The ADA and the class action suit lawyer have a conflict.
this is a pretty memorable ep - you sure you watched it?
'Jaynestown'
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
The ADA and the class action suit lawyer have a conflict.
this is a pretty memorable ep - you sure you watched it?
I may have to chalk it up to an Ambien loss.
It was excellent and, I believe, brought up an earlier case from the show.
Also, may have been repeated on Saturday night.
Did anyone else watch Lie To Me?
I only watched with half attention, had to get some cooking and some laundry done in prep for tomorrow, but it seemed interesting. A little more narrow gimmick than The Mentalist, I don't know if that will turn out to be a strength or a weakness. Just like The Mentalist, though, I think the more interesting stories would revolve around what happens when their conclusions turn out to be wrong. Infallibility is boring.
I watched. I enjoyed it enough that I've added it to my season pass for now. I think it could become very johnny-one-note quickly, but I think they also put in enough interaction between the team members to make that a decent portion of the show, too.
Infallibility is boring.
not when Simon Baker looks that adorable being infallible.
I didn't care for it actually. If I hadn't been watching the Mentalist already, I might feel differently, but two of the same kind of show? No can do.
I was going to record it but tivo can only grab two things at once and it ran into the 9 pm or Law & Order timeslot. (I was already recording Lost.)
If it doesn't do that next week, I might try it then.
See - I know I don't have Le nubian's problem because I already watch The Mentalist and Psych.
ha! yeah, I can't get into Psych - but I'm not much for comedies except 30 Rock.
BTW, L&O has been firing on all cylinders lately. I liked this week's ep also, especially the last 5-10 minutes.
Yeah, L&O has been excellent.
(BTW, I thought Jack's dad was a NY cop - but now he was Chicago cop. Huh.)