and the Twilight Zone.

Then there are shows that are a 10 in their category - like Raymond. But is Raymond ultimately a better show than say, Cheers, or MASH or All in the Family? Or a funnier show about a family than Family Ties? I would have hated Raymond before I married into an Italian family. I would have said, "who needs these insensitive boors?" And yet, it is a 10 right now, for what my life is right now.

How can I not give a 10 to shows that I watched faithfully for years, rearranging my schedule to do so? Shows like the Saturday night block from a few years back - Touched By an Angel, Early Edition and Walker Texas Ranger? And yet I don't feel that they were Absolute 10s. Maybe 10s for a season.

Walker actually became a much more overtly Christian show than TBAA ever was during the season following the introduction of the Hays Cooper era characters. That may not have made some people happy, but I was very happy about that. It was gutsy, and I appreciated the rendering of people of faith on a show who weren't either buffoons or a crooks.

And Early Edition was a very cool idea, but not the best treatment of the "what if you could change the future", and therefore not a 10 (even though Kyle Chandler was definitely a 10 by anyone's standards!).

But Walker then jumped the shark a bit in the last couple of seasons where the plot consisted of Alex getting kidnapped/threatened/hurt and Walker scaling the Empire State Building/jumping out of an airplane/singlehandedly defeating the 101st Airborne in order to save her. I still loved it that Walker always kicked the bad guys' butts, but it got really stupid at the end, and therefore not a 10. And yet if you measured my devotion to it by the number of years I diligently watched and worked it into my weekly routine...then it should be a 10, or maybe a 12.

And how does one compare Quincy ME to Crossing Jordan? Or Matlock to Law and Order (pick a suffix)? What those shows meant to me when I was watching them is as an important consideration as how they actually stack up in terms of quality and character development compared to shows that have the advantage of better technology, and less restrictions on "being real" in topics covered and dialogue.

After the stark realism of NYPD Blue, or the courtroom drama dished out by Law and Order, when I watch Matlock now, it is really kind of hokey. But like The Rockford Files, or Switch, ChIPS, Ironside, or any of the other shows from that era - I cannot judge them by their cheesy music, or dated hairstyles, or any of the other things that would tempt me to give them lower ratings.

I haven't even touched on shows like The Waltons or Little House on the Prairie or Highway to Heaven! What do you do with those? Look at my shows and you will see lots of cop shows and crime investigation dramas, mysteries and who-done-its, sci-fi and offbeat comedy for mature audiences. But it wasn't always so.

SIGH. I haven't even figured out what shows to list as actual favorites. I loved Kraft Mystery Theater - with McMillan and Wife, McCloud, Columbo and was there one more? But it was Columbo that took on a life of its own in my heart. And yet when I compare Columbo to Bobby Goren on LAO-CI - how do I choose?

Jeremy Brett's Sherlock Holmes is a superb piece of acting, and probably my all time personal favorite. But how does even Sherlock Holmes compete with my memories of my dad, sitting in the chair with him and smelling his cigars, and enjoying Columbo and all the other stories he liked where "you know who did it, but it takes the rest of the show for him to prove it?"

In the end, I think there has to be something special about who you watched the show with, and how your memory of the show captures how you felt at the time, and what you were doing, and what the show meant to you. Those are the things that have cemented certain shows in my heart.

What makes a show a "10" to you?
 
Posted by momathome, 10:45am
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Friday, May 19, 2006

I honestly have never thought of myself as much of a TV watcher.  So it was really eye opening to me when I visited TV.com in search of info on the fate of  Jethro Gibbs of NCIS  and discovered a whole world I actually knew a whole lot about...

I realized I was a big fake as a non-TV watcher when I started making a list of my favorites and had not even scratched the surface when I hit 30 shows.  I still have not listed them all.  I kept seeing new ones on the list and going "wow I remember that!", so much so that I have not yet listed even some of my current favorites.

And then, of course, there was that nagging little voice reminding me that I was at tv.com trying to find out about Jethro in the first place.  What person who hates TV calls someone by their character's name?  or worse still, their character's FIRST name? Or I guess in this case, technically his middle name - but that is beside the point.

Or maybe it IS the point.

The point is, I love TV, and I may as well admit it.

Posted by momathome, 10:12am
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Stevens was already an accomplished actor while still in his teens, mostly on Broadway, as well as off-Broadway plays, films and television shows, ranging from \"Torch Song Trilogy\" to soap operas. But the character of Ben called for him to...
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momathome must really love MovieTome and agree with every review we've ever written! What other reason could momathome possibly have for not rating a single film?
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