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Posts Tagged ‘Modern Family’

Is your favorite show on the chopping block

In Griot, News on May 14, 2012 at 12:29 pm

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I don’t know what favorite series shows you’re into,
but a few are in trouble – so says ol’ YAHOO:

airly safe shows like singing competitions and sitcoms were the biggest hits. Fantasy series – like ABC’s “Once Upon a Time” and NBC’s “Grimm” – fared surprisingly well. But shows set in the past – from the 1960s to the Mesozoic era – didn’t succeed. Neither did high-concept science fiction like Fox’s “Alcatraz” or NBC’s “Awake.” They were canceled last week, joining “Terra Nova” and “The Playboy Club.”

The networks’ most successful gambles this season were with existing shows, not new ones. CBS successfully revamped “Two and a Half Men” with Ashton Kutcher in place of Charlie Sheen. NBC ran “The Voice” in midseason against a CBS Monday night lineup, anchored by “Men,” that had looked bulletproof in the fall. “The Voice” ended up briefly surpassing Fox’s “American Idol” as the top-rated non-NFL programming on television, though “Idol” eventually retook the lead.

For the sake of full disclosure, an aside: We like risky shows. They keep TV fresh and interesting, and without some rolls of the dice, we would never have gotten “Seinfeld,” “Modern Family” or “Lost.” But for every risk that pays off, there are many more that make average viewers shake their heads and wonder what those network executives were thinking.

This was a season that seemed to depressingly reinforce stereotypes about the TV landscape: Networks remain the main home for mass-market reality shows, broad comedies and procedurals, while cable is the domain of novelistic period shows like “Mad Men” and “Boardwalk Empire” and hit genre series like “Game of Thrones” and “Walking Dead.”

Whatever is happening doesn’t seem to be good for TV: Overall, according to Nielsen, viewing was down 0.5 percent, or about 46 minutes per viewer per month in the fourth quarter of 2011 that included the start of the season. The decline came after years of consistent year-over-year growth.

Every show is a huge potential risk
, and getting one on the air requires beating the odds again and again. But some shows are bigger gambles than others because of their setting, subject matter, complexity or flat-out weirdness. The flip side? Dark, complex, jarring shows are often the best ones, from “Lost” to “Breaking Bad.”

Networks have already taken some gambles for the upcoming season — but none that seem as risky as the ones from this one.

NBC’s midseason “Hannibal,” about the cannibalistic “Silence of the Lambs” villain, would sound insane if not for the success of the Hannibal Lecter film franchise.

NBC’sThe New Normal,” from “Glee” veterans Ryan Murphy and Allison Adler, features an extended family consisting of a gay couple and the surrogate mother of their child. That might be more challenging to traditional notions of family if not for the fact that “Modern Family,” which is tied for the top-rated sitcom on TV, hadn’t featured a gay couple with an adopted daughter for the last three seasons. NBC winkingly says the show features a “post-modern family.”

One of the most ambitious shows of the upcoming season is NBC’s “Revolution,” produced by “Lost” co-creator J.J. Abrams, which imagines a world in which all power suddenly disappears. Past “Lost”-influenced network shows in which a bizarre occurrence suddenly changes the world – from ABC’s “Flash Forward” to NBC’s “The Event” – haven’t fared well. But NBC is giving the show a plum timeslot after “The Voice,” its biggest hit.

Fox’s upcoming series — including “The Following,” a serial-killer drama led by Kevin Bacon, and a comedy starring “Office” vet Mindy Kaling, sound fairly straightforward — especially compared to last season’s Fox slate.

CBS is rolling the dice with another ’60s set show, “Vegas,” about a rodeo cowboy-turned-sheriff. Star power should help the show’s odds: It stars Dennis Quaid in the lead, and it also features Michael Chiklis, Carrie-Anne Moss, and “Terra Nova” vet Jason O’Mara. CBS’s “Elementary,” a Sherlock Holmes update set in modern-day New York, finds Jonny Lee Miller saying the magic word to a female Watson played by Lucy Liu.

ABC’s edgier offerings, meanwhile, include “666 Park Avenue,” about a young couple managing a historic apartment building that is home to dangerous supernatural happenings, and “Last Resort,” about a nuclear submarine crew that goes rogue after getting a sketchy order to deploy their weapons.

Here’s a look at some of the current season’s swing-and-a-misses, God rest their souls, and what lessons can be learned from them:

Terra Nova

The story of a family catapulted from the near future to the distance past died from a thousand cuts, administered by too many cooks. Too mixed metaphorical? Okay: It had a dozen executive producers, to go along with a massive budget, and tried to hedge by offering something for everyone. There was sci-fi. Family drama. Teenage romance. Action. A dystopian future. But in trying to please everyone – you know how this one goes, right? – it ended up pleasing very few. Fox canceled it amid low ratings. Still, good for Fox for giving it a shot. It’s impressive whenever a top-rated network strays from what’s safe, and this was the season’s biggest gamble by far.

The Playboy Club

Some people will take it as a good sign that the fastest-canceled show of the season was also the one with the most T&A. “The Playboy Club” was beautiful to visit, and not just because of its cast. The set design was lovely, the music was hot. The idea to include musical numbers in every episode was a lot of fun, like when country stars used to drop in at the Boar’s Nest on the Dukes of Hazzard. But “The Playboy Club,” like “Terra Nova,” didn’t seem to have a soul. Like “Terra Nova,” it was all over the place with subplots, none of them very original. You’ll keep watching a good-looking but dumb show, the way you’ll keep dating a dim bulb because of their physical attributes. But if they don’t have a soul, you can’t keep time with a person or a show.

ABC’s “Pan Am,” had lots of similarities with “The Playboy Club”: Good looks, a swinging ’60 setting, and, unfortunately, storylines that didn’t really grab you by the throat. It was canceled last week.

Alcatraz

This one didn’t look like much of a gamble at all, at least to “Lost” fans: It starred endearing Lostie Jorge Garcia, was produced by Abrams and other “Lost” veterans, and was co-created by “Lost” writer Elizabeth Sarnoff. It was set partly on an island, for gosh sakes.

But since the rather open-ended conclusion of “Lost,” viewers have been awfully careful about mythology-filled shows that may or may not go anywhere. “Alcatraz” had one big central mystery – how did the former prisoners disappear in 1963, and why do they keep reappearing in modern times? “Alcatraz” hedged its bets, doling out clues as it kept viewers occupied from episode to episode with an escaped criminal of the week. The half-and-half approach didn’t engage enough of them.

Awake

The NBC drama was your humble correspondent’s favorite network show of the year. But it took some of the same have-it-both-ways approach as “Alcatraz.” The LAPD detective lead character was split between two realities – one in which his wife is alive and his son is dead, and another where the reverse his true. He also solved crimes in both worlds. The idea was that viewers would be entertained by the procedural within each episode, even as all the crimes – which may or may not be in the lead characters dreams – brought him closer to deciding which reality was real. If either one was real. Yes, it’s complicated. And attention spans are short. We really don’t know what “Awake” could have done differently. Its setup either fascinated or repelled viewers, and seems mostly to have repelled them. We’d like to wake up in a world where a show as strange as it “Awake” could survive on a major network.

Some of the forementioned shows are on fire and some of them lack,
I’m Qui
50/50 on the call, even though my “MISSING” isn’t coming back.
Rats!

Sure some shows are destined to give-in to the grim reaper,
however I’m ecstatic that ABC’s SCANDAL is a keeper!

Good to Go Network Shows

In Communication, Griot, News, TV Shows on February 28, 2012 at 8:01 pm

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Tomorrow the good show line up airs on ABC.
Check it out if you’re into vibing comedy:

First up to bat on Wednesday night
is SUBURGATORY and Cheryl Hines.

It’s about “A teenage girl who moves from the city to the suburbs.”
And everything sense worthy is thrown to the curb.
Her dad is single and his best friend is a DDS.
Cheryl plays “the flirtations neighbor in pursuit of man” best.

It’s family comedy in the prime of eve.
They live in the suburs… something like me.

The next show on the line up has big fam appeal
It’s MODERN FAMILY starring Ed O’Neill.
Please tell me you watch this – for it is a hoot.
Their family thing is a circus ring and the kids are really cute.

And if their multi scenario isn’t the show that moves ya,
Tune in to HAPPY ENDINGS starring Damon Wayans Jr.
Little Damon is all grown up – past his Major Payne debute.
He’s seriously funny like his dad & he’s also cute too.

Last on the line is quite the throw —
It’s ABC’s REVENGE served by Madeline Stowe.
Madeline is sexy and used to be so sweet.
Madeline is a b*tch in the Revenge series.
Check her out WEDNESDAY NIGHTS to see what I mean.

It’s always a pleasure for me to reach out and see
how many people are tube watching — like me.

Ooo Wee – I’m Qui
Watching primetime tv.

What are you watching on Hump Day?
Suburgatory @ 8:30 / 7:30pm C
Modern Family @ 8pm
Happy Endigns @ 8:30
Revenge @ 9pm
on ABC

FLIRTING with

In Griot, TV Shows on June 17, 2011 at 10:33 pm

MEN OF A CERTAIN AGE

I love em! Please tell me you are getting a kick out of watching this show on TNT?

No?
You’ve never heard of it?

Ohhh –you’re just familiar with the term because you [or your mate] are currently living in it [a certain age], but you didn’t know there was a show about it. Well okay. lol!😉

And Wow! TNT is absolutely flirting with us and I’m an avid spectator – cheering them on [both TNT & the men].

Hey! What can I say? I’m a flirt… especially on the weekends. Ow!

However, TNT airs their view of distinguishable males on Wednesday nights & I’m usually front and center LEARNING and laughing. I’m not quite at “a certain age” but I’m honest when I say I’ve always been attracted to ’em.

Attracted to who? Men in their 40’s and 50’s. I’ve always been sparked by their seasoned knowledge and era mannerisms. I’ve been this way since (at least) the age of 27. I wonder if I’ll still feel the same way when I’m 50-60?

Likely so, since my other favorite shows are COUGAR TOWN and MODERN FAMILY [ABC]. Cougars are definitely defining the new modern family and stimulating’ly so (might I add). Ask Demi Moore and Susan Sarandon. They know exactly what I’m talking about.

_____________________________________________________________________________________

As of current, I’m the YOUNGER FLOWER to those MEN OF A CERTAIN AGE.
Though I duly find them sexy in their distinguished day to days.

I dig their manner’able ways and invisible insecurities – because they’re still little boys.
I dig the way they take in the view, a hands-in-pocket hue – barely yielding breathing noise.

So cool, so calm, so sexy…and all of this – is a show on the outside.
Ambitious, aware, and sexily seasoned, among other attributes reside on the inside.

I love it! I love it! I love it! I want more of it – and cable is showing it.
I’ve got a list of gf’s who’d say best: they love the way TNT is throwing it.

Wisdom is the biggest characteristic that I find sexy inside of any age.
I’ve got a thing for “wrinkles in my brain” as knowledge is all the rage!

I’ve got a thing for a fit man: from his mind to his physique,
I’m Qui
Fan of of MEN OF A CERTAIN AGE – they absolutely bring out the FLIRT in me.
Oooo Wee & Oui! Oui!

Check out: MEN OF A CERTAIN AGE – TNT
Wednesday nights @ 10/9c
Get to know the cast: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1242441/fullcredits