Who will win the “shirt-off”? Probably not that guy from Big Bang Theory.
Month: November 2012
Friday’s “Charlie Brooker’s weekly Wipe, Chicago Fire gets a full season and InBetweeners women are Drifters” news
Trailers
- Trailer for Save The Date, with Lizzy Caplan and Alison Brie
UK TV
- InBetweeners women, Bob Mortimer to star in Drifters
- Charlie Brooker to have a weekly Wipe on BBC2
- Four pilots for 4Funnies
- Sarah Hadland joins The Job Lot
- BBC Cymru Wales and S4C renew partnership
- 4oD to allow phone downloads [subscription required]
- Sacha Parkinson and Lily Loveless join BBC3’s One Day Like This
- Wednesday ratings: Secret State starts low
US TV
- Chicago Fire gets a full season
- Whitney gets five more scripts
- The Killing set to be uncancelled
- New showrunner for Malibu Country, old showrunner returns to Last Man Standing
- Wednesday ratings: Chicago Fire hits series high, Arrow up 30%
US TV casting
- C Thomas Howell promoted to regular on Southland
- Royal Pains‘ Brooke D’Orsay to recur on Two and a Half Men
New US TV show casting
- Eion Bailey joins Trooper, Liza Lapira joins Super Fun Night
- Brigid Brannagh joins After Hours
- James Morrison and Kerry O’Malley joins Those Who Kill, Robert Bailey Jr joins After Hours
- Scott Cohen joins The Carrie Diaries
Nostalgia Corner: Whiz Kids (1983-84)
It’s 1983. Computers are new. Computers are cool. So is WarGames, the 1983 Matthew Broderick movie about a computer hacker that breaks into the US military supercomputer and nearly accidentally starts World War 3.
So what would be better than a TV show in which a whizz kid hacker breaks into military computers and causes World War 3 every week?
Oh. Well, unless you do an Aeon Flux and end the world every week, that’s not going to last long as a series, is it? So how about a more traditional affair in which a nerdy computer hacker (and his gang of friends) solve crimes that in some way revolve around computers? We could eek that out for a whole season, couldn’t we?
CBS tried to do just that with Whiz Kids. Starring Matthew Laborteaux of Little House on the Prairie and The Red Hand Gang, it saw computer hacker Richie (Laborteaux) building a computer of his own, RALF, from the spare parts his father sends from overseas on telecoms jobs. With the assistance of a few friends (one black, one female, one cool white boy, one annoying young kid to maintain the standard demographic/tokenist spread of the time), as well as newspaper reporter Lew Farley (Max Gail), the police and from episode 13, former secret agent Carson Marsh (Dan O’Herlihy), Richie solves various crimes, usually ones involving murders and corporate espionage but occasionally involving spies.
The show didn’t really push many boundaries in terms of either plotting or character development, but the show did avoid the traps of having the kids solving crimes by themselves, of making only Laborteaux’s character capable of any thought and of having an entirely romance-free set-up: a love triangle between the cool kid, the girl and Richie was hinted at. The kids don’t spend all day indoors, but actually have other hobbies. It was also hinted that the girl (Alice, played by Andrea Elson of ALF fame) was actually quite a good hacker herself, but Richie was too up himself to notice.
The show also didn’t avoid the question of the kids’ ethics: the show depicted some genuine hacking techniques, including ‘war dialing’ (named after WarGames), brute force password cracking, denial-of-service attacks, and even social engineering, some of which would be considered serious criminal acts within a year of the show airing.
Perhaps Wizz Kids‘ most notable aspect for people now was the amount of genuine classic computer software and equipment that ended up in the show, with Apple, Autodesk, Hitachi, RadioShack, Atari, Xerox, Mattel and Commodore among the companies that provided product placement – look closely and you’ll spot an Apple II and a TRS-80 on display.
However, the show itself only lasted one season and hasn’t been released on DVD. All the same, YouTube is your friend and here’s the entire series for you to enjoy. Have fun!
Mini-review: Malibu Country 1×1 (ABC)

In the US: Fridays, 8.30c/7.30c, ABC
Dreadful. Even less funny than one of those jokes you find on the stick in a Mini Milk ice lolly and the worse of the two dreadful country music-based shows ABC now has. And while country star Reba McEntire being in it is understandable, Lily Tomlin – what the hell’s the matter with you?
Here’s a trailer. Don’t watch even a second more of this show than that. Even the trailer might be a step too far.
A trailer for the BBC’s Ghost Stories for Christmas DVDs
Just in case I haven’t bleeted on at you all enough about the brilliance of the BBC’s Ghost Stories for Christmas, here’s a trailer to try to convince you to get the entire box set for Christmas.
And for those who missed my mini-reviews of some of them:
