Kristen, have there been strikes?
There was the one on House. There was the previously mentioned one on L&O, which BTW included a dramatic reenactment of Rene Balcer's real life picket line incident. There was at least one other but I seemed to have blocked it out now.
Supernatural had an episode that mentioned the actual writer's strike as part of the framing of the thing. Don't know if that counts, though.
I'll give Dollhouse a shot. Obviously, as I watch Supernatural weekly, I have a fairly high tolerance for skeevy gender issues.
I could only give The Wire two tries.
I am an extreme television viewer. I give almost all new scripted shows (except L&O or CSI like procedurals which I absolutely can't stand) 3 episodes. Shows with writers or actors who have worked on projects I have enjoyed in the past get 5 or 6 episodes before getting deleted from the DVR.
indeed. Ultimate Drew didn't join the staff until season 7, which seems hard to believe.
His first episode was "Selfless," which is interesting if you consider (Cloverfield spoiler)
the heart-ripping out spiders in the frat house vs. the Ebola insects in the subway tunnels
The "House" strike episode had the strikers carrying signs that had the same color scheme/font as the writers' strike signs.
I'm looking askance at Dollhouse for subject matter and casting race issues, but giving it a shot. See Plei re: SPN, though my love for that show has dwindled to almost nothing.
I tend to be a much harder sell. Generally speaking, if the first episode I see of something doesn't grab me, I'm gone. Joss, Tim, and Bryan Fuller get a few extra episodes, though really Drive is the only series by those three that's needed them.
I could only give The Wire two tries.
Really?! Why? (I've never met someone who has seen the show who hasn't loved it. But, obviously, I'm biased.)
The Wire was slow to pull me into it -- it just has such a different rhythm than other shows.
I think it helps to know going in that The Wire does not work in stand-alone episodes. The shows are like chapters, each season is like a stand-alone book, and the series is like a memfault (series of sequential books that tell a broader story.) The beats of the episodes are sometimes much different than regular television.