The methadone metronome
I don’t watch much television these days. There have been periods of my life when my weekly viewing probably matched the average American (i.e. waaaaay too much). And there’s been times when I watched none at all for long stretches. Growing up, I saw very little TV. There was one in the house but it was used sparingly and was heavily censored. My grandfather’s shrill denunciations of “that terrible box” reverberated throughout the many branches of my family tree. That terrible box was responsible for ripping the heart, and the church, out of Irish society he insisted. It sold selfishness and glossy foreign ways. I can vividly remember the furore when Dallas was first beamed into Irish televisions. It represented the death of Irish civilisation, and by extension – at least to grandad – the death of civilisation itself. It was brainwashing us into abandoning tradition and seeking lives of empty self-gratification.
Not that I want to paint the daft bugger as some kind of wise old patrician. His views about television may well have been perceptive, but his views on just about everything else were mad as a badger.
Just before I hit my teens (when my parents attempts at censorship would have ceased to be successful), we moved overseas and I spent the next seven years or so in countries where I didn’t speak the language. So I watched some CNN now and then, but basically the tellybox was where films on video appeared. By the time I hit my late teens I had unconsciously dismissed television as being trash. The world of soap-operas and sit-coms and light-entertainment and cop shows and cartoons was just one big gaping pit of cultural excrement. You could have pointed me towards David Attenborough‘s wonderful documentaries, or perhaps Monty Python’s Flying Circus. But my distaste for the medium blinded me to the idea that it had anything at all to offer.
The Truth Is Out There
Then, however, came The X-Files. For me, that was the beginning of television. In retrospect The X-Files was actually foreshadowed by Twin Peaks, but I came to that one late – many years after it had first been broadcast. I only stuck with The X-Files for the first few seasons, but it made me realise that the medium had finally matured to the point where something truly interesting could be done with it. This was sharp, smart, well-written stuff with production values that rivalled cinema. It was well-acted, had genuinely likeable characters and fit perfectly with the mood of the times.
But it wasn’t just like a half-length movie every week. The X-Files wasn’t cinema reinvented for the MTV generation. It was it’s own unique thing. You can do things over 12 or 20 episodes that you just can’t do in a film. In many ways, a good television series is far closer to a good novel than even the best cinema. The time exists to fully flesh out characters, to linger over intriguing sub-plots and to provide detail and atmosphere that would simply be sensory overload were you to compress it into 90 or 120 minutes. I think of good television as a form of literature.
Since The X-Files there have been a small handful of TV programmes that manage to reach or exceed the bar it set. Probably far fewer than there should be. But at the same time… it’s a wonder any get made at all, given the culture of anti-intellectualism that clearly exists within the television industry. For those interested; here is that list in its entirety…
- Twin Peaks. David Lynch‘s gloriously warped masterpiece. The one that began it all. An FBI agent shows up at the isolated mountain town of Twin Peaks to look into the murder of young and beautiful Laura Palmer. He goes about investigating the crime as though the murderer was one of the locals, yet all the while connecting Laura’s death to a series of others that happened miles away. Twin Peaks is filled with some of Lynch’s most memorable characters and a rich, dark, claustrophobic atmosphere that infects your dreams. Special Agent Dale Cooper – played to perfection by Kyle MacLachlan – would feature high on a list of Great Literary Characters. A latter day Sherlock Holmes (who switched the cocaine and opium for something a little more psychedelic), Cooper attacks problems with a singlemindedness that usually appears anything but, and a method that is often – quite literally – madness itself. You still can’t get Season 2 of this on DVD, which is nothing short of criminal.
- Millennium. This series was created by Chris Carter (the man behind The X-Files) and is – in many ways – superior to his more famous work. At least, the first two (of three) seasons are. If you assume the show ends at the final episode of season 2 then you have a near-perfect piece of television. It follows the experiences of Frank Black; another truly fine character, played this time by Lance Henriksen (Bishop from Aliens); an ex-FBI profiler recently recovered from a serious emotional breakdown. Frank gets visions. Of evil. And as the series progresses those visions become increasingly apocalyptic driving him closer to madness. The shadowy Millennium Group is trying to recruit Frank to their ranks, and as he battles to hold his family together in the face of internal and external pressures, the whole world starts to come apart at the seams. Dark as a dark, dark thing. And then some.
- Buffy The Vampire Slayer (including spin-off series, Angel). The best of them all. Potentially never to be bettered. Joss Whedon created one of the great works of literature of the late 20th / early 21st century, yet lots of people still think it’s “just Beverly Hills 90210 with monsters”. Certainly that’s the phrase I used when my friend Justin recommended it. I seem to recall he described it as “the best thing ever”. He was right. The premise is deceptively simple… vampires, zombies, werewolves, demons, ghosts… “everything you’ve ever dreaded was under your bed, but told yourself couldn’t be by the light of day. They’re all real!” But luckily for the human race, there’s one girl in every generation gifted with special powers to fight the hordes of darkness… the slayer. Sarah Michelle Gellar plays the lead role, but Buffy is very much an ensemble piece. That’s the beauty of the show; it’s actually about human relationships. Not monsters. From the beginning of Season 1 to the final moments of Season 7, the central theme of Buffy The Vampire Slayer is the human condition. Just like almost every truly great work of literature. The supernatural setting merely provides the writers with a wonderfully colourful backdrop against which to explore that condition. So in one episode they can magically remove everyone’s ability to speak… almost an entire episode with no dialogue. In another, Buffy gets the ability to hear everyone else’s thoughts… rapidly driving her insane. In yet another she becomes convinced that her entire world of vampires and demons is a psychosis she’s experiencing while confined to a lunatic asylum. In another, everyone gets their memory wiped by a spell gone wrong. Over and over these fantastical premises are used not (merely) as rollicking good eye-candy, but to highlight the strengths – and the frailties – of the human heart.
- Firefly. Like Chris Carter before him, Joss Whedon decided not to follow the massive success of Buffy by retreading the same ground. And like Chris Carter before him, this clearly displeased the moneymen. Firefly was never going to sell calendars and mousemats and pencilcases the way Buffy did. It just wasn’t that kind of show. Mind you, at its deepest level, Firefly had exactly the same premise as Buffy… a bunch of outsiders and misfits unite against a hostile universe, and through their love and friendship forge a life worth living. The Ur-Plot. I guess most people will be more familiar with the later film, Serenity, than with the original source material. Which is a tragedy of sorts despite the movie being excellent in its own right. Firefly was cancelled after half a season, and the film serves as a stop-gap “end” to a rich story that had been slowly unfolding. For those unfamiliar with either the film or the TV series, Firefly follows the travels of a starship, ‘Serenity’ (a ‘firefly’-class freighter), as the crew scrape a living on the galactic frontier, all the while evading the law… hot on their heels (in the form of shadowy, sinister covert agents as well as big starships filled with uniformed troops). It’s the life you imagine Han Solo was leading right up until that fateful day in Mos Isley. That said, there’s no aliens in Firefly. Space turned out to be empty when mankind started to explore it. Instead the setting is a very human one. It’s a dirty, dusty future that fuses China with the Wild West. And gone are Buffy’s highschool misfits to be replaced by a bitter war-veteran (from the losing side) and his best friend. Then there’s the best-friend’s Hawaiian-shirted pilot husband; the good-hearted and lovely ship’s engineer; an elderly disillusioned priest; a high-class prostitute; a once-wealthy and influential doctor and his young sister (the character around whom the primary plot arc revolves). The writing was of a quality you rarely encounter in any medium… somehow the characters that Joss Whedon creates have a life and a reality to them that makes him the envy, certainly of this writer, and I suspect many others too.
- Veronica Mars. Yet more Californian highschool shenanigans. This time though, we dispense with the supernatural and the science fictional. Veronica Mars does to the Whodunnit? genre what Buffy did to horror. The show starts a year after the murder of Veronica’s best friend. A year in which her life has been turned completely upside down. I wouldn’t be doing justice to the gloriously convoluted plot were I to try and summarise it here. Rob Thomas has clearly drawn a lot of inspiration from Raymond Chandler‘s novel The Big Sleep as well as the film based on it, and the whole genre it typified. At the same time, Veronica Mars feels fresh and very relevant… one of the central themes of the first two seasons is the economic inequalities that blight American (and by extension, Western) society… as rigid a class system as has ever existed despite the superficial “anyone-can-make-it” classless nature of America. When Veronica describes her school she points out, “if you go here your parents are either millionaires, or your parents work for millionaires.” Veronica is an exception, and is in the unique position of knowing what it’s like on both sides of the fence. Her father used to be the town Sheriff. Top law man. And power is as good as money. But when her Dad accuses the richest of all the rich men in town of the murder of his own daughter; Veronica’s best friend; he finds himself hounded out of office and becomes a Private Detective to pay the mortgage (and, it turns out, to continue his investigation into what really happened the night of the murder). Philip Marlowe meets Buffy without the monsters. But in a very very good way.
- Battlestar Galactica. I’m the first to admit that this programme shouldn’t be half as good as it is. I mean, a remake of a dodgy 1970s space opera famed as much for the preening ponces on the flight deck and their godawful cheesey dialogue as for the ludicrous Greek-mythology allusions. But the creators of the show (and it does seem to be the creation of a team, rather than the vision of one person implemented by a team) have clearly taken a leaf or three out of Joss Whedon’s book. The look and feel of the show is straight out of Whedon’s Firefly… a fact that’s very much to its credit. And just as with Buffy, the fantastical setting is used simply as the backdrop against which the writers can explore human relationships and moral problems. And it is when examining ethical and moral issues that Battlestar Galactica is at its best. The first two seasons are excellent television and alone warrant inclusion in this list. However the third season opens with — to my mind — perhaps the six finest episodes of television ever broadcast. Using the science-fiction setting to create the necessary ‘distance’, the programme examines — amongst other things — the potential justifications for terrorist attacks against an occupying force, up to and including suicide bombings. It does so in a shockingly direct and — dare I say it — compassionate way. More than once while watching I was reminded of Talking Heads’ Listening Wind. Can there be higher praise?
If I’ve omitted something obvious, then let me know. But that short list pretty much covers — for me — the literature of television. My stance with regards to that terrible box has mellowed a little over time, and there’s plenty of other things that are occasionally “worth watching” (The Simpsons, The Mighty Boosh, Futurama, etc) but by and large, when you consider the sheer number of hours of programming broadcast in the English language over the decades, it’s a disturbingly short list.
The prime omission, IMNSHO, is Six Feet Under. The five seasons form a complete story that is certainly one of the best ever told on TV; and episode-by-episode it pushes TV boundaries with daring, compassion, intelligence and warmth. Brilliant performances, wicked humour, stark darkness, and consistently wonderful writing.
February 20th, 2007 | 6:23pm
by Gyrus
Fair enough, Gyrus, you’ve recommended Six Feet Under (and sorted me out with copies of the first two seasons… thanksverymuch) so many times that I will add it as an honorary member of the list even though I’ve yet to watch it myself (as I say; my TV viewing is almost non-existent at the moment… but it’s a periodic thing and I imagine I’ll watch it before too long).
February 20th, 2007 | 6:29pm
by Jim
I have a love and hate relationship with it and feel almost embarrased to say that I’ve never really explored the shows you talk about apart from X-Files and bits of Buffy. The X-Files and sadly, Ally McBeal, filled a void when I was living in Luton (rhymes with cruton if you are John Hegley..) with no friends nearby and before I owned a PC.
In the last 10 years I’ve only recorded 3 things from the TV. 1, Bits of Live 8. 2, My daughters 2nd birthday card being shown on the Cbeebies “Birthday Time” slot and 3, The Church playing at the opening of the Commonwealth Games.
My 3 year old looks at TV ads and says things like “It’s just an advert for BUTTER, what a waste of time” or “they are just trying to tell me to buy stuff I don’t want daddy” Have I brainwashed her? I, like my father, find myself utterly flabberghasted by the banality of much that is shown, yet I watch Coronation Street most nights…
Truly great TV for me?
Blackadder. Not Only But Also. Rising Damp. The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin. I didn’t know you cared (written by Peter Tinniswood)
all old comedy stuff….
At the moment I’m having great big belly laughs at Trailer Park Boys. It’s on Canadian TV and also on some obscure comedy chanels in the UK at about 4am. I urge you to download it and watch. I came to it due to an episode I read about where the main protagonists kidnap Alex Lifeson of Rush and bring him back to their trailer park home to play for them. Sounds crap, but it’s extremely funny. Episodes have titles such as “If i can’t smoke and swear, I’m fucked” and “Propane, Propane”.
Otherwise it’s just Question Time and odd bits of music programmes.
Peace,
RA.
February 20th, 2007 | 10:03pm
by RA
PS.
Methadone Metronome. Nice. I’m off to put it on the headphones now….
February 20th, 2007 | 10:13pm
by RA
bugger.. spelling… argh… wish I could edit…
February 20th, 2007 | 10:14pm
by RA
You can’t. But I can.
February 20th, 2007 | 10:15pm
by Jim
E.R (seasons 7 to 10) & The Sopranos – The writing & acting in these are as good as pretty much any film that is out there. Also a precursor in Northern Exposure, not quite there but an enormous step in the right direction, & on a par with Twin Peaks at least.
I really liked this piece, jim, you lay it out so plainly & concisely. I have you to blame for getting me into TV on this level with Buffy – the catalyst! – & i have to be careful what shows i watch now as they have to be treated as 18 hour films, ideally, when i do. And so i have avoided to the best of my ability many other shows as i dont feel the rewards are great enough. it has to be something great & worthwhile to hand over that amount of time of your life.
It is a fascinating development in culture, tho – the development of a new art form -the coming of age of a medium thought worthless, much the same as the graphic novel grew out of the funnies. i wonder what’s next?
February 25th, 2007 | 9:50pm
by m'hoop
Hi Jim, my name is zoe and i’m just a gardener so don’t really think I can comment on your clever t.v. observations. I would however like to say hello and it would be very nice to meet you someday and maybe I could engage you in a discussion about parsnips xzoe
February 25th, 2007 | 9:54pm
by zoe
Good lord, Man! Have you never seen Farscape? Not the easiest show to get into. Be absolutely sure to watch in order. Remember each season informs the season before and after so you will see even more in subsequent viewings. The. Greatest. TV. Ever! Buffy comes second.
March 3rd, 2007 | 12:57am
by Vinity
One word. Carnivale (HBO). Died far, far too young. Simply became too expensive to produce. Unfortunately it was discontinued at the end of the second season, following a cliffhanger that would have changed the show fundamentally.
March 3rd, 2007 | 12:59am
by Tom
I’d like to add Friday Night Lights and The Wire as great shows. The Wire is near perfect and Friday Night Lights surprises me every show.
Oh, Freaks and Geeks was pretty solid as well.
I will have to check out Millennium again. I didn’t like it at the time but that can change.
Considering how many books and movies are terrible as well and how much time there is in a day for reasonably respectable channels to broadcast TV shows along with the money required, I think television is doing pretty damn well and getting better every year.
March 3rd, 2007 | 3:19am
by dmhWQS
Like the previous poster said, try the Wire. It has been described as the closest thing on TV to a novel.
March 3rd, 2007 | 4:35am
by Steve
Hi Jim! I got linked over here from Whedonesque, so congrats! I’d say the only tv show as literature you’re missing is “Freaks and Geeks”. “Wonderfalls” is excellent as well but I wouldn’t consider it literature, I’d consider it just plain funny.-Michael
March 3rd, 2007 | 5:00am
by Michael
Although it doesn’t really fit with the types of shows mentioned here, Arrested Development is the funniest show I have ever seen on TV. It was consistently hilarious throughout all 3 (2 and a half) seasons. It’s also the only show I’d rate above Joss Whedon’s stuff, and I’m a huge Whedonverse fan.
Dexter is also a very good (but creepy) show. I hope the second season keeps the same intensity of the first.
Now I might have to start watching BSG again… I had started a while ago but kind of forgot about it…
March 3rd, 2007 | 9:24am
by snake
Heroes, anyone? In my mind, it does much the same as what Whedon’s shows and the new BSG are rightly credited for: explore human relationships and the human condition against a fantastical backdrop. The characters and their interaction are exquisitely written, and the story itself, stemming from these psychologically fleshy characters, is just unbelievably intriguing. The fantastical, in turn, is handled in a cleverly toned-down and realistic-like fashion, especially in the beginning. Kinda reminds me of Shyamalan’s Unbreakable.
March 3rd, 2007 | 12:17pm
by dreameling
Wonderful discussion. I, too, disdained TV for many years, and I’ve also tried to make it in fiction writing, so I really do appreciate the hard work and talent that go into these shows.
My own list includes some of those listed here, such as Buffy, Angel, Firefly, Six Feet Under, Veronica Mars, Carnivale, BSG, and Twin Peaks. Others that I’ve found include:
“The West Wing” especially seasons 1-3, with some high points through the rest of the series. You don’t have to agree with the politics, but we could all wish that government could be like this, passionate, intelligent, committed, and able to deal with its own mistakes and shortcomings. Wonderful characters, great dialog, incredible tension.
“Hill Street Blues” was another of the precursors to the current era of great serial storytelling, with an awesome ensemble cast, great characters and dialog, and the kind of incredible mix of drama, romance, tragedy, comedy, and action that characterizes Buffy and Angel. This show pioneered hand-held camera work to take the viewer into intense action, and does it even better than the hand-held work in Firefly. A survey of truly great television would be incomplete without this one.
“Joan of Arcadia” is another one that can easily get passed by because on the outside, it looks to be much less than it is. The religious aspect is not played “by the book” as the title song tells you outright: “What if God was one of us? Just a slob like one of us?” It’s a masterpiece of parallel storytelling, with all five members of Joan’s family dealing with their own issues and crises, so wrapped up in their own focus that they miss developing problems in each other and their relationships. It’s also a great ensemble piece. Like Carnivale, it was cancelled after its second season, with a cliffhanger that promised to alter the fundamentals of the show.
There are a few short series that shouldn’t be missed:
“The Singing Detective” is perhaps the best piece ever to come from British television. It is dark, twisted, anguished, bitterly funny, with surreal dream sequences as good as Buffy’s “Restless” and the dancing dwarf sequence in Twin Peaks. It’s only flaw is the ending; they tried to wrap it up with an action sequence that is totally inappropriate. Up until that ending, though, television couldn’t possibly be any better.
David Greenwalt, another of the creative powers behind Buffy and Angel, has a couple of short series that shouldn’t be missed. “Profit” takes a huge risk by having no good or empathetic characters. The title character, Jim Profit (played by Adrian Pasdar who is now in Heroes) is a sociopath, liar, and ambitious manipulator, but the people he destroys are equally reprehensible.
Also, there’s “Miracles” (produced by Greenwalt and written by another up-and-coming writer, Richard Hatem) deals with a crisis of faith, and has the integrity to provide no answers at all to the questions it raises. The second episode, “The Friendly Skies” is another candidate for the best hour of television you will ever see. Skeet Ulrich is outstanding in this series as a man whose job is investigating miracles for the Catholic church, and finds that his job has destroyed his faith.
March 3rd, 2007 | 4:28pm
by Miss Kitty's Mom
pretty good list.
I loved X-files and feel the same way you do about it to an extent. it was probably the first show i saw that really did it for me, but have since gone on to discover twin peaks.
i watched all of the X-Files though.
Over great past shows:
Buffy, Angel, Wonderfalls, Freaks and Geeks, Deadwood, old doctor who, firefly.
currently i think the Wire is the best show on Television. nothing really comes close to it. Sopranos is the show that gets all the accolades but the Wire is miles better.
Sopranos is still a great show, but the latest season was, for the most part, a self-congratulatory wank-fest.
Battlestar is overrated but still the best scifi on tv. it gets extra points for tackling issues that are going on around us today (eg. the insurgency and suicide bombings on New Caprica).
Veronica Mars had a brilliant first season, a disappointing second season, but a better third. However, Wallace really has turned into Token Black.
March 3rd, 2007 | 11:19pm
by eddie
Carnivale, yes. Sort of like a collaboration between David Lynch and John Steinbeck and maybe Neil Gaiman or Tim Powers, real magic in the carnival in the dustbowl… starts out like a cautionary tale on the dangers and cruelty of letting young demigods wander arounds without knowing what is going on, ends up a bit too “eternal battle between good and evil” for my taste, but not so much as to ruin it. As full of surprises as Buffy or The Sopranos, and with plenty of weirdness of the sort found in each of them. It did end with the obligatory cliffhanger, but apart from a sudden last minute complete shift of character in someone I really didn’t believe it from it ended pretty well for a series they hoped to continue.
I’m a bit surprised no one has mentioned Babylon 5. They manage a pretty good story arc, they handle the battle between good and evil plot better than most (and it’s not the only one they do), but mostly they have some wonderfully complex characters. Their flagship-of-the-good-guys space station has homeless people. And they managed to actually surprise me fairly often too, which I do appreciate. For character development it’s tough to match the evolution of Londo and G’Kar, their individual evolution is interesting enough, but the evolution of their relationship is a wonderful thing to watch. I liked the rest of the show too, but in the end it is them that I found the most fun. Personally I’d reccomend starting at the beginning of the second season, the first is a bit rough, though it was fun to catch up on later.
And one more, perhaps it is a bit far afield, but there is a British comedy series called Yes Minister (and later Yes Prime Minister) which has excellent ensemble interplay and wicked wit and quite on a par with Whedon’s delightful work, though with rather a smaller ensemble. It follows the career of an elected government minister, his civil service counterpart, and his personal seceretary, which could be incredibly boring but is delivered so well it is anything but. It is a bit older but its subject matter is of the eternal truth of the nature of people and power structures kind, not much connected to current world events, and the quality of its wit and banter makes it a classic well worth watching.
Thank you for your reviews. I had not heard of Veronica Mars and now will take a look. 🙂 It’s nice to hear some of my favorites so well spoken for. And, “preening ponces on the flight deck”, exactly, thank you.
March 4th, 2007 | 1:41am
by KS
Hi Jim – long time, etc.
With you on all the above except the Chris Carter shows – I had more fun with Harsh Realm than X-Files/Millennium put together.
Just like to add two words.
Babylon.
Five.
Well OK, a few more.
Firstly: No B5 – no Galactica.
It was the first show to go all-CGI on SF TV. One of the first SF shows to talk deeply about religion and politics. The first to work with a multiple-season story arc *and stick to it*.
It still stands up despite the occasionally dodgy sequels (Crusade, Legend of the Rangers and a couple of the TV movies – I’ll reserve judgement on the new Direct-to-DVD ‘Lost Tales’ now being made.) Sure, it wasn’t perfect – but it tried a damn sight harder than any other show at the time and set a standard few reach today.
As for comedy shows… I’d recommend Spaced, Darkplace, League of Gentlemen, Arrested Development.
Sayonara.
Cat.
March 4th, 2007 | 10:27pm
by Cat Vincent
Mmmmmmm. I always used to have a pretty low opinion of Buffy until I saw one episode when a demon turned the whole world into a musical, and that’s the way the show went, in a delightfully straight-faced way. But still, as something of an aficionado of horror-films I find it a bit pussy-ass. More a methadone metronome than an atomic heroin-clock.
Your list is lacking comedy: recently Peep Show and Monkey Dust were top, Look Around You was good, and going back a bit Brass-Eye, hell anything written by Chris Morris, then Blackadder, Yes Minister, the Young Ones,… And that’s just the British ones.
I’d say there was quite a long list – though still a very low concentration – of decent TV shows.
March 4th, 2007 | 11:06pm
by Larry Teabag
Holy crap. It all went a bit mad here, this weekend. Thanks to a link from the front page of Whedonesque (a kind of semi-official Joss Whedon website) my traffic increased by a factor of twenty-five compared to an average weekend. So instead of getting my usual forty, or so, visitors on a Saturday (weekends are slow for blogging) I got almost a thousand!
Nine hundred and ninety-nine of whom read this one page and then hit the back button on their browser. So sadly, my readership will dwindle back to its regular size once the link disappears from Whedonesque’s front page (tomorrow I suspect). All the same, thank y’all for visiting. It was nice of you to stop by.
And many thanks to those of you who left comments. Mahulahoop, you’ve been lauding those seasons of E.R. for a good while now. To be honest, I just can’t get behind any show set primarily in a hospital (early episodes of Scrubs, when it was at its weirdest, are exceptions… but comedy in a hosptial is just about bearable; when you’re being asked to take the plight of the patients — and the doctors — seriously, I just find the whole setting too bloody depressing).
As for The Sopranos; I enjoyed the first season and a half. I thought it was damn fine television. But then I missed a couple of episodes and figured I’d wait until it was repeated so that I could catch up. That was three or four years ago now, and I’ve felt absolutely no compulsion to seek it out again. As good as it was, it just made no real lasting impression.
And hallo to Zoe. Mahalia tells me you’ll be over on this island for a few months over the summer. We must get together and discuss parsnips some time.
Vinity, I must admit to having seen very little of Farscape. But what I did see, didn’t grab me. I found the ‘muppet’ characters a little difficult to take seriously I’m afraid. And I’m increasingly irritated by ‘aliens’ who are merely humans with a bumpy forehead or coloured skin. That said, I certainly haven’t watched enough to pass comment on the quality of the writing, which is really my primary interest.
Tom and KS, I recall being intrigued by the trailers for Carnivale but I never saw any of it. And now I’m not sure I will. I’d have difficulty starting to watch a TV series that I knew from the outset was ‘unfinished’. I did it with Firefly simply because I’m in love with Mr. Whedon’s ability to write characters and dialogue. I’m not sure I’d do it with any other show. Watching two seasons and then having it all end with an unresolved cliffhanger would be too much like starting to read a novel you knew was missing the last two chapters.
dmhWQS, Friday Night Lights, The Wire and Freaks and Geeks are three shows I’d never even heard of until your comment (and subsequent back-up from Michael and Steve). I still don’t know anything about them, but I’ll definitely file the names away in my memory should any of them get an airing / repeat here in Ireland. As I mentioned, I’m not watching a whole lot of television at the moment, so I’ll probably not seek them out just now. But thanks for the recommendations all the same. As I say; I’ll keep an eye out for them in the future.
To be honest, dmhWQS, if you didn’t dig Millennium first time round then you probably won’t now either. Even more than The X-Files, it was very much ‘of its time’. Frank’s visions become increasingly apocalyptic as the clock counts down to the year 2000. The fact that the changing of the century passed with something of an anti-climax, makes it difficult to take seriously the tension generated in the series by its approach.
Also, I do rather disagree with your assessment of television in general…
I couldn’t agree more with your implication that the vast majority of books and movies are terrible. Indeed, the vast majority of any popular art tends to be dross. But I honestly feel that television has only very recently matured to the point where anything at all good can be done with it in an artistic sense. And as a medium, it will always struggle, because of the very reason you hinted at… the money.
TV is driven by commercial concerns in a way that even the movie industry isn’t. In the past ten years, there’s been a number of excellent films made independently and on a shoestring budget. That sort of thing is next to impossible in television because of the way networks and studios operate. And because the success of a television show is tied — almost exclusively — to the amount of advertising revenue it can generate, the networks and studios find it very difficult to take genuine risks (hence the early demise of Firefly… and I assume, Carnivale too).
Now, of course the industries behind movies and books (and music) are also dominated by commercial concerns. But the direct link between the desires of (usually very conservative) advertisers and the ‘product’ / ‘artwork’ doesn’t exist in quite the same way. And while indy movies, music and small-press books can exist and indeed thrive, there’s very little chance for the same to occur in television. This isn’t ‘the fault’ of any of the artists working in the television industry, but it is a fact of life. And as a result, television produces far less quality ‘art’ than films, books or music manage.
In my view.
Snake, again, I’ve never even heard of Dexter but I’ll keep an eye out for it should it get a showing / repeat over here. The same goes for Heroes, dreameling. Though comparing it to Unbreakable probably wasn’t the best recommendation from my viewpoint. I’m not what you’d call a fan of Mr. Shyamalan. I thought The Sixth Sense was pretty average, and everything else he’s done since has failed to reach the low bar it set (Signs may well have been the most ridiculous movie made in the past decade… aliens attempt an invasion of earth but it turns out that they find water highly toxic. Quite aside from the fact that our atmosphere is 3% water vapour, what the hell were they going to do when it rained? ‘Absurd’ doesn’t even begin to describe it).
Miss Kitty’s Mom, I watched a lot of The West Wing (and I’m quite enjoying Mr. Sorkin’s new one… Studio 60 on The Sunset Strip), but it very much falls into the “worth watching” category for me. The writing is good, and the style and direction is second-to-none, but it felt rather soap-operaish to me…. something that the shows I mentioned above never did.
I never watched Hill Street Blues, but I dislike cop shows even more than I dislike hospital dramas. Also, Hakim Bey once described Hill Street Blues as the “most evil TV show ever“. And while I’ve never seen the show, I tend to agree with the sentiment all the same.
As for Joan of Arcadia, Profit and Miracles… once again TV shows that I’ve never even heard of. I’m taking it as read that all of the programmes mentioned in this thread are at least “above average” in some sense. Yet if I look at the TV guide for tonight, I find I can choose between a whole bunch of soaps, cop shows, dire sketch comedy and a veritable coruncopia of ‘reality programming’. I’ll watch out for Joan of Arcadia and the others, but it seems the rest of the nation is watching out for more Z-list celebrities learning to ballroom dance.
I’ve seen The Singing Detective and — once again — found it a little underwhelming. I can see why so many people praise and recommend it… and maybe I just wasn’t in the right frame of mind when I saw it, but it didn’t grab me at all.
Eddie, you’re not the only person who thinks Veronica Mars dipped in form during the second season. My friend Gyrus agrees. I don’t as it happens, and I feel it’s been consistently good with — if anything — a slight drop in form during the early part of Season 3 (from which it has since recovered very well). And I’m not sure it’s fair to describe Wallace as ‘Token Black’. If anything, I feel the programme tackles racial issues in a way that 99% of American television drama fails to do.
As I said, I’ve not seen The Wire, though it’s certainly getting a lot of praise. But I again disagree with your view that Battlestar Galactica is over-rated. But hey, that’s blogging for you… personal opinion and all that.
KS and Cat… Babylon Five. Hmmm…. it’s another one of those programmes that’s been recommended plenty of times (in fact, I’m fairly certain you gave it a rather impassioned recommendation that time in Golders Green, Cat. Which was indeed a long time ago now. Jeez, I feel old.).
I’ve not watched it, and lots of people whose opinion I trust insist it’s excellent. But something about it puts me off, and I’m not 100% sure what it is. Still, it has gained the status of a classic, so perhaps I’ll overcome my misgivings at some point.
I didn’t watch Harsh Realm back when it was broadcast, and I’ve yet to see it being repeated anywhere. It’s definitely one I plan on giving a try (as I’ve enjoyed Chris Carter’s other work) at some point though.
Larry, as I mentioned in the piece, Buffy merely uses the horror setting as a canvas on which to paint. It shouldn’t — in my view — be judged as “a horror show”, but as a drama which pays homage to the genre. Once More With Feeling (the musical) is a classic episode, but it’s just one of several dozen classics. Restless (which takes place entirely in the dreams of the main characters) is probably my personal favourite, but the writing is consistently excellent from start to finish.
And I’ll chalk the fact that you describe it as “pussy-ass” up to unfamiliarity with the show. True, the gore-factor is non-existant, but the sheer emotional power of episodes like New Moon Rising or The Body have an impact far beyond anything a traditional horror film could achieve.
Thanks also to everyone who recommended comedy shows. I may — but probably won’t — write a piece specifically on the subject of television comedy. It wasn’t the focus of this piece, which was more about drawing the “good TV show / novel” analogy than anything else.
But briefly, I agree on: Yes, Minister / Yes, Primeminister (though I imagine it’s dated… not seen it in years), and also Spaced which was probably the best sitcom ever. Chris Morris is — it goes without saying — a genius and Blackadder was generally excellent.
I’ve never seen Arrested Development, so I can’t comment, but I have to say I really dislike League of Gentlemen. I understand the comedy of embarrassment and squeamishness, but I don’t enjoy it all that much.
March 5th, 2007 | 1:06am
by Jim
I agree with all of the shows you list, and I used to think Firefly was the best show I’d ever seen. It was (with Buffy, BSG, Veronica Mars, West Wing, and several others that people have already mentioned keeping it company), until I saw The Wire. Nothing else come close.
March 5th, 2007 | 6:31am
by Nathan