Nothing worse than a monster who thinks he's right with God.

Mal ,'Heart Of Gold'


Experimental TV: Network Drama  

This thread is an experiment to discern the Buffistas' interests in television discussion. It will close on June 1st, 2007, after which our community will assess our future direction. Discuss network aired drama here. [NAFDA]


Kathy A - Apr 20, 2007 6:17:43 pm PDT #114 of 820
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Anyone else see Raines tonight? The little girl was an excellent actress (both loved and was disturbed by her delight in repeatedly blowing away the molester with Raines' gun), and Goldblum really hit his performance out of the park. When he was talking with the shrink on the phone after yelling at the two figments to shut up, and he was so on the verge that he was practically crying--man, I teared up, too!


Theodosia - Apr 21, 2007 2:17:30 am PDT #115 of 820
'we all walk this earth feeling we are frauds. The trick is to be grateful and hope the caper doesn't end any time soon"

Damn it, I keep forgetting that I want to check out Raines.


le nubian - Apr 21, 2007 5:16:07 am PDT #116 of 820
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Kathy, I am really enjoying Raines. I wish it had had at least a 13 ep order. I heard the ratings aren't great - so I don't think NBC will be putting it on the fall schedule.


Vortex - Apr 21, 2007 7:05:46 am PDT #117 of 820
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

argh. I forgot that Clatterford was set to record. grr. I want them to write some code in tivo that has a special symbol for when you have a lower priority season pass that conflicts so that you can pick which one you want. Clatterford usually reruns at 1, so it records that one, but not last night. grrr.


Sean K - Apr 21, 2007 9:21:19 am PDT #118 of 820
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

So I'm not entirely sure this should go here, especially considering it's an experimental thread, but this may also be the best suited thread anyway, and, well, that works for the experiment too.

Anybody else here ever watch the Waltons? I remember my family watched it when I was a kid, and I know it ran for like nine years (the show came up in conversation between S and I this morning, don't ask me how). Anyway, so it's this show about a large family that lives on a mountainside in the 1930's. I'm guessing there wasn't a huge area for them to use as farmland, being a mountainside and all, and S said they didn't really have a lot of neighbors or anything.

What the hell was this show about? Rock tumbles down the mountain and hit somebody in the head? Somebody tumbles down the mountain and hits their head on a rock? "John Boy, stop masturbating in there! We can all hear you doing that!" Somebody, please. Help me out a little here, I'm having a very hard time breaking a story out of this premise. What the hell happened on this show?


Scrappy - Apr 21, 2007 9:57:17 am PDT #119 of 820
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

I LOVED The Waltons. The show was about family dynamics and neighborhood life and growing up. Intimate stories about little things like getting a crush or playing in a recital or discovering your grandmother actually had an interesting past. When it was well done, it was beautifully written and acted. It ran a long time and got tired by the end, but it could be lovely.


askye - Apr 21, 2007 10:11:19 am PDT #120 of 820
Thrive to spite them

I loved the Waltons. It was one of the tv family's I wanted to be a part of (the other was The Addams Family). The show was about the everyday life of them. There were neighbors -- the Baldwin sisters, the Goddseys, then there were the mountain people.

Some of the story lines I remember are -- a young girl is found who can't speak and they teach her sign language (and I think look for her parents), but in the meantime she and Elizabeth play hide and seek and Elizabeth gets trapped in a trunk. The girl uses sign langauge to tell the family where she was.

There was always stuff about the Baldwin sisters and "the recipe". Then there were the war years where they dealt with one of the boys , Jason, I think, struggling with whether or not to be a contentious objector.


Sean K - Apr 21, 2007 10:13:44 am PDT #121 of 820
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

S described it as kind of like Seventh Heaven, but I'm enough of a child of the current era that, even though I can see where the stories come from on Seventh Heaven, I was still having a hard time seeing the stories for the Waltons.

I'm sure the stories were good and compelling, as the show ran for a long time and won awards, but the premise alone left me dumbfounded as to what kind of stories you would tell that anyone would care about.


askye - Apr 21, 2007 10:20:18 am PDT #122 of 820
Thrive to spite them

Here's a fansite for The Waltons - [link] If you click on the episode guide it will give you a brief synopsis of each episode.


askye - Apr 21, 2007 10:23:24 am PDT #123 of 820
Thrive to spite them

There was some interesting casting -- John Ritter was a semi regular for awhile playing a reverend, Sissy Spacek played a love interest of John Boy, Jonathan Frakes played the love interest of Erin or Mary Ellen (I can't remember which).