Anya: It's lovely! I wish it was mine! Oh like you weren't all thinking the same thing. Giles: I'm fairly certain I wasn't.

'The Killer In Me'


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]


Topic!Cindy - May 10, 2007 4:28:03 pm PDT #424 of 820
What is even happening?

Thanks, P-C.

I would have watched it from the beginning if had been on Fridays, because that's how my brain works.


Aims - May 10, 2007 4:44:33 pm PDT #425 of 820
Shit's all sorts of different now.

GA: Ok, was that Burke looking very interested in Callie???

Also, totally called Ava remembering every damn thing a couple of weeks ago.


Hil R. - May 10, 2007 5:48:15 pm PDT #426 of 820
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

ER: I'm totally confused about how and why the ER is open again. Or, really, why it was closed to begin with.


Amy - May 10, 2007 5:57:49 pm PDT #427 of 820
Because books.

Hil! Thank god. I thought I was the only one still watching this show.

I don't know, either. Some kind of renovation, I guess?


quester - May 10, 2007 6:16:29 pm PDT #428 of 820
Danger is my middle name, only I spell it R. u. t. h. - Tina Belcher.

GA: I think Thatcher has too many lingering issues with doctors and trust. His ex-wife was pretty abusive, the man she cheated with is still at that hospital, his daughter knocks on his door after 20 years and the first he sees of her she's pissed. He's having Ellis flashbacks. And, yes, he's in shock and grieving.

Not that I'm defending him or anything. But, poor Meredith. And Derek has suddenly turned into an unavailable jerk.


SailAweigh - May 10, 2007 7:11:20 pm PDT #429 of 820
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Oh, they have to break Derek and Meredith up because it's the end of an odd numbered season. Then they can spend all of the even numbered season getting them back together. It's high school, without the football.


sumi - May 10, 2007 8:07:52 pm PDT #430 of 820
Art Crawl!!!

GA: I had this thought that the woman in the bar was Meredeth's half-sister who was finishing med school.

But Derek kind of made a conscious decision to be less involved with Mere, right? On the advice of the Chief.

Traveler - that was fun. And it has William Sadler -- I didn't know that. And was the FBI guy Bree from DH's dead husband?


libkitty - May 10, 2007 9:23:20 pm PDT #431 of 820
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

Yeah, Traveler shows some promise. GA, I'm so over the soap aspects of the show, which I guess is most of the show, huh. I liked the characters, but not so much the mix'n'match.


esse - May 11, 2007 12:01:45 am PDT #432 of 820
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

and I'm a bit surprised that it's airing in the UK.

It got picked up in February when the American networks did their usual pony show to sell them into syndication over here. There's been a fair bit of critical buzz.

Gilmore Girls: I cried when Rory graduated. I was just there, man, a year ago. I know exactly how that feels. And her freaking out from the previous two weeks and all the highs and lows--that's so true, man. The uncertainty, the exhileration, the fear.

She definitely made the right choice about Logan, and I think he kind of exemplified the sort of prat he so often is when he said goodbye instead of respecting her decision and trying to make it work. Despite everything he and they as a couple have been through, he still has the rich boy mentality of, "I want it now. It should be mine." and that seems to be the attitude with which he went into proposing to Rory. I can't align this dude with the guy who said, "Don't take me into your plans, we'll work it out." But apparently that was only good for when she actually had firm plans, and not when she was still working out.

Actually, the thing that ticked of most about the whole proposing thing was the sheer inappropriateness of Logan's timing. I don't know if it was some kind of meta reason, to write him out before the finale, or if it was just touching on the charactersation I see above, but you don't freaking propose in front of a room full of people at your girlfriend's graduation party. The party was supposed to be about her, you asshole, not about you as a couple. And making her think about that, when she should be thinking about moving out and graduating and being happy? Makes you that much more of an asshole. And then walking away when you should have sucked it up, taken the hit, and supported your girlfriend on the day of her graduation makes you primo, top shelf asshole.

Augh. I never liked Logan, but I am disgusted with him now.

Also, the fabric softener thing was cool, and made me think the writer had recently done some site visit to a real lab where they actually do that, and Booth's reaction was the same as the writer/visitor's.

It's funny, in Kathy Reich's most recent book (Break No Bones) they did exactly this thing--stick a finger into a solution to plump it up for a fingerprint. Book!Tempe uses TEC solution, which is apparently difficult to google, but I assume it has similar components to fabric softener.

Bones: Sometimes, I think this show is designed to just deliver me super-hot Boreanaz every week.

I absolutely *adored* the exchange between Jack and Angela with the love message in luminescent bacteria on seafood. Once I figured out what he was going to do, I knew it was the perfect weird quirky expression of love that Angela would adore. I love also that *she* asked him to marry her, and how it freaked Jack out; and how she said it had to be a big wedding in a week. A week! Bless.

The mystery was engaging enough, and I didn't figure it out until Jack and Zach did the re-enactment. "Why do I always have to be the victim?" was very funny. Booth eating sushi the dude they're questioning had made was both funny and kind of callous, which was perhaps the intetion.

But, being the ridiculous B/B shipper that I apparently am, my absolute favorite scene was the end with the mac and cheese. The way they're both feeling out each other, without necessarily realizing it, and changing their opinions based on what other people say and the questions they ask...it's a slow moving ship, my ship, and I wouldn't have it any other way.

YAY for FNL being renewed. That is fantastic news. Why would they remove the football? It's an integral part to the context of their story.

You know, it was obviously too much to ask that Derek be a, you know, good human being for the one freaking season he and Meredith were together. I mean, Meredith has her faults, but Derek runs hot and cold like a broken faucet, and frankly, if I were Meredith (or Meredith's friend) I would tell her to kick (continued...)


esse - May 11, 2007 12:01:51 am PDT #433 of 820
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

( continues...) him in the balls and have a few cutting words of her own to say.

Obviously this is the point in the denouement when all of the work Meredith has been doing for herself, her family, and relationship get unraveled in an evil twist of fate that will send her down the season two roads again, but it's so disappointing to watch all that great characterization flushed down the toilet. I don't know if the GA writers think that Meredith is somehow more interesting to watch when she is in pain, but she's not. It's just more painful.

And also, I know it's a drama or whatever, but surely we could have some problems that happen when the characaters are, you know, at least somewhat well-adjusted? Why on earth do you kill off two mom-figures in the same season, within eight episodes of each other? Why make all the men treat the women in their lives so poorly, and why do the women just take it instead of standing up for themselves? This show, as much as I generally enjoy it on a casual-watching basis, has some shitty things to say about love and marriage and male-female relationships.