Fred: So you don't worry that it's possible for someone to send out a biological or electronic trigger that effectively overrides your own sense of ideals and values and replaces them with an alternative coercive agenda that reduces you to a mindless meat puppet? Shopkeeper: Wow. People used to think that I was paranoid.

'Time Bomb'


Procedurals 1: Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You.

This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]


sumi - Dec 03, 2008 4:52:58 am PST #2151 of 11831
Art Crawl!!!

Nathan Fillion's show Castle has a start date!

"Castle" on Monday, March 9 at 10:00 p.m.; "Cupid" on Tuesday, March 24 at 10:00 p.m.; and "The Unusuals" on Wednesday, April 8 at 10:00 p.m. In addition, ABC News' "Primetime: What Would You Do?" will return on Tuesday, January 6 at 10:00 p.m. (all times ET).

It looks like the Unusuals is also a procedural (or at least a mystery) and stars Amber Tamblyn as a dectective:

In "The Unusuals," it helps if a cop has a twisted sense of humor, because every moment could be your last. Just ask Casey Shraeger (Amber Tamblyn, "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants"), who started her day as an NYPD vice detective before unexpectedly being transferred to the homicide division. She quickly realizes that, not only does everyone in her new department have a distinct sense of humor, but also their own dirty little secrets.

From an ABC press release.


erikaj - Dec 03, 2008 8:41:13 am PST #2152 of 11831
Always Anti-fascist!

Could be cute, but Ms. Tamblyn is still too young to be murder police. She'd have to be one of those fanfic Mary Sues that leaves the academy at age twelve. I know...nobody cares but me.


Ailleann - Dec 03, 2008 8:46:47 am PST #2153 of 11831
vanguard of the socialist Hollywood liberal homosexualist agenda

I thought exactly the same thing, erika.


erikaj - Dec 03, 2008 9:34:48 am PST #2154 of 11831
Always Anti-fascist!

And I totally know she's not as young as Tibby, but late thirties is young on a detective squad, as Bayliss found out. As the old commercial said "I've done a little reading on my own" on this particular subject. It's not personal; I'm happy to see AT on TV again, but it's no wonder kids have no idea what careers look like from what they see in the media. Everything is not like professional sports or boy bands...in some fields, it's good to be a little seasoned, you know?


erikaj - Dec 03, 2008 9:36:13 am PST #2155 of 11831
Always Anti-fascist!

And I thought I was young to have that as a hot button...who knew?


sumi - Dec 03, 2008 9:36:16 am PST #2156 of 11831
Art Crawl!!!

Yeah, she would be young to be in Vice too, wouldn't she? (Or she would have to be the youngest.)


erikaj - Dec 03, 2008 9:39:45 am PST #2157 of 11831
Always Anti-fascist!

Yeah, and somehow my keen detective instincts tell me it'd be difficult to be young and cute on the Vice squad. I know times are changing; Joseph Wambaugh even included breast-pump humor in his latest, but there's still kind of a locker-room vibe.


Ginger - Dec 03, 2008 9:54:37 am PST #2158 of 11831
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

In real life, vice is often a young person's game. Almost all vice is undercover, and once someone has a fair amount of experience, he stands a much better chance of being ID'ed as a cop. Also, not having a family yet is a plus. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation starts their youngest agents in vice; my ex was doing buy-busts when he was 25.

At 25, she is too young to be a murder detective.

If you wanted to do a really innovative cop show these days, you'd do one in which no one has deep dark secrets.


§ ita § - Dec 03, 2008 10:01:40 am PST #2159 of 11831
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I thought that Owain Yeoman was looking very good in last night's Mentalist. And not even in a hurt/comfort sort of way. Though I am surprised that two years on an arson squad made him an expert, other than relatively speaking.

Did anyone else do the mentalist trick Jane lead off with? Is the assumption that everyone puts a triangle in a circle, or is it more complex than that?


Juliebird - Dec 03, 2008 11:30:16 am PST #2160 of 11831
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

I'm still wondering why Jane brought up what he was going to do with Red John if he ever got his hands on him, other than to tie in with the Avenging Rain Man. Unless it really was to keep Lisbon at a distance (as someone on another board speculated). I mean, this is the guy who never shows his hand. Or maybe he's like first season Charlie Crews, and he doesn't really know what he'd do if confronted, and he wants to make sure that Lisbon will protect him from himself, but that's even more out of the blue. Maybe it really was because she blushed.