Angel: Will you just shut up for once?! Illyria: What? Angel: My God, the speechifying. Has it ever occurred to you that now might not be the best time for when-we-were-muck stories?

'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]


Vortex - Mar 11, 2008 5:22:21 am PDT #933 of 11831
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

I forgot it was on, so was in the middle of something. I tivoed the last 45 minutes, haven't watched it yet. I wasn't that interested, but then they described it as House in stilettos. I wonder how they are going to make her likeable.


sumi - Mar 11, 2008 5:22:24 am PDT #934 of 11831
Art Crawl!!!

Also, was the pi/lover played by the guy who played Tommy Gavin's dead cousin Jimmy?


Ginger - Mar 11, 2008 5:25:52 am PDT #935 of 11831
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I watched it, more or less. It was on in the background, anyway. I was not impressed. Among other things, the dialog is oddly stilted and pretentious. Notably, one lawyer called another a "feckless puppet."

Also, what is it with women attorneys on television wearing suits that appear to be two sizes too small?


sumi - Mar 11, 2008 5:27:41 am PDT #936 of 11831
Art Crawl!!!

On tv that shrunken jacket thing is all the rage. (You see it on What Not to Wear too. )


Vortex - Mar 11, 2008 5:28:14 am PDT #937 of 11831
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

don't you mean

Also, what is it with women attorneys on television wearing suits that appear to be two sizes too small?

I think it's the "shrunken jacket" craze. On tiny women, it looks trendy. On big women, it looks like you're trying to wear something you shouldn't.


Ginger - Mar 11, 2008 5:38:32 am PDT #938 of 11831
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I am once again out of step with modern fashion. Even in small women, fabric straining against a single button just looks like they're wearing the wrong size. The jacket bunches. The top underneath sticks out funny. I think I notice it most in television attorneys because they're standing up and gesturing. It also emphasizes one of the television differences between men and women that's a constant niggling irritation. Men wear ordinary suits. Women wear inappropriately sexy clothes. Men detectives wear suits while women detectives wear tight jeans and tank tops.


Dana - Mar 11, 2008 5:39:26 am PDT #939 of 11831
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Men detectives wear suits while women detectives wear tight jeans and tank tops.

That drives me nuts about CSI, but ESPECIALLY about Numbers (not that I watch it any more).


Vortex - Mar 11, 2008 5:49:29 am PDT #940 of 11831
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

That drives me nuts about CSI, but ESPECIALLY about Numbers (not that I watch it any more).

I choose to believe that it's character development @@. Although I think that sometimes they deliberately try to make other women look unattractive. Other women are usually crying witnesses or spouses of victims or fugitive, or other law enforcement professionals, who never seem to wear makeup or comb their hair)


Dana - Mar 11, 2008 5:51:08 am PDT #941 of 11831
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

I choose to believe that it's character development

But that just makes me hate the character.


Sophia Brooks - Mar 11, 2008 5:52:00 am PDT #942 of 11831
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Men detectives wear suits while women detectives wear tight jeans and tank tops.

I've been really liking the costumes on Dexter with regard to this. Dexter's sister, who got a recent promotion to homicide, started dressing in pantsuits and buttondown shirts-- and they seem sort of low end, and a littl ebit stretchymatching her salary. The men are actually wearing polo shirts or hawaiian shirts (it is Florida). It seems to fit with her character's desire to move ahead in her career, while actually seeming practical and like she could do police work