Showing posts with label The Following. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Following. Show all posts

Thursday, July 17, 2014

2014 Comic-Con: The Bag Designs!

San Diego Comic-Con begins in less than a week, and today Warner Bros. has released the bag designs. There will be 13 different looks this time, and a bag will be randomly given to attendees when they pick up their badges at registration. They are again designed like backpacks, but will not feature the "cape" addition that was popular at the 2013 convention.

All bags will have an image of the San Diego Convention Center on one side:
But the other sides will vary from popular live-action shows Arrow, The Following, The Originals, Supernatural (which I forget is still around), and The Vampire Diaries...
         


to animated series Teen Titans Go!...

to upcoming programs Constantine, The Flash, Mike Tyson Mysteries, iZombie, and Gotham...



and even a few to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Batman

Many Con goers trade bags to get the one they want, and you ca also donate blood during the Convention to get an extra bag. Which are you hoping to snag as your premiere souvenir from this year's event?
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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The Following - Let Me Go

"Let Me Go" S01E07

Review:
Joe Carroll is out of jail and Ryan has now turned to the dark side to bring him back. Parker was way too quick to get on board with Ryan's plan to "do things a different way." Joe killing his lawyer was unexpected because Olivia had done everything he wanted, but it does show his hatred for Ryan is above anything else he might care about. Seems as though Joe wants to get Ryan's body count as high as his, but time will tell. Now that Joe has his own school in the woods, he can orchestrate more of his targeted plans for the 'novel.'

Recap:
Screenshot:
Map as of S01E07 - Let Me Go
Map:
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Monday, March 4, 2013

The Following - The Fall

"The Fall" S01E06

Review:
Yes, the farmhouse fell, but the only real damage was to Claire's resolve and faith in Ryan. At least we can move past the freaky love triangle of Emma, Jacob, and Paul. I'm glad Ryan was able to make fun of that a bit. Roderick is someone in law enforcement who should be revealed by the end of this season. He's doing too much in the shadows currently, but we know he's pretty powerful. Ryan added to his body count, but no one of significance to Joe. Not the best episode, but with the farmhouse gone, now it can get more exciting and leave the drama behind.

Recap:
Screenshot: 
Map as of S01E06 - The Fall
Map:
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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The Following - The Siege

"The Siege" S01E05

Review:
One consistently amazing thing that continues to happen is that Joe gets exactly what he wants, almost regardless of the request. Claire doesn't disappoint, and Joe's new, unwilling accomplice in his lawyer puts Joe in a much more powerful position. Ryan's cowboy personality stays true and the body count continues to pile up because of it. With this episode setting up a siege, the next one should add on to the list of martyrs.

Recap:
Reminder: The bubbles belonging to past members of The Following will default to minimized.
Screenshot:

Map:

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

The Folllowing - Mad Love

"Mad Love" S01E04

Review:
This was probably in the top two episodes of the show so far. The title refers to both Ryan and Claire's relationship and the bizarre trio thing now happening in the kidnapper house. Maggie Kester becomes the brilliant antagonist we signed up to see opposite Ryan, although short-lived. Background on Ryan's family, his relationship with Claire, and the decisions that led up to the current state of him and Claire before Joe's escape was great to finally get out in the open. This should let Claire and Ryan's relationship change in the near future. The kidnapping trio are taking things too far, however, and there's simply no way that situation holds.  A relationship between two people can be plenty dramatic, let alone one with three mentally unstable, cult murderers...

Recap:
Getting a bit crowed, so the bubbles belonging to past members of The Following will be minimized.
Screenshot:

Map:
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Saturday, February 16, 2013

The Following - The Poet's Fire

"The Poet's Fire" S01E03

Review:
The theme of one-episode characters doesn't seem to be a sustainable model for this show. With Joe Carroll having received a good number of visitors during his stay in prison after Hardy caught him the first time, perhaps we will see every single one? Rick was interesting, but short-lived. A fireball every now and then would have livened things up a bit, but the awkward, hormone-fueled love triangle forming at the 'kidnap house' is going to get old fast. Ironically, the number one reason criminals get caught is a lack of patience, whether hiding out or simply not telling others of their crimes... but it makes for boring TV, unless emo-rage tantrums are your thing.

Recap:
Check out this episode's map below. There's now a snapshot included before the live map, as the live map will always have the latest version.





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Friday, February 8, 2013

The Following - "Chapter 2"

by Jonathan Bredemeyer

This episode's review has the new format. Review first, then a summary in mind map form. Let me know what you think.  The mind map will change over time and may be reorganized to have episodes underneath each character (that way it wouldn't give away things to viewers who haven't seen the entire show from the beginning). One note, the same mind map will be updated with all the new information, so you'll notice you see all the info, regardless of the review.

"Chapter 2" s01e02

This episode exposed character flaws that I didn't think would be visible for a while. Joe's plan is already not going as envisioned and an agent is already giving him what he wants behind Ryan's back. The dumbest member of "the following" pulls off a mass killing while the three smarter ones are beginning to show signs of conflict? Coming off the rails a bit too quickly. I'm betting things get more serious in the upcoming episodes. 


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Monday, January 28, 2013

NEW SHOW: The Following - Pilot

by Jonathan Bredemeyer

TheTalkingBox has decided to cover The Following.  In future reviews, the review part will be in the form of a mind map while commentary will follow.  I'm also going to do a map of Edgar Allen Poe's works, which the show has mentioned, and which ones I think might come up next.

Review:

Starting in the Virginia State Penitentiary, straight with the creepy music and everything, we watch Joe Carroll walk out the door dressed as a prison guard. Jump to Brooklyn and Kevin Bacon (as Ryan Hardy) in a spacious studio apartment. Ryan gets a call from the FBI as he sees the prison escape on TV.  Apparently, he caught the escapee, Joe Carroll, years earlier after the felon killed 14 girls. The FBI wants him to come in and help.
FOX
Ryan choppers into the prison and puts on the obligatory FBI straight black tie. Also, Ryan wrote a book called Poetry of a Killer about capturing Joe, so his reputation is at stake.  In Joe's cell, Ryan discovers a note from Joe asking about a sequel... Back around 2002, Joe had a child with Claire Mathews.  Joe was also obsessed with Edgar Allen Poe and based his murders on "The Tell Tale Heart" and "The Black Cat."

Ryan meets a female agent named Mason, who's 'read his file,' and a Mike Weston [Fox is just screwing with Burn Notice at this point...] who has a bit of hero worship for Ryan.  [Read his book and everything... Ryan now has a pacemaker from his last encounter with Joe.] The FBI staging area gets surprised by a premeditated suicide of a women who visited Joe in prison.  She strips down to her underwear, exposing a body covered in writing, then stabs herself in the eye.  The writing turns out to be from "The Raven."

Ryan drinks vodka from a water bottle at the now-crime-scene as he gets a call from Sara Fuller, Joe's last attempted victim.  Ryan and the FBI determine a prison guard is the one who helped Joe escape and find loads of dead dogs in the guard's basement.  Apparently, Joe was teaching him how to be serial killer. 

Ryan finally visits Claire, who knows he's been drinking which is worsening his heart condition.  She also reveals that Joe found out something in prison that he shouldn't have, but Ryan thinks he's guessing...  This is the first time Ryan's spoken to her in 8 years after the FBI found out they were involved.

Joe had tried to finish Poe's last unfinished work, The Lighthouse, with a novel called The Gothic Sea.  Ryan withholds all Claire's information from Agent Mason.

Ryan and Mason head to talk to Sara, as that's whom he predicts Joe is after.  They find one of the two cops assigned to guard her dead, and a secret hole in her closet that leads to the apartment next door.  Following a trail of blood, they find the second cop's body and 'NEVERMORE' written in blood on the wall in the garage.

Ryan's theory is that Sara's gay neighbors are part of a cult following Joe, and that they kidnapped Sara for him.  Ryan flips out for a bit and has a flashback, then steals an SUV and drives on a hunch to a lighthouse nearby where the gay couple have a property.  He breaks in and chases screams with his bad heart slowing him down the whole time.  Turns out the screams were a recording and Joe clubs him in the face.  Joe shows Ryan Sara's hanging dead body and then surrenders.  Ryan tries to choke him as agent Mason and FBI friends storm in and stop him [phew... the series was almost over there...].

Meanwhile, Mike Weston has uncovered Joe's secret online world consisting of over one thousand websites.  Joe will only talk to Ryan, and reveals that he's been planning a twisted, character-filled plot for Ryan's next book.  Ryan flips out and breaks a few of Joe's fingers.  Turns out, Claire's babysitter has stolen Joey and turned him over to... someone...
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Monday, January 21, 2013

Midseason Checkup

by Amy K. Bredemeyer

For the past six months, the new series that we've focused on have all been on the "Big 5," better known as the broadcast networks of ABC, FOX, CBS, the CW, and NBC. We looked at each show in four parts, deeming them "good," "bad," "questionable," and "ridiculous." Some of them have not yet started, as the midseason is just getting underway. FOX has The Following premiering tonight, and the ball will just keep rolling from there, with NBC's Do No Harm starting Thursday, January 31st, Body of Proof beginning Tuesday, February 5th on ABC, Zero Hour (also ABC), showing up on Valentine's Day, and more. So, this post will serve as an alphabetical roundup for where this season's shows now are and which are still to come. In the near future we'll do a separate article to look at a few cable shows. 

1600 Penn is three episodes in and definitely NOT a ratings hit. The critics are generally fans, though I've been back-and-forth on it.

666 Park Avenue
made it seven episodes before cancellation. All thirteen episodes will air, though the final four won't be until the summer. Beginning at almost 7M, the show lost 3M before cancellation, though it enjoyed audiences in Canada, the UK, Spain, New Zealand, and Australia, where the series will finish in the next couple weeks.

Animal Practice seems to be nothing more than a laugh now. Five episodes aired before it was canceled, one after, and the remaining three went straight to Hulu, hopefully satisfying the fans it did have. I was among the 12,8M who tuned in for the pilot during the Olympics "Hot Weather Sports," but I never bothered again, finding it just too ridiculous. Still, 3.68M stayed with it until the bitter end.
Arrow, a modern retelling of the comic book Green Arrow, has been a hit with critics and audiences alike. The viewership has been steadily over 3M, and the show is about halfway through the first season. I haven't been able to get into it, but I'm happy it's doing well.

Beauty and the Beast has another 13 episodes to go in its rookie season, which has a very stable audience of around 1.5M. I thought that the pilot was better than the marketing, but I still didn't think it was great. Luckily, there are plenty of teenage girls ogling "beast."

Ben and Kate
has been a bit weak for its time slot, rarely reaching 3M after the first three episodes. It has seven episodes left in its season to turn things around, but things aren't looking great. Personally, I'm only a fair-weather fan.

The Carrie Diaries just started a week ago, and the pilot drew 1.6M. I think that the CW was expecting more for the Sex and the City prequel, set during Carrie's junior year of high school, but nothing about the series really appeals to me.

Chicago Fire didn't draw my attention because I neither find Chicago nor firefighters intriguing. But, it is certainly drawing plenty of eye otherwise! It started with 6.6M and has seen peaks up to 8.54 recently. I highly doubt that this one will get canceled, so that 10pm Wednesday slot will probably hold this drama for a while. 

Crossbones has been largely forgotten about by many, as no news has really broken in months, aside from the possibility of Hugh Laurie starring. Production has been delayed, and this series will likely not even appear for another year, so don't get excited.

Cult begins Tuesday, February 19th at 9pm. My initial opinions about the series (a blogger investigates mysterious disappearances) remain: boring, but could have an audience.

Deception
, initially known as Infamous, has its third episode airing this evening. The first two brought in 5.66M and 4.14M viewers, respectively, but I'm still left wondering how this mystery drama is going to work as anything other than a TV movie in the long run.

Do No Harm has been highly anticipated by many, and the marketing for this updated Dr. Jekyll-and-Mr. Hyde really seems to be creating some hype for its debut on Thursday, January 31st. Personally, I find it to be creepy and an over-exertion of a simple theme. Still, with another former Cosby on the air (Phylicia Rashad), it might just do okay.

Elementary has been a ratings hit for CBS, and will likely continue to grow as it gets the coveted post-Superbowl slot this year. I've personally felt that the episodes are less entertaining as the first season goes on, but I'm clearly in the minority.

Emily Owens, MD is currently burning off the remaining episodes from its original order of thirteen. It's been wavering between one and two million viewers since its inception, but the CW doesn't have the same standards as the others. Its competition? Go On, NCIS: LA, Happy Endings, and New Girl.

Family Tools will be gracing the airwaves on Wednesday, May 1st at 8:30pm. It's only getting ten episodes instead of thirteen, but there are a lot of great actors who could make magic. I'm still looking forward to it!

The Following begins tonight, and I originally found it to be procedural and too crime-solving for me. After the pilot, I was astonished at how much I disliked it, and I'm not sure that Kevin Bacon is enough. That said, my husband liked the beginning of the series and is planning to cover it for TheTalkingBox, so if you think an FBI agent in the midst of serial killers is cool, stay tuned.
Friend Me has been up in the air since the co-creator committed suicide last fall. Unfortunately, the premise might need to change if the series is to continue, as it was to be based on two guys moving to LA to work for Groupon, which has not been doing that great.

Golden Boy begins Tuesday, February 26th at 10pm, though it will actually be a Friday night series for CBS. It's a cop show that originally had Ryan Phillippe attached, though Theo James is the new star. It's a biography to a certain extent, and is set to chronicle the life of a police officer from detective to commissioner. Not my cup of tea.

Go On is in the middle of its first season, and despite some early popularity, it's been below 5M viewers since 2013 began. I don't know if it can pull out of its dip, but many hope so. I'm still watching, but it's not my favorite comedy.

The Goodwin Games is still to come. With no start date in sight, the initial order was cut from thirteen to seven back in early November. The veteran writers and decently-known actors might still draw a crowd when FOX finally decides to air it, so don't panic yet! 

Guys with Kids
has been getting a bad reputation since the beginning, with critics mainly complaining that it brings nothing original to the table. Its first season has six episodes left to air, but it has struggled to pull 4M+, succeeding only once since October. I actually think the show is funny and interesting to watch, but I need to start preparing myself for the fact that its renewal is not very likely.

Hannibal does not yet have a date to premiere, but follows the theme of prequels & adaptations, being based on the Hannibal character from the Thomas Harris novels. Not a fan of serial killers or creepiness, I won't be tuning in when it does air.

How to Live with Your Parents for the Rest of Your Life has Brad Garrett playing Sarah Chalke's father, coming Wednesday, April 3rd at 9:30pm. Though the shorter title will certainly help, but Chalke as a divorcee with a close male BFF still isn't going to reel me in to watch.
Last Resort didn't receive a full-season order, and the final episode will air later this week. I thought that the exotic South Pacific was a strange locale for a show that would primarily take place on a submarine, and I guess I'm not the only one. The pilot drew 9.3M pairs of eye but the drama has dipped as low as 4.9M.  

Made in Jersey was an early cancellation, with only two episodes airing before it was pulled from the Friday night schedule. It actually got 7.8M and 6.7M viewers for those episodes, respectively, but it has already burned off the other six episodes that were completed. I hardly had time to really compose a stance on the series before it ended, so no skin off my back. 

Malibu Country did not last long in my book - I gave up after just two episodes. For a Friday night, the numbers aren't terrible... though the TGIF block needs more substance if you ask me.

The Mindy Project received a full-season order after just two episodes aired. Its ratings have since fallen from 3.68M to 2.76M, but it is up against Apt. 23 and NCIS: LA. The critics tend to like the series, though there has been plenty of speculation as to its staying power. Personally, I'm not a fan of Mindy Kaling nor this show's approach to medicine.

Mistresses is expected to begin in May, though it may begin airing in just a couple of weeks in New Zealand. It's a take off of a British series by the same name, and the more I learn about the series, the less interested I am. Still, I might give the pilot a go.

The Mob Doctor was canceled after eight episodes, but many wondered why it took so long. All thirteen episodes did air, albeit the final few often to only just over 2M people (the pilot only drew 5.1M anyway). My gripe with it was that it offered nothing original, and I guess I wasn't alone.

Nashville never interested me because of my dislike in country music. I wondered how it would do in a 10pm slot, but it's been great. Critics like it, the actors have been receiving award nominations, and its only halfway through its season. It has not fallen below 5.9M yet, so it's probably going to stay around a bit.

The Neighbors is halfway is halfway through its first season, staying above 6M in its slot between The Middle and Modern Family. The marketing seems to suggest that critics are coming around to the series, but I recently abandoned it for its failure to incorporate all of the characters and keep a cohesive storyline.

The New Normal has been a bit of a gamble since it was announced, but I like it. I'm not sure if it has a long and prosperous future, and it seems that the general public feels the same: It hasn't hit 5M viewers since the fourth episode, and the latest two have been under 3.5M.

Next Caller is dead in the water. The Dane Cook series never aired, and only four episodes were filmed. I didn't think it had a great premise - two radio hosts having to share the air - but it doesn't matter now.

Partners had a short life. Only six episodes aired, and though it never had more than 6.5M in the live audience, it also never dipped below 5.4M. I liked it but didn't think it was gold. How I Met Your Mother was its lead-in, and it was up against Bones, The Voice, and Dancing with the Stars, so completely different target demos. Oh well!

Red Widow begins Sunday, March 3rd with an eight-episode run. If gangsters are your thing and you want to see how a woman handles things when her mob boss husband dies, check it out. For me, the premise doesn't offer much.

Revolution
had me going there for a while. At one point I was curious as to how the airwaves would handle another apocalyptic-like show, similar to both Falling Skies and Terra Nova. After the pilot, I was hooked. I wanted to see where things were going to go. A few episodes later, however, I was more frustrated than anything else. NBC choosing to air ten episodes in the fall and hold the other ten until March has been a choice questioned by many, but the show has never had fewer than 7M viewers, so they must be doing something right!

Save Me is still in the pipeline, with no updates in quite a while. You may recall that this is the show where Anne Heche can channel God. If not, don't worry, as I'm sure Anne Heche will be the big marketing factor when this one returns to light.

Vegas has surprised me. I'm not one for the 1960s mob scene, but it's been great for CBS, starting with nearly 15M viewers and still over 11M after 12/21 episodes. This is certainly an accomplishment, as it's up against Parenthood and Private Practice, among other things.

Zero Hour will first air on Valentine's Day... creepy for a series that is about the paranormal and conspiracy theories. Nobody wants to learn about a spouse abducted on the most romantic day of the day, so although I'm unsure about the debut date, I am sure that I won't be tuning in regardless of when it runs.
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Friday, September 14, 2012

Fun Friday with the Kevin Bacon Game!


by Amy K. Bredemeyer

I don't remember the first time I heard about "The Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon." I don't even remember which of Kevin Bacon's movies I saw first! But, yesterday I found out something cool you can do with Google and I wanted to share.

First, a little explanation for the unaware... Kevin Bacon (who is starring in The Following starting mid-season, by the way) has been in tons of movies with a wide variety of stars. Years ago, a party game developed where someone would name an actor and people would try and "link" that person to Kevin Bacon by figuring out movies that Kevin Bacon had been in with someone else who had been in something with a third person who had been in something with the named person. You wanted to not only link the actor to Mr. Bacon but also try to be the one with the shortest number of links needed to do so. I'm pretty bad at the game, but it's also gotten much easier over time.

Well, Google has set it up so all you have to do is type the name of an actor and "bacon number" (you don't even need the quotation marks) and the first thing you'll see on the results page is the chain linking Kevin Bacon to that person. It's fun to mess around with, and I encourage you to give it a go! Here are some examples with actors known for their television work (which makes them slightly "more difficult" for the game)...


I seriously tried like fifty people and I never came up with a Bacon Number higher than three, and only one occasion of that! So, please, if you find one that's three or higher, do share!
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Sunday, August 26, 2012

First Look: The Following

by Amy K. Bredemeyer

Because I didn't attend very many panels on the Saturday of Comic-Con, I've already shared the good stuff from the Q&A portion of the panel for The Following, but I didn't address the actual pilot. Now, I'll reiterate that I wasn't a big fan of the premise (a crime-solving procedural with an FBI agent "in the middle of a network of serial killers"), and, although seeing the pilot for Beauty and the Beast warmed me up to that show a little, the same cannot be said for The Following. In fact, it almost made it worse... when the panel ended I was a little astonished at just how much I disliked this first episode. Again, some changes may be made before the show actually debuts (which won't be until mid-season, according to FOX), but here is a recap with remarks for the series starter. If some things seem a little strange, it's because they are. It was a very odd show, and I'm under the impression that some things are meant to be better understood later on.

The Following "Pilot" (S01E01):
Here's a scary statistic: according to this episode, the FBI estimates that 300 serial killers are active on any given day! Now, we start in Waverly, VA and someone is pregnant. [Tell Tale Heart, anyone?] Joe Carroll, an inmate with the internet, managed to arrange a very elaborate scheme, so, of course, we need to see a number of flashbacks to get some background on him. Back in 2003, he was married to Claire and they had a little boy named Joey. He was a professor and snuck into the home of two young women one night. He killed one and was about to slit the throat of another when Hardy (Kevin Bacon's character) arrived and shot the guy before he could slit the girl's neck. [yeah... I'm serious. This is a very intense show!] Joe believes that eyes are the essence of identity, so he has a hobby of gouging them. [yeah, this guy is pretty messed up!]

Now, present day... a woman in public has Poe's The Raven written all over her body, and she kills herself. [only the creepiest of people would practice killing on German Shepherds!] As soon as it's revealed that Joe is on the loose with a mission, Hardy checks on Claire, with whom he once had an affair. [because you can't survive on being a thriller alone - you have to have that drama!] She's a bit troubled, but has a babysitter to watch her son while they all try to stay safe. Hardy figures that Joe wants to finish what he started, so he goes to see Sarah, the roommate. Well, Joe is a super-creep and planted two men to be her neighbors for years, acting as a gay couple. [I don't know how this guy just gets everyone to do whatever he pleases, but I guess that's the hook...] So, when Hardy gets there, he finds that Sarah has been taken through a secret crawl space in the closet and into the neighbor's home... where they find a dead officer in that garage. [it's a bloodbath on this show, by the way. so if you have a weak stomach, you might just want to give up now.] Because Joe has an unfinished book about a lighthouse, Hardy heads to the local lighthouse, where he immediately hears screams. He's too late - the cries were recorded from when Joe removed Sarah's eyes before killing her. [well, now. they just want to paint this guy in the very worst light ever, huh?] Hardy takes a bat to the face but manages to take down Joe. After being brought in, Joe will only talk to Hardy, and it looks like it's going to be a long relationship, as Claire's son has gone missing... and the viewers see that the kidnapper was none other than Babysitter Denise. [and cue the millions to develop a huge hatred for Joe Carroll!] 
CR: FOX
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Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Saturday at Comic-Con: Around Town and Back

by Amy K. Bredemeyer

Saturday morning could have been Once Upon a Time, followed by Futurama, The Simpsons, and Family Guy. But, I woke up at 6am to consider heading down to get in line for Ballroom 20 (Hall H was busy with the big movie panels and all) and took a look at Twitter. Things didn't look fabulous... in fact, it was already starting to be doubtful that I'd get into that room, and I hadn't even considered the fact that Warehouse 13 was in that room before any of the things I was thinking of seeing even started. So, I made the executive decision to roll back over for another hour and a half, then truck on down to the Con.

I spent a couple of hours on the floor, hitting up various booths and grabbing swag (including FOX for the poster tubes and ABC's The Neighbors for a shirt and a "new name). Then, I ventured next door to see the Batmobiles exhibit, the Hobbit video game testing, and then into downtown to see what was going on. Jonathan and I apparently hit the Grimm area at the only down time they had all weekend, so we were able to meander through at our own pace.
Photo by Jonathan Bredemeyer
Photo by Jonathan Bredemeyer
(you can see the Gandalf hat and my "Danica Patrick" nametag)

We made our way through the throngs of the gaslamp quarter, deciding to pop into the CNet party for a bit (again, lucky on the timing - less than 10 people were in front of us in line! and BATMAN was the DJ!) and getting a ton more swag, including some Science Channel bags.
Photo by Jonathan Bredemeyer
Then, we stopped over at the Omni to donate blood - there's a big drive every year at Comic-Con, you know! True Blood gives you some good stuff for doing good, and the process wasn't that slow. Actually, quite a few people there were talking about how the lines were the greatest of any at Comic-Con! You sat in the waiting room, then went to a room to fill out your paperwork, then waited for someone to call you over and input your information into the system, then waited for a nurse to call you in to take your blood pressure, iron level, etc., then waited to turn in your paperwork, then were given your blood bags and sent to another room, where the line was a bit slower but still moved... and you got right into a chair and away you went! By the time we grabbed our swag and had our snack, we hadn't even been there 90 minutes - yes, slower than your everyday blood drive, but not bad for what was going on! The only downside is that, when we went to the Sails Pavilion later that night to see if we hit any of the TON OF DRAWINGS they did for all of the donors, neither of us won anything. The number before mine won a Vamplet thing, but the number before Jonathan's got A SIGNED STAN LEE POSTER! Anyway, moving on...

By 4pm we were in 6BCF for The Following Screening and Q&A. I'll talk about the pilot itself another time, but here are a couple of highlights from the panel, which featured Kevin Williamson, Kevin Bacon, Marcos Siega, and James Purefoy.
- Kevin Bacon wanted "to play a hero who had some complexity" and "a darker side."
- Kevin Williamson alluded to the fact that the second episode hasn't even been written yet!
- They were surprised with how much gore they got away with... they shot it as a cable show and then toned it down as required.
- Kevin Williamson: "it turns out, Kevin Bacon has chemistry with everyone!" (as if the Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon game had never taught you that...)

Next up in that room was the Person of Interest Screening and Q&A, which was a little different, not being a brand-new show and all. [sidenote: I didn't really care about this all that much, but it was in the room after The Following and before Revolution and MythBusters, so I wasn't prepared ahead of time.] After the typical updates like the return date (9/27) and the DVD release date for the first season (9/4), we jumped right into some Q&A with panelists Jim Caviezel, Michael Emerson, Taraji P. Henson, Kevin Chapman, Jonathan Nolan, and Greg Plageman.
Photo by Jonathan Bredemeyer
- Taraji says that her character "believes in the moral good of all men" and that she get that they're "doing good things" even if they're continuing to break laws.
- Kevin shared that he'll hear people say, "hey, I like you on that show. Try not to get shot."
- As a child, Jonathan Nolan realized that nobody watched the security cameras all the time in London, and in Chicago there were no cameras, so he began to wonder what happened to the information collected, which is where the idea for Person of Interest came from.

At 6pm we were treated to Revolution pilot screening and Q&A, to promote the new fall NBC show. Again, we'll be covering the new pilots at a later date. The Q&A with the panelists (Eric Kripke, Billy Burke, Giancarlo Exposito, Tracy Spiridakos) was very short, and the most interesting moment had to be learning that Billy is learning his swordsmanship from the guy behind The Pirates of the Caribbean.
Photo by Jonathan Bredemeyer
By Saturday evening, people are really in the Comic-Con groove. A good chunk are hitting up the Masquerade in either the competition room or watching from an overflow room. Many flock to see the annual Kevin Smith panel. Others are out in the streets of San Diego, either hitting up parties or enjoying the weekend nightlife. Well, 7:15pm found me settling in for the MythBusters panel with stars Adam Savage, Jamie Hyneman, Tory Belleci, Grant Imahara, and Kari Byron (moderated by John Landis) for 45 minutes (not the hour that was advertised, by the way). This is a show that I don't regularly try to catch, and I have really only seen a handful of episodes. I'm not against it, I just don't care enough to make the effort to tune-in. Still, it was a great panel, so let me share some moments with you:
Photo by Jonathan Bredemeyer
- When asked what their favorite mythbuster is, Jamie said "whatever the latest one is" and Adam likes the car stuff (like the re-creation of the Speed bus stuff).
- all of the cast members are sick of being asked questions related to Kari.
- There are some myths they'd like to tackle but they can't because of danger/expense, like the Indiana Jones refrigerator theory when it comes to nuclear weapons. There are others that insurance has just turned down - like going over Niagara Falls in a barrel. And, sometimes, insurance is picky about WHICH one of the cast members can bust the myth! To debunk the idea that falling through canvas awnings would break your fall, they turned down Adam but allowed Tory to do it!
- Adam's motto is that "failure is always an option."
- They were all kinda surprised at the outcome of the blind driving experiment. The amusing part was having Jamie drink and then give instructions to a blind driver - he drove like he was drunk!
- They get letters all the time from people disagreeing with myths they've covered, like ice bullets, split arrows, and even the plane on the conveyor belt.
- It would have required too much precision to use curved mirror on the Archimedes Death Ray.
- when asked if they would test some pregnancy myths, Kari says that "one of you guys can knock someone up. I'm done."
- Adam's favorite thing to blow up is a hot water heater.
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Thursday, June 7, 2012

Fall 2012 Network Shows: GONNA PASS!

by Amy K. Bredemeyer

By this point you've probably already seen a little bit about which shows each major broadcast network has picked up and when they're planning to air them. Some sites have covered them show by show, others network by network, and at least two decided to break it down night by night. We decided to go with our interest in them - what we can't wait for, what we don't think is worth the time, what falls somewhere in the middle, and even what we don't think will last. Of course, this is subject to change, especially come late July when so much more comes to light! Today we look at the ones that we're not really planning on checking out at all. Some of them sound like they could get a nice audience, others maybe not...

Arrow (CW) is based on the comic book Green Arrow, a superhero vigilante who rights wrongs in Starling City. I just don't need a comic book show in my life, but I can see how it could work for other people.
The Carrie Diaries (CW) looks at Sex and the City's Carrie Bradshaw's senior year of high school. I never could stand Sex and the City, so I have no desire to see another incarnation of it. That said, the show had a large following, so this could work.

Cult (CW) is a journalist blogger and a production assistant who investigate mysterious disappearances. This sounds a bit boring to me, but the contemporary idea of a blogger being a main character could do well.

Vegas (formerly Ralph Lamb, CBS) is 1960s mobsters. Stars Dennis Quaid. Not for me. The setting could do great for others, as could Dennis Quaid.
The Mindy Project (formerly It's Messy, FOX) is Mindy Kaling's (The Office) show where she plays a physician living life. Not a fan of Mindy, don't like the premise as it relates to medicine, nothing really grabs me at all. Some people will tune in for Mindy, though... 

The Following (FOX) looks at an FBI agent "in the middle of a network of serial killers." It stars Kevin Bacon. Kevin Bacon isn't enough to draw me in, and this screams "procedural" and "crime-solving" too much for me to bat an eye.
R: Patrick Ecclesine/FOX
Red Widow (ABC) focuses on a woman who is left to take over a small criminal business where her husband is murdered. Eh. How many gangster or family-coming-together shows need to premiere in 2012-2013? This one just blends in and doesn't seem to offer anything special.

How to Live with Your Parents for the Rest of Your Life (ABC) has divorced mom Sarah Chalke moving back in with her parents - Brad Garrett and Elizabeth Perkins. Perhaps the cast is enough to make you tune in, but not me. Perhaps you're interested in people moving in with their parents, but I'm not. The combination doesn't make it any better. And, I agree with the ten thousand others who have already said it: shorter title, please.
666 Park Avenue (ABC) is a drama based on the book series, following a young couple taking over a devil-haunted NYC apartment building. Yeah... I don't do creepy. I think that Sundays at 10pm will be a good slot for this creepy mess, so it might do great, just not with me.

Chicago Fire (NBC) is about firemen in Chicago. Look for Jesse Spencer as some eye candy. Chicago isn't my favorite city, firemen aren't my favorite profession, and Jesse Spencer isn't my favorite hottie. Where's the draw?
(Photo by: Sandro/NBC)
Do No Harm (NBC) will be a Dr. Jekyll/Mr.Hyde type medical drama, starring a brain surgeon. Phylicia Rashad is set to co-star. This borders on creepy, but could also be part House, what with a random time-bomb-type doctor and all. I think this show is trying a bit too hard... and that some concepts are better left off serials.

Next Caller (NBC) is a satellite radio DJ who now has to share a show with an NPR feminist. Stars Dane Cook and Jeffrey Tambor. Meh... I'm a very big fan of Frasier, but hated the episodes where he had tension with coworkers - be it Bulldog's pranks, Dr. Mary's comments, or his love/hate relationship with several others. I just don't see the appeal here.
Hannibal (NBC) based on the characters in the classic novels, a criminal profiler is looking for a serial killer, and partners with an amazing empathizer. Again, I don't do creepy. Or serial killers, for that matter. But I could see this becoming popular with others.
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