What have you been watching this week? (w/e 19 June)

A few new series and mini-series starting up this week, so what have you been watching?

Another 50/50 episode of Mitchell and Webb last night (ironically enough): ‘Remain Indoors’ remains one of the most darkly funny things around. Psychoville I might get round to watching in my lunchbreak, if I have enough time. Occupation is waiting for a few hours of available downtime, since lovely wife’s undying love for James Nesbitt mandates that we watch it together.

Episode 4 of Mental was quite one of the most painfully bad episodes of anything ever made – even worse than Painkiller Jane – so I’m giving up on that.

Haven’t watched Nurse Jackie this week yet, since for some reason, it won’t go onto my iPod at the moment. Royal Pains and Burn Notice are waiting for me when I get home – last week’s were both good, so you should be watching them if you’re not already.

Simon Schama’s John Donne was typically Simon Schama-esque: all very exciting and involving when you watch it, but you can’t remember a thing afterwards. Michael Woods’ Beowulf was far more memorable for its slower pace.

I also caught an episode of an old documentary series called The Power of Myth, which is basically a collection of interviews with Joseph Campbell. Surprisingly Christian in its analysis and a bit sketchy on the details, but very interesting and worth watching if you have a mo.

As always, no spoilers unless you’re going to use the <spoiler> </spoiler> tags, please? Ta!

What have you been watching this week (w/e 12 May)?

In between hay-fever induced sneezes, why not let your fellow readers know what’s worth watching on tele right now?

I’ve done a few reviews this week, including Property Snakes & Ladders and Mental – hopefully a That Mitchell and Webb Look review coming later today, which overall I enjoyed. Still got last night’s episodes of Royal Pains and Burn Notice to watch, of course, and The Daily Show‘s kind of ticking along, even if it isn’t doing anything too hard hitting at the moment.

The Apprentice final was on Sunday, of course – the best one won for once. What a miracle. What an awful, awful prize: running a digital signage business for doctors’ waiting rooms. That’ll be so much more exciting than running your own restaurant Yasmina, won’t it? Private Eye, incidentally, reveals (via the Sunday Mirror) that Debra cheated a couple of weeks ago by getting her parents to ring up the Shopping Channel and order the items she was trying to flog. Oh dear.

UPDATE: Forgot Nurse Jackie. That was okay. Nicely dark still, but still a bit bitty. Like her English best friend though.

As always, no spoilers unless you’re going to use the <spoiler> </spoiler> tags, please? Ta!

Meme of the week: Favourite TV politician

It seems appropriate in the wake of certain recent events in European politics to ask a quick meme this week:

Who’s your favourite TV politician? Or your least favourite?

I’m suspecting there’ll be more than a few West Wing responses, but don’t forget the likes of State of Play, Yes Minister, Yes Prime Minister, Party Animals, GBH, A Very British Coup, 1984 et al (depending on how left/right wing you are). If you prefer to hit the movies for Dave, The American President, etc, feel free

As always, leave a comment with your answer or a link to your answer on your own blog.

Mentalism in action: Patrick Duffy and the Crab

Yes, the world is mental. Didn’t know that already? Well, let me break it to you that it is: the world is definitely mental.

Oh, you’d like proof would you? Blimey, you’re demanding. Well, how about this video, in which Patrick Duffy and a talking stuffed crab discuss having a threesome with Courtney Cox.

Yes. See?

More crab talk after the break as well.

Continue reading “Mentalism in action: Patrick Duffy and the Crab”