The BarrometerA Barrometer rating of 4

Third-episode verdict: The Grinder (US: Fox)

In the US: Tuesdays, 8.30/7.30c, Fox 
In the UK: Not yet acquired

Three episodes in, The Grinder has already settled into something of a routine. Each episode starts with a scene from an episode from Rob Lowe’s fictitious TV show The Grinder, in which he does something supposedly TV lawyerly but which barely exists in TV shows outside those of the 1980s. Lowe’s lawyer brother Fred Savage mocks it for being a TV cliché and having nothing to do with real law. Savage and Lowe then go to Savage’s workplace and then encounter a case that’s relevant to the scene we saw in the fake show. Lowe then tries to win the case for Savage using the ‘law’ he learnt on the TV show – and loses. Then to avoid bursting Lowe’s bubble, Savage does his best to enable the case to be won using Lowe’s law. 

And for all the meta-textual fun the show has going for it, with commentaries on how difficult second episodes are to maintain the qualities of the pilot while still advancing the show, none of that’s especially funny or clever. Lowe’s character is irritating and borderline delusional as written, apparently having no understanding of the difference between reality and TV. Savage has a thankless task that even his character meta-textually acknowledges in episode two is thankless. The arrival of Natalie Morales in episode two to provide some deadpan undercutting hasn’t upped the laughs either, unfortunately.

Grinder rests.

Barrometer rating: 4
TMINE’s prediction: Cancelled before the end of the season and might not even get any extra episodes ordered

US TV

Homeland is racist, says Homeland

It’s a problem that affects anyone who wants something written in a foreign language but doesn’t speak the language himself or herself: how do you know what the translator has written is correct? You can get someone else to double-check it of course, if you have the time and budget, but most people just take the first translation and hope for the best.

But, of course, people make mistakes all the time. Or are just untrustworthy.

This sign in Swansea, for example, is a famous illustration of the problem:

Someone who didn’t speak Welsh needed a Welsh translation so emailed the English wording to the council translation department. They got an email back, assumed it was the translation and used that. Unfortunately, what the Welsh wording actually says is: “I am not in the office at the moment. Send any work to be translated.”

The latest season of Homeland suffers from a similar but differently motivated problem. The series has earned itself a reputation in some quarters as being racist to Arabs. Unfortunately, despite being set in Berlin for the latest season, one scene needed to show a Syrian refugee camp. And the producers thought that meant there would be pro-Assad graffiti on the walls of the camp, so they commissioned some Arabic-speaking artists to write some suitable graffiti for them.

Unfortunately, the artists in question weren’t impressed by Homeland so took a few liberties.

Homeland is racist

For those of you who don’t read Arabic, that one says: “Homeland is racist.”

Homeland is not a series

Homeland is not a series”, “The situation is not to be trusted”, “This show does not represent the views of the artists”.

One of the artists explained to The Guardian: “We think the show perpetuates dangerous stereotypes by diminishing an entire region into a farce through the gross misrepresentations that feed into a narrative of political propaganda.

“It is clear they don’t know the region they are attempting to represent. And yet, we suffer the consequences of such shallow and misguided representation.”

So remember: always get your translations double-checked. Translators get paid little enough as it is, so if you double the amount of work available for them, maybe they’ll all be a bit better off. As will your TV shows.

[via]

News: a Die Hard prequel, Supergirl flies on Sky1, My Best Friend’s Wedding’s TV series + more

Film

UK TV

New UK TV shows

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting