US TV

What have you been watching this week (w/e March 25)?

White Van Man

It’s been a little while since the last one, but it’s time for "What have you been watching this week?", your chance to recommend to friends and fellow blog readers the TV that they might be missing or should avoid – and for me to do mini-reviews of everything I’ve watched this week. Since we live in the fabulous world of Internet catch-up services like the iPlayer and Hulu, why not tell your fellow readers what you’ve seen so they can see the good stuff they might have missed?

My usual recommendations for maximum viewing pleasure are: Archer, Being Human (US), Community, The Daily Show, House, The Killing, Modern Family, Shameless (US), Stargate Universe and 30 Rock. Watch them (and keep an eye on The Stage‘s TV Today Square Eyes feature as well) or you’ll be missing out on the good stuff.

  • Chuck – an okay episode this week, but it’s still miles away from entertaining. I keep saying this but I might be giving up on it soon.
  • House – rewatched a season one episode the other day, and again, here’s a show that’s forgotten what made it so good in the first place. It needs to recover its edge. It’s still above average TV, but it’s a shadow of its former misanthropic self.
  • Shameless (US) – has slowly been becoming must-see TV, despite William H Macey’s slightly implausible performer as Frank. Emmy Rossum is fantastic though.
  • White Van Man – BBC3’s sitcom starring Will Mellor. I say ‘sitcom’ but it’s not actually funny. I tuned in this week because our Joanna Page was on it as a Star Trek-obsessed single mum and web designer and while she did raise the comedy level considerably, everything else about it was horrid. The cast – with the exception of the slightly bland Georgia Moffet – are fine. It’s the script, which just isn’t funny. Poor.

UPDATE: Many thanks to Chloe for pointing out that the new series of Engrenages (Spiral) starts on BBC4 next Saturday! Tune in, everyone!

But what have you been watching?

Sitting Tennant

Friday’s Sitting Tennant (week 10, 2011)

Hebbie's Sitting Tennant

Toby's Sitting Tennant

Erin C's Sitting Tennant

esgaril's Sitting Tennant

Janice's Sitting Tennant

Rullsenberg's Sitting Tennant

Sister Chastity's Sitting Tennant

theriverlady's Sitting Tennant

Well, on Tuesday, I promised you a little surprise and here it is – the return of Friday’s Sitting Tennant! Work’s calmed down enough and there have been enough pictures sent in by the great and the good now that we can sustain Friday Tennants again. So relax and allow your eyeballs to savour all the Tennanty goodness for the rest of the weekend.

  1. Hebbie: 55
  2. Sister Chastity: 35
  3. Rullsenberg: 25
  4. Toby, Erin C, Janice: 15
  5. esgaril, theriverlady: 5

Don’t forget Tuesday’s caption competition!

Got a picture of David Tennant sitting, lying down or in some indeterminate state in between? Then leave a link to it below or email me and if it’s judged suitable, it will appear in the “Sitting Tennant” gallery. Don’t forget to include your name in the filename so I don’t get mixed up about who sent it to me.

The best pic in the stash each week will appear on Tuesday and get ten points; the runners up will appear on Friday (one per person who sends one in) and get five points.

You can also enter the witty and amusing captions league table by commenting on Tuesday’s Sitting Tennant photo, the best caption getting 10 points, everyone who contributes getting five points.

Friday’s “another nail in the Wonder Woman coffin” news

Film

Theatre

British TV

US TV

Classic TV

Lost Gems: Hot Metal (1986-1988)

Hot Metal

Anyone who was around in the 80s will remember the fun Rupert Murdoch brought to the newspaper industry here in England. The move from Fleet Street to Wapping, his acquisition of The Times, his fights with the unions – I’d go on, but it would only depress me.

Such ‘fun’ was actually ripe for satire and David Renwick and Andrew Marshall, who’d written a previously vicious and satirical sitcom, Whoops Apocalypse, decided they would do the same for the Murdoch press. Made by LWT, Hot Metal (the name given to printing presses by the industry) ran from 1986 and 1988 and followed the fortunes of The Daily Crucible, the world’s dull newspaper, after its acquisition by Terence “Twiggy” Rathbone (Robert Hardy). Its editor, Harry Stringer (Geoffrey Palmer), gets ‘promoted’ to managing editor and a new, more exciting editor found: Russell Spam (Robert Hardy – again. The running gag is, of course, that everyone thinks they’re the same person, until they’re spotted side by side; but metaphorically, Spam and Rathbone are two sides of the same coin, just as say Kelvin MacKenzie and Rupert Murdoch were).

Spam then takes the paper downmarket, turning The Crucible as its now called into a sensation-seeking red top. He’s helped by journalist Greg Kettle (Richard Kane), who intimidates his victims by claiming to be “a representative of Her Majesty’s press” and produces stories such an allegation that a vicar is a werewolf. Throughout the first series, there was also a running plot involved cub reporter Bill Tytla (John Gordon Sinclair) gradually uncovering an actual newsworthy story that went to the very heart of government.

Come the second series, Stringer has left after vanishing in a mysterious aircraft accident, to be replaced by former daytime chat show host Richard Lipton (Richard Wilson), while John Gordon Sinclair has been replaced by Maggie Troon (Caroline Milmoe). In all, 12 episodes were made as well as a Comic Relief special in which Rathbone moves into satellite TV (just like Rupert Murdoch) with the aid/opposition of the returning Stringer.

It was a delightfully funny, delightfully vicious satire of the industry that’s as relevant more than two decades later as it was at the time. There’s not much of it I can show you right now bar these two bits from the first episode and that Comic Relief special, but enjoy – it has a great theme tune by Alan Price, best known for his work in the pop group The Animals as well as the various Lindsay Anderson films O Lucky Man! and Britannia Hospital. Happily however, you can get it on DVD.

Thursday’s “Titans really will clash” news

Doctor Who

Film

  • Trailer for Captain America: The First Avenger (with Richard Armitage!)
  • Bill Nighy to play Hephaestus in Clash of the Titans sequel (which will feature actual Titans this time)
  • Teaser for Mr Popper’s Penguins (which will feature actual penguins)

Theatre

British TV

  • The cost of BBC soap operas, including £10.1m for Pobol y Cwm

US TV