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]


askye - Dec 06, 2007 4:19:37 am PST #673 of 11831
Thrive to spite them

I did not watch this last night because I was going to go to bed early. Except I didn't.

Now I'm kicking myself because I have to wait all day.


Ginger - Dec 06, 2007 4:46:49 am PST #674 of 11831
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

There was Leonard Cohen's "Who By Fire" towards the end.


shrift - Dec 06, 2007 11:10:32 am PST #675 of 11831
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

AND the Yeah Yeah Yeahs!


Vonnie K - Dec 06, 2007 11:32:15 am PST #676 of 11831
Kiss me, my girl, before I'm sick.

I'm in my usual song collecting binge from the ep; I've got the Cohen, The Frames, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs (what an awesome song) and Richard Thompson, but I'm still missing a couple of songs. There was this fabulous song that began rap-ish as Charlie was coming out of the prison, segueing to the scene of the Apartment of Pot and Snake, and googling what I can hear of the lyrics is giving me no love. *sigh*

Does anyone know how much more expensive for the studio to get licensing to use the songs on DVDs compared to broadcast airing? I'd imagine it's quite a bit more, and I can see them being able to afford, oh, Shivaree or The Frames, even, but Radiohead and the Stones and Leonard Cohen? They have to be expensive. And the thought that the DVDs will have wrong music just makes me terribly sad, because the song choices are such an big part of what makes this show work so well stylistically.


Dana - Dec 06, 2007 11:33:23 am PST #677 of 11831
"I'm useless alone." // "We're all useless alone. It's a good thing you're not alone."

BTW, "Shoot Out the Lights" wasn't Richard Thompson's version. It was a cover by someone I don't know.


Vonnie K - Dec 06, 2007 11:46:47 am PST #678 of 11831
Kiss me, my girl, before I'm sick.

Did some digging around, and apparently the cover was by X, an LA band that has Exene whassherface, the one that was married to Viggo Mortensen. The song's nowhere to be found online, since it's from an obscure Richard Thompson tribute album. Bah.


Tom Scola - Dec 06, 2007 11:51:48 am PST #679 of 11831
Mr. Scola’s wardrobe by Botany 500

It's been a good year for X on TV.


sumi - Dec 06, 2007 11:55:53 am PST #680 of 11831
Art Crawl!!!

I knew I heard X last night.


joe boucher - Dec 06, 2007 12:31:37 pm PST #681 of 11831
I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve. - John Prine

The song's nowhere to be found online, since it's from an obscure Richard Thompson tribute album.

Put a request in the music thread. Corwood probably has it.


Vonnie K - Dec 06, 2007 1:44:51 pm PST #682 of 11831
Kiss me, my girl, before I'm sick.

Thanks, Joe. Will do.

By the way, that shot of Charlie standing in front of the upside-down car and the two dead bodies, with the deserted city streets in the background? SO BADASS. Especially with the Yeah Yeah Yeahs blaring on the soundtrack. I think I might have squeaked a little.