Wednesday, April 21, 2010

NewsRadio

"No. No, I'm at the station right now. Yeah. No, then I got to go to the factory, then I got to go to the building site. Huh? No, that's just for fun. I like to watch the big trucks."
-Jimmy James, owner of radio station WNYX and eccentric billionaire
NewsRadio main cast

NewsRadio starts out kind of slow and out of focus, much like many other half hour comedies. Anyhoo. It doesn't take many episodes to realize they are something different. The main reason they stand out is because they don't always go after the cheap laughs. They trust their audience to see the development in characters and actively seeks out to make us laugh thanks to those changes over time and those understandings of the characters.

NewsRadio is made with love. An ensemble cast obviously enjoying them self while working on it, great characters molded with the actors and the ensemble in mind and with very good scripts as a platform. My only regret is nobody knew to say "Enough is enough.With Phil gone we shouldn't make the fifth season. Let's do a double episode to honor him and wrap up these characters, and then let the show live on in memory along with Phil."
In memory
Phil Hartman
(September 24, 1948 - May 28, 1998)
Rest In Peace

Better shows than NewsRadio have run too many seasons, the final season of Coupling springs to mind, but few if any have as good an excuse as NewsRadio to why it went downhill. The tragic murder of Phil Hartman May 28, 1998, only 16 days after the airing of the fourth season finale of the show, in reality killed the show as well. They tried moving on without the character of Bill McNeil, and their first episode of the fifth season was a moving tribute. How often they had to stop shooting that episode because the cast broke down in tears is something no-one kept count on, but there's no doubt the loss of their colleague and friend affected the cast in ways easily seen on the screen especially in that episode.

If you've never seen the entire NewsRadio I'll give you my advice. Watch only the first episode of the fifth season, and call it quits. The 21 episodes after that one doesn't hold the same quality, even if it's funny enough every so often. The problem is they forgot a couple of important notes on the characters we'd grown to love, they never managed to work them self past the loss of Phil/Bill and in the end they never got an ending the audience can live happily after with the knowledge of.

Dave Foley and Maura Tierney as Dave Nelson and Lisa Miller

The fifth season character of Max Lewis probably didn't stand a chance anyway they played it, but to me Jon Lovitz isn't especially funny either. I didn't even enjoy his two guest appearances in different parts during the first four seasons. Then Max Lewis kept annoying me the entire final season, which obviously is difficult to get past reviewing it.

I got to remind myself to fairly review the show as it was, but the fact is to me, as a TV lover, I feel you should take the time and acknowledge Hartman despite of the biggest reason NewsRadio was so good; It's an ensemble cast.

To me the roles of Dave Foley as Dave Nelson, Phil Hartman as Bill McNeil, Maura Tierney as Lisa Miller and Stephen Root as Jimmy James is the four walls elevating it to the show it was, but Joe Rogan, Vicky Lewis, Andy Dick and Khandi Alexander probably had the same spot with others as some of those four had with me, and even with me they all had important roles in balancing the ensemble. They spent four seasons airing quality comedy, without ever escaping the treat of cancellation. They had Seinfeld and Friends taking all the glory in those days, but NewsRadio is a well kept secret as one of the 90s classic comedies. Maybe they even was a little ahead of its time. The fact remains they didn't ever get as much praise as they deserved, but it's never to late to catch up with golden shows just because they've stopped airing. NewsRadio is four season+one episode of high quality comedy. Enjoy.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Samantha Spade (Without a Trace)

Poppy Montgomery is Samantha Spade at Without a Trace

I got to admit Samantha Spade was quite a while the sole reason I stuck through Without a Trace. 7 seasons with 160 episodes, and not all was equally interesting to say the least. The character of Samantha Spade was however one of those cops balancing her personal emotional state interestingly with her work at the New York Missing Persons Unit at FBI.

Jack Malone and Samantha Spade

Still. Their cases was always the most important part of Without a Trace, and they didn't go as far into personal issues as NYPD Blue went. I do however think Without a Trace balanced it out quite well, and Samantha had more than enough of a personality to not be just another cop in just another cop show.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip

"We're all being lobotomized by this country's most influential industry. It's just thrown in the towel on any endeavor to do anything that doesn't include the courting of 12 year-old boys. Not even the smart 12 year-olds, the stupid ones, the idiots. Which there are plenty thanks in no small measure to this network. So why don't you just, change the channel? Turn off the TVs do it right now." -Wes Mendell, Executive Producer Studio 60

Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip main cast

Television is a completely new ballgame these days. Networks fill the air with reality shows where contestants eat worms, stay the longest on an islands or live the longest imprisoned in camera filled houses. Scripted shows costs more to produce, quality actors costs salary while reality shows gets fame seekers for free and people still watch the trashy reality shows making them better suited to gain advertiser money.

S60 wasn't afraid to kick off their show by saying so. And by letting Aaron Sorkin loose to follow up his huge The West Wing success with actors like Matthew Perry, Bradley Whitford and Amanda Peet collecting paychecks, they took a high priced dice throw from the get go. S60 didn't have to gain some success to survive. S60 needed to be a killer hit to stand a chance.


Then it doesn't really matter the show is one of the best ever written and performed by quality actors. S60 only got a season, but it's 22 episodes you shouldn't miss out on. You'll easily recognize Sorkin's writing both in the wit and smartness, but also in the way the dialogue drives the drama. It's no doubt one of those shows canceled way to soon, and not because of a lack of quality. It was canceled just because television today is a completely different ballgame.

Monday, April 5, 2010

The West Wing - season 1

"Lady, the God you pray to is too busy being indicted for tax fraud." -Josh Lyman, White House Deputy Chief of Staff

The West Wing main cast

The first season of The West Wing is a stunning display of television at its best. OK. So Mandy Hampton wasn't the most interesting character ever made for television, but hey; At least they got a lot right. The casting came very close to a home run. Add the ability to make politic interesting, add the walk-and-talk, add characters with layers and humanity in both their shortcomings and their emotions, and you come close to summing up the first season of The West Wing. Of course you'll still be way short, as its strength is the complexity and that's not something you sum up in a couple of short lines.

New drama doesn't get much better than this. It's filled with passion and yet manages to use wit, relations and human reactions to drive the stories forward. They never bash their view to death with repetitions, but we're never in any doubt on were they stand. The first season of The West Wing is close to perfection in script writing and character building. Managing to keep the smaller episode stories interesting as they went along was the icing on the cake making it an instant success.

Who knew politic could be so interesting prior to The West Wing?

And between all these political victories and losses, it's all those small moments I'll always remember the most from the first season of The West Wing. Moments reminding us also the people with the most powerful jobs in the US are people who gets touched by others in so many ways.

The first season of The West Wing is nothing short of excellent entertainment. I've got no problem recommending it strongly if you have yet to get acquainted with the White House senior staff, and if you are familiar with them this might maybe serve you as a reminder to say hello to an old friend.