oddly, I felt show was - undramatic. Oddly predictable. Even how people turn on the jury was - predictable.
I think the jury trial served a few purposes.
1) getting V into college. 2) a reminder ( heavy handed) that it is not just kids in the '09er crowd that are mean, cruel, and bigoted. 3) A slap in the face telling everyone that V is not an '09er. She doesn't think like them and even if she hangs with them she isn't one.
Logan tears.....
Wallace!
Yes, I had to try,
I already have the tapes and destroyed them. If you want to hound
someone, why don't you hound Veronica Mars. She can be reached at:
http://www.upn.com/shows/veronica_mars/
-Logan
Cute. I have mail from Logan in my box. Hee.
I just love that they use logical email addresses for the characters. gmail, AOL, etc.
I was watching last week's Veronica Mars when they showed Logan's e-mail address — gottapes@gmail.com — on screen, and I decided to send off a message. Would you believe he wrote me back in character?
My favorite stunt like this was on King of the Hill where they set up an actual Spank Peggy's Feet fetishist website after there was an episode which featured that very thing.
My favorite was when the BtVS writers set up a website for Cassie.
You can still find some of it on the Wayback machine: [link]
My favorite was when the BtVS writers set up a website for Chloe on geocities.
That was a good one! Am I a goob for calling the cell number Dean gave on Supernatural
(to hear a recording of Dean again exhorting Dad to come help)
?
edit: just in case it counts as spoilery, as I am so clueless about keeping those rules straight.
Huh. My Tivo SAYS that Veronica Mars is on, but this looks a lot more like "Everybody Hates Chris" to me....hmph.
"uses these real e-mail accounts… [because] it's easier, and more realistic. I then set up to have a bounce-back message for fans, and there're a lot of them who write to the address.
The true original of this is 25+ years old: the novel I am the Cheese takes place in a fictional town, Monument, MA, but the phone number the protagonist is endlessly trying to call is a real one. It's the home phone number of the author, Robert Cormier, who lived in the same house for decades in Fitchburg and would talk to any kid who called him up.
Apparently, there were a lot of unhappy kids who called him -- it's a novel about loneliness and insanity -- and they would ask for the person the protagonist is calling in the book (I think her name was Mary; I've forgotten), and Bob would tell them he had created her, and the conversation would go from there.
Bob died 4 years ago (he lived to be in his late 70s), and now I'm wondering whether the phone number will be changed for new reprints.
That Logan e-mail thing pushes my must-have-fourth-wall button. How crazy am I that the thought of getting an e-mail from a fictional character freaks me out? Craxy.
But. What I came here to post was that AFI named VM one of its top ten shows of 2005: [link]
Yay. The full list for those not wishing to link:
24
BATTLESTAR GALACTICA
DEADWOOD
GREY'S ANATOMY
HOUSE
LOST
RESCUE ME
SLEEPER CELL
SOMETIMES IN APRIL
VERONICA MARS