Technically that kind of guest star news (espec for a returning character) is spoilery for this thread and belongs in Lite.
Angel ,'Conviction (1)'
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 forgot that s/he was recurring, sorry for the spoilage.
Recurring or not, it's still Lite material.
Luther S2 promo. Not plotty, just pretty. Great music choice.
Washington Monthly has an interesting look at NCIS. Its conclusion:
The police procedural genre has evolved into a reliable forum for presenting a world where the diversity of America works well. Squad rooms are often packed with recognizable American ethnic and cultural types, who roll eyes at each other but band together to get the job done. The core members of the NCIS team happen to be less ethnically diverse than most fictional squadrooms—the only African American is their boss, the director—but they exhibit a different kind of diversity. By cultural type it’s clear enough that Gibbs, a former Marine with a Bush-like faith in his “gut,” and his second in command, the ex-Baltimore cop and former Big Ten athlete. Tony DiNozzo, are conservatives, while forensic scientist Abby Sciuto, who dresses like a Goth and builds houses for the poor, along with special agent Timothy McGee, an MIT-educated geek who writes thinly veiled novels about the team, are the show’s liberal stand-ins. The characters’ political allegiances, however, are never openly stated. And though the series has aired during a period when national security has polarized the country, no hint of such conflict disturbs the family-like camaraderie of the NCIS team, nor undermines its unerring competence. Neither does the show demand that the audience take sides in divisive issues, as did 24, with its routine portrayal of federal agents using torture to extract information from terrorists.
Apparently, millions of Americans find something to like in the portrayal of a national security agency where the lawmen leave their politics at the doorstep—the kind of place where any of us might feel comfortable working. In a time when we are constantly reminded that our politics is divided and dysfunctional, NCIS tells us, reassuringly, that at a more fundamental level we can trust our government precisely because it represents us all.
hmm. I am not sure I agree with that paragraph, at all. I think the author doesn't really represent diversity well and the mystical belief that people can be different and work together.
Sometimes diversity means that people have really different opinions that can't be reconciled.
Everyone in NCIS are serving the government's interests and believe in law, order, and the system. As someone who watches a whole lot of crime, such tv is often framed through a conservative law and order (and authoritarian) lens.
That isn't really true diversity, I don't think.
Castle: Michael McKean's Donald Trump impersonation was hilarious.
Castle: Michael McKean's Donald Trump impersonation was hilarious.
I howled when I saw the eyebrows.
NCIS: No!
What happened? ( I can't watch until it's up on the website)