The BarrometerA Barrometer rating of 2

Third-episode verdict: Satisfaction (CTV)

In Canada: Mondays, 8pm, CTV

Time for a third-episode verdict on CTV’s latest sitcom, Satisfaction, in which three twentysomethings – a couple (Luke Macfarlane and Leah Renee) and his old college room-mate (Ryan Belleville) – who all live together in one flat end up going through all kinds of wacky twentysomething dilemmas.

And surprisingly, three episodes in, as we found with the first episode, it’s still quite funny. Yes, it’s attachment to the situation in ‘sitcom’ is still negligible, preferring to just give us loosely connected funny incidents. Yes, it has a roster of stereotypical ‘freaks’ to support the main, normal cast. And yes, it’s not going to win any awards for the subtlety of acting.

But despite all that, it’s actually pretty good, garnering a pretty good laugh quotient each episode with absurdity and the occasional piece of well observed satire, including last week’s fake TV programme, The Horse Doctor, and this week’s “guy who gave up his job saving the world so he could become a hipster who designs fonts because it’s more meaningful”. It has some good lines, the characters are reasonably fleshed out and likable (although could do with some development), and it can even be quite clever

Give it a go.

Barrometer rating: 3
Rob’s prediction: Should get another season, assuming CTV doesn’t cut back its original programming budget again

Wednesday’s “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen TV show, and BBC pick ups and cancellations” news

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for We Steal Secrets, with Benedict Cumberbatch
  • Trailer for Lovelace with Amanda Seyfried [NSFW]

Comics

  • Amazon launches Jet City Comics imprint

UK TV

New UK TV shows

US TV

US TV casting

New US TV shows

  • Fox green lights: put pilot for adaptation of Alan Moore’s The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen

New US TV show casting

Charley says: Do what Tufty the Squirrel does if you want to buy an ice cream safely

Charley the cat wasn’t the only popular recurring character of 1970s public information films. Another was Tufty the Squirrel, around whom the road safety-oriented Tufty Club was created.

Despite being a rather cute little squirrel, Tufty was a bit annoying in his ads, unfortunately, with neighbouring animal Willy Weasel always doing something silly on the roads and getting hurt, while Tufty primly did exactly what he was told by his mummy and thus survived the all-out carnage that seemed to follow him wherever he went.

Here, we learn the right and the wrong ways to approach an ice cream van. Poor Willy Weasel.