Sunday, September 27, 2009

Committing to living life in the present by watching TV

You know that magical-thinking sensation you sometimes get when cleaning the house that once you finish you will be done with for good and won't ever have to do it again? When I read Entertainment Weekly's Fall TV Preview a few weeks ago, I had that feeling, about work--I was looking forward to the time when I would be done with work and could really focus on other things, like TV, exercise, and blogging.

In the real world, I probably won't be done with work until at least 2042, and by then TV and the internet will be obsolete. Exercise will probably still be around, so I can hold off on that for now, but I should probably get on the TV and blogging while there's still time.

In that vein, I watched the new episodes of Gossip Girl, Dollhouse, and Bored to Death this weekend. Scripted TV, how I have missed you!

Of the three, I surprisngly found Gossip Girl to be the most affecting. The kids all headed off to college, and as difficult as you might think it would be to create convincing First Day of School nervous excitement for characters who act like alcoholic 37-year-olds, they basically pulled it off. Blair moved into the dorms at NYU (instead of her gajillionaire boyfriend Chuck's love nest) so that she could establish herself as the Queen Bee of the freshmen. But the plan backfired when B's Upper East Side culture clashed with college-kid crunchiness: nobody came to her sushi and saketini party because they were watching Vanessa's documentary about her organic community garden. And, Dan (Dan! the one from Brooklyn!) vetoed her signature accessory, telling her, "No headbands in college." Ow! The pain of being the reject is not dulled by having a catered cocktail party all to yourself.

Dollhouse was full of sexy mysteriousness, as usual, but I found that I could barely keep up with the ongoing plot arcs because I hadn't thought about them since last year. I do love Joss Whedon's refusal to dumb down his plots for people who aren't paying attention, but it sure does make you feel dumb then you are not paying attention.

Bored to Death, which stars Jason Schwartzman, Ted Danson, and Zach Galifianakis (the cousin of my idol Carolyn Hax's ex-husband Nick, if you were wondering), is about a writer (Schwartzman) who poses as a private detective in order to combat his ennui, or something. It was funny, but the most impressive thing about it was that it was the only show set in New York I've ever seen that really felt like it was in New York. New York kind of freaks me out, so that may not be a good thing in the end, but it was impressive nonetheless.

So that was a productive weekend! I am now going to direct my newfound energies towards watching The Amazing Race.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's wonderful to have your critiques so that I don't have to watch them myself!

Thanks for the hard work!

Love, Mom

Andrea said...

I've been avoiding blogging by watching Project Runway, Top Chef, The NBC Thursday night line-up, Bored to Death, and Entourage. May expand to Curb just to sate curiosity. I never even watched Seinfeld. I feel like a new, and more boring, person.

Unknown said...

Great stuff... I like this... Visit below link for Independence day India wishes and images
happy independence day India wishes 2015
happy independence day 2015 india images
India's 68th independece day speech quotes sms and messages

Unknown said...



Bajirao Mastani Trailer
Bajirao Mastani HD Trailer
Bajirao Mastani Box Office Collection
Bajirao Mastani Star Cast
Bajirao Mastani Wiki
Bajirao Mastani Songs


Bajirao Mastani HD Video
Bajirao Mastani IMDB
Bajirao Mastani Ratings
Bajirao Mastani Wallpapers
Bajirao Mastani Images
Bajirao Mastani Release Date



Anonymous said...

tamasha movie 2015



Tamasha

Admin said...

Sanam Teri Kasam Full Movie
Sanam Teri Kasam Songs
Sanam Re Songs
Sanam Re Full Movie
Funtube