
In the US: Thursdays, 9/8c, NBC
In Canada: Thursdays, 10pm ET, CTV
In the UK: Not yet acquired
Seeing as the first episode of NBC’s new show has the lowest ever ratings for a mid-season show, I’m not sure I needed to have bothered with a full review for this boy – it’s not long for this world. But I will and I’m going to take the opportunity to wonder exactly how short-term broadcast networks’ memories are.
See, on the one hand, I’m impressed by their commitment to trying to make an idea work. ABC has just greenlit a pilot based on The Syndicate, a UK show about Lottery winners with secrets and how they’re affected by their win. Thing is, NBC did that not so long ago as Windfall.
Maybe that’s okay, given the show was on another network: one US network is rarely bothered if they make an almost identical show to another’s within a year of it airing – indeed, that’s often the point.
But how about when it’s remaking its own shows, shows that flopped. Do No Harm is a take on the story of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde in which a brilliant neurosurgeon (aren’t they always? Aren’t there ever really rubbish neurosurgeons? Under-achieving neurosurgeons? After all, it’s not exactly rocket science is it?) has multiple personality disorder. Every night at 8.25pm, his other, sociopathic personality takes over and tries to screw up his life and possibly mutilate and rape anyone he comes across. Then the nice surgeon wakes up again at 8.25am, trying to work out what the bad guy did.
Thing is, we’ve already had Awake just a year ago, which had the two different lives, one inside dreams, one outside (or maybe they’re both dreams). That at least had the virtue of being pretty good.
But before that, also on NBC, we had My Own Worst Enemy, in which mild-mannered Christian Slater discovered that he was really an implanted personality and that his real, nasty, more interesting secret agent self came out at night when he was asleep. In that show as well, the nice guy decides enough is enough and decides to take revenge against himself – as does the bad guy – while they try to come to some kind of working arrangement in the interim.
Sounds great, doesn’t it? No, wait. It’s the opposite of that. This was not an idea that needed exploring again.
And the ratings have shown it. Here’s a trailer.



