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TV Babble - September 2006

Fallout from Jericho

September 29th 2006 03:08
The second episode of Jericho, Fallout, may have been an improvement on last week, but the ratings were not. It dropped to just under 1 million viewers, which isn’t terrible, but it’s hardly stellar.

As for the episode itself, it was once again enjoyable and there was by far more character development than last week. Thankfully there was much less small-town syrupiness, though the show was still somewhat predictable.

Although the show is entertaining, I still don’t feel engaged by it yet. At the end of the episode I don’t feel any compulsion to know what happens next. It’s like one of the tame rides at a theme park. You enjoy it while you’re on there, but there’s no overwhelming desire to ride again – still, you probably will because the line is short.


I think Jericho is suffering the same problem as The 4400. The show has an interesting concept, but the writing and acting doesn’t always come through. Most of the setups from last week – most notably the Mayor coughing and the escaped prisoners – have already come to fruition. For a show like this to be successful, there needs to be more complex storylines and longer payoffs. Hopefully the Robert Hawkins plotlines (the St Louis cop) will fulfil that role.

As for the acting, for the most part it’s passable. The standout is British actor Lennie James who plays Robert Hawkins. Unfortunately, a lot of the cast seem to be camping it up somewhat. It is quite irritating, because acting such as this really takes you out of the story – it’s hard to be completely enthralled when you keep being reminded that it is a tv show. That is, of course, unless you’re Bertolt Brecht and audience alienation is what you’re aiming for, but somehow I don’t think that’s what Jericho’s producers were attempting.


Overall Rating


I will be tuning in next week because I’m hoping against hope that Jericho will be heading in a totally unexpected and surprising direction. I’ll try not to be too hard on the cast either – after all, I hated Percy Daggs III (Wallace Fennel) on Veronica Mars at first, and how I think he’s da bomb (sorry, Jericho, too soon?).
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So obviously Ray Martin didn’t put off too many viewers, with about 2.5 million tuning in to watch the Terri Irwin interview. This wasn’t as high as Channel Nine’s interview with the Beaconsfield Miners though, which gained an audience of 2.8 million. Still, it’s a very impressive figure and actually more than watched the telecast of Steve Irwin’s memorial service on 7, 9, 10 and ABC combined (2.39 million).

Ray did a humdrum, pedestrian job much as I’d expected and for the most part he avoided asking idiotic questions. The worst moment was when he attempted to be ‘deep’ by asking Terri if she loved Steve too much. What an inane and insensitive question! Was he trying to insinuate that if she loved Steve less she would be experiencing less grief now? What kind of person asks a recent widow if the love she felt for the father of her children was wrong?

Still, the interview wasn’t about Ray, it was about Terri. I think most people would have tuned in even if a trained chimp was asking the questions (maybe more, in fact). I’m not ashamed to say that I absolutely bawled my eyes out, and was absolutely captivated by every word that she said.

Now that she has done the interview, I just hope that the media vultures will leave her in peace so she can deal with the death of that great man
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The interview with Terri Irwin will air tonight on Channel Nine at 8.30pm. I was deeply saddened to hear of the passing of the Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin, and I will no doubt watch the interview. I’m sure it wasn’t easy for Terri to do, and I’m sure it will be highly emotional for both her and the viewers.

However, as I mentioned in the comments of yesterday’s entry, I cringed when I heard Ray Martin would be doing the interviewing. I actually didn’t think he did a particularly bad job as host of A Current Affair, but the man is just not a good interviewer. Cast your mind back to his interview with Olympic gold medallist Michael Johnson, which was just painful to watch.

As you have probably guessed from my previous post, I would be much happier if Andrew Denton were interviewing Terri. Of course, this was not a very likely prospect considering Channel Nine has the rights to the interview. Still, the powers that be could have chosen someone with a bit more charisma. A 60 Minutes Reporter like Peter Overton, Tara Brown or Charles Wooley would have been a more appropriate choice. Even Tracey Grimshaw would have been preferable to Ray.

Still, I know that it could have been so much worse. If it were Channel Seven that were conducting the interview they might have put Naomi Robson at the helm. In my nightmares I see her arriving at the interview atop a six-foot saltwater croc, adorned in khaki with an entire menagerie on her shoulders. Half-way through the interview she invites Terri on an impromptu trip to Indonesia to kidnap WaWa and make him the property of Channel Seven. Before they depart though, she makes a stop at her gold-plated makeup truck so she can liaise with a seedy underworld figure.

It’s then that I wake up and realise that maybe Ray Martin isn’t so bad after all. Perhaps he'll prove me wrong tonight. I guess I'll just have to watch and see.
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Andrew Denton My Heart

September 26th 2006 02:39
I was heartbroken when I heard that Andrew Denton intended to finish up his show Enough Rope. Thankfully, rumours of his demise were greatly exaggerated.

Unfortunately, Denton did admit that he does not want to be omnipresent on television like one Michael Parkinson. So the question is, when he does decide to farewell the comfy interviewing chair, who will fill the void


[ Click here to read more ]
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Another significant moment in the episode was the Doctor’s offhand comment that he ‘was a father once.’ Not having seen the original series of Doctor Who I don’t know the specifics of the Doctor having a child. However, it’s not important who the child of the Doctor is, rather that he is letting Rose know that he has a past. He has seen the Time War and knows he is the only one of his race left, thus it is probably too painful for him to talk about any connections he had except as a throwaway comment. There is obviously such love between the Doctor and Rose, but there seems to be an understanding between them that it can never be on a romantic level. Admitting a child would indicate to Rose that he has had that sort of relationship before, which is why her surprised reaction was appropriate. It was very much like in School Reunion when Rose found out there have been other companions – Rose realises how little she actually knows about the Doctor. Although she is shocked by the Doctor’s paternal revelation, she knows that he has been through such pain with the loss of his people and thus doesn’t push him for more information.

My biggest problem with the episode initially was, as morbid as it sounds, the fact that no one died. The Doctor Dances included one of my favourite moments of last season, where no characters died and the Doctor proclaimed “Just this once, everybody lives!” It was iconic for Doctor Who, as it was the first episode in the history of the series where everyone did survive (save once episode in the original series that took place entirely within the TARDIS). It was also truly touching, as it gives an insight into the horror that is the life of the Doctor – someone always dies. Sometimes, he is the only one left


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Fear Her is the last episode season 28 of Doctor Who before the two-part finale. On initial viewing, it seems a somewhat flawed episode that delves too far into the show’s kids programming roots; falling victim to the silliness that can alienate the older audience. However, on closer inspection, it does successfully further the themes that have become apparent throughout the season thus far.

The main plotline, in which a young girl was taken over by an alien, was a nice parallel to Rose and the Doctor’s relationship. The alien sought the companionship of a human girl to ease the pain of its lonely existence. It was also refreshing to see a beautiful CGI alien rather than a guy in an ugly rubber suit. However, contrary to the title, there wasn’t exactly a huge amount to fear in the episode – scribble monsters and lights and smoke from a cupboard are nothing compared to the beast or the empty child
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Australian Premiere of Jericho

September 22nd 2006 02:19
Channel Ten’s new drama series, Jericho, premiered last night at 8.30pm. The pilot was enjoyable, if not a bit saccharine. What you may not realise, however, is that the show airs in Australia only hours after the US. This is, quite simply, phenomenal, considering how we often have to wait for years for foreign shows to appear on our screens (I’m looking at you, Channel Nine).

It’s about time the networks realised how irksome it is for viewers to have to wait for these programs to air. It’s no wonder that Australians download so many TV shows and buy DVDs from overseas – because we want to see them before we grow out of the demographic they cater for!
[ Click here to read more ]
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