Promo for Harper's Island.
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]
I know I saw her before, and I think it was on Buffy
I knew she was familiar! I kept thinking, "Julie Bell? No, too young."
The kneejerk "This is ridiculous" reaction from the cops was annoying--but at least the one guy "It's just an alternative lifestyle" was less annoying--but I've seen worse portrayals. And the witch was shown as a positive, if odd, force in the kids' lives.
That's true. The "it's the only place I feel safe" aspect was positive. But I chafe at the perpetuation of those horrible stereotypes for comic effect.
But I chafe at the perpetuation of those horrible stereotypes for comic effect.
Wrod
The "it's the only place I feel safe" aspect was positive.
And that's how we knew that the dad was the killer. I was expecting the wife to take off her scarf to reveal a bruised neck. It just seemed odd to me that she was wearing it.
My retcon is that she didn't really learn how to do this stuff in a Wiccan community - she kind of made it up herself.
I'm no Sherlock Holmes - I did not notice the scarves.
I just watched this week's SVU. They somehow managed to get in just about every stereotype about gifted kids -- pressured by parents, can't fit into the "real" world, overly competitive, antisocial, even one kid with thick glasses and weird vocal patterns -- and then added in some stuff about the dangers of ADD drugs, too.
Oh, I saw that one, and felt like "Hey! That's my hey." But then SVU is totally stereotype=a-rific. In addition to David Simon making me That Person who's all "You know, they usually don't find the weapon, right?" and making people shush me, Dick Wolf shows aren't fun like they used to be.
The butcher of Kiev is a character actor I first loved on Highlander.
The guy Elliot fought in the kitchen was the stuntmaster on several episodes of Highlander, and was Mac's opponent in the maze duel in "Duende".
The younger brother, Brad, on The Mentalist, played Michael, "Two queens. Right," in the Something Wicked ep of S1 Supernatural, and his dad was the same actor who played the suburban pipe-smoking, fruitcake-stomping, pliers-wielding pagan god (oh the irony) in the Very Supernatural Christmas episode.
Actor bingo--it's not just Canadian.
You know what show I really liked this week? "Law & Order" Did anyone here watch it? I thought it was well done, suspenseful and well-acted.
I highly recommend the ep if anyone gets a chance to see it on rerun.