6/30/07 Update:
The series finale of Studio 60 aired this last Thursday. With the return of the show on May 24th, I’d hoped that though the show was canceled, it would still go out with the excitement it came in with.
With the exception of the heart-breaking performance of Nathan Corddry in the final four episodes, nearly everything about the way this showed ended irritated me. I was particularly confused about how the K&R shows suddenly turned into West Wing episodes. Gone was the funny, quirky fast-paced dialog and along came the ham-fisted treatment of the pre and post- 9/11 climate and the completely unrealistic courtship of Danny and Jordan. (And the manufacturing of dramatic plots completely unnecessary of a once-smart show.) And don’t even get me started on how Harriet handled Danny’s question about why God doesn’t fix the bad things that happen to us.
So far this year I’ve not come out ahead. I started the season a regular watcher of Studio 60, The Nine, Veronica Mars, Gilmore Girls, and Grey’s Anatomy. All but one of those shows was canceled and I won’t watch Grey’s anymore after this season. I’m glad I discovered The Office back in October.
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2/19/07 Update:
From tvseriesfinale.com:
NBC has just announced that they will be pulling Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip one week earlier than previously planned. The Black Donnellys will begin on February 26th at 10pm instead of March 5th.
The schedule change comes as the result of Monday night’s poor showing in the ratings. The “Friday Night Slaughter” episode of Studio 60 attracted its lowest ratings to date, under five million viewers. Insiders say that the peacock network hasn’t made a final decision on Studio 60’s future and that the schedule change was made to give The Black Donnellys a strong launch in sweeps (which is getting a lot of promotion and will likely garner big numbers). No return date for Studio 60 has been set.
I heard a while back that due to the low ratings the show’s focus was shifting to the romance side of the story, which was more of the “B” story up until the last show before Christmas. Since the show’s return in January, my love of the show has waned, with wit lacking in the script and the more interesting behind-the-scenes part of the show becoming very secondary.
But it’s still better than most of what’s on TV. I guess all I can do is enjoy it while I can.
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… and why big network execs may once again ruin a good thing.
I tend to bat pretty close to zero on television shows. The shows I adore always get canceled to soon (My So-Called Life, Sports Night, Arrested Development, Gideon’s Crossing, The soon-to-be-cancelled The Nine, Joan of Arcadia, Freaks and Geeks, Ed, 2 Guys and a Girl) and the shows I’m iffy about hang on well past their due date (Alias, Different World, Ally McBeal, Dharma and Greg, Family Ties) and the ones I hate just keep showing up (7th Heaven, Dancing with the Stars (the world cannot contain my hate for this show), Survivor, Big Brother, Hope and Faith). So either my taste is out of sync with the rest of the world or everyone else is just crazy. But Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip is brilliant.
I’m aware of when I’m being manipulated emotionally. And Sorkin does it so well that I don’t care. The writing is sharp, the acting (and casting) is superb, the production value is excellent and dang it, I love the show. For once Christians are not portrayed as wackos and I find it refreshing.
It’s officially picked up for the rest of the season, but ratings are sad. So I’m afraid the execs will kick it to the curb. And Charmed stayed on the air for 8 seasons? That is depressing.
The show returns tomorrow night. Watch it. You won’t be sorry.
I had a wonderful evening last night – dinner, movie and coffee with a couple of friends. One is leaving for 4 weeks on a short-term mission trip to Denmark so we had a little goodbye for her before she leaves.
I enjoy Steve Carell – obviously since I put Little Miss Sunshine on my best of ’06 list and The Office is just about the funniest show to me ever. You add Lauren Graham and I’m intrigued – Morgan Freeman and I’m happy.
While the movie isn’t all that funny, (I expected many more laugh-out-loud moments than I got. There was maybe 6 or 7.) a moment in the movie will stay with me for a very long time. It’s not a spoiler, but it is a nice defining moment – so read no further if you’re dying to go and don’t want to be spoiled in any way shape for form.
God asks Evan’s wife: “Do you think that God gives us patience when we pray for it, or does he give us opportunities to be patient? And when we ask for courage, does he give us courage or give us opportunities to be courageous?”
There is more to the mini-speech he gives, but that’s all I will share. The point is made in the most simplified, beautiful way that I’d never expect from Hollywood. What a lovely way to remind us all that it’s not about what God gives us, but about what we do with what we already given. It’s not the ultimate point the movie makes (which is a fairly good one, yet nothing we haven’t heard from Hollywood before) yet that moment between Morgan Freeman and Lauren Graham made the $7.25 I spent worth it.
Priced at 98 million dollars, this piece of contemporary art is an actual human skull encrusted with more than 1,000 carats of diamonds.
This piece, titled “For the Love of God” went on display in London back in February. Denying that was an expensive gimmick, the artist (Damien Hirst) said that he wanted it to represent hope, “wealth against death” and “the ultimate victory over death”.
If you ask me, this is the ultimate expression of “you can’t take it with you”, no?
You can read more about the piece here.
**No I am not impersonating Dwight when I say “question”.**
Hee.
Is it better to not confront a person you’ve already forgiven, that has recently come back into your life after a long period of absence, and has never acknowledged or apologized for the hurt they caused? Especially when said person hates confrontation and probably doesn’t think they did anything wrong?
Or should I try to clear the air?
(Because even if it’s not on their mind, it is on mine. But I don’t want to do this for selfish reasons, either.)