The CarusometerA Carusometer rating of 4

Third-episode verdict: Cupid

Well, it doesn’t look like it’ll be coming back for a second season but it’s time for a third-episode verdict on Cupid, the reincarnated Rob Thomas series about the Roman god of love’s need to match 100 modern day couples if he’s to return to Mount Olympus.

After a relatively bland and inauspicious start, things have only become blander and less interesting, making you almost hope for the ‘glories’ of Valentine. Even though the show started with very little of note, it did at least try to make Cupid vaguely interesting: a bit of a Mediterranean jack the lad. Now, he’s just puckish and has a couple of posters of Greece on his wall.

Meanwhile, Sarah Paulson’s ever-so-serious character has pretty much been a walking charisma vacuum, with little to do except for reprimanding Cupid and being the practical anti-romantic – a thankless task, even if she had any other defining characteristics, which she doesn’t seem to have any more.

The only other redeeming qualities about the show were that the couples being matched did at least seem pleasant and fun. Now, they’re there as plot devices, with the third episode’s "can a Republican and a Democrat really fall in love?" being one of the most shallow pieces of television I’ve seen since Knight Rider – the answer, apparently, is "as long as the Republican likes gay people".

All in all, a complete let-down that just goes to show you that even with a second chance, a show can actually get worse.

Carusometer rating: 4
Prediction: Cancelled by the end of the season, possibly pulled off the air even sooner

US TV

Joe interviews Heroes’ Puppetmaster David Lawrence

David Lawrence the Puppetmaster

Blogging pal Joe has just had lunch with David Lawrence (aka Heroes‘ Puppetmaster Eric Doyle), who’s now the star of some official Heroes webisodes. If you’d like to find out what they discussed – and perhaps what they ate, but I don’t want to spoil it for you – nip on over to Joe’s blog right now.

BTW, webisodes look like they’re US only, unfortunately. Sigh. But here’s the trailer for it so you can see what you’re missing, UK viewers.

Tuesday’s six-year plan news

Film

British TV

US TV

News

Monday’s replacements news

Russell Crowe as Robin Hood

Film

Theatre

  • Dominic West to star in Life is a Dream at the Donmar Warehouse

British TV

US TV

David Simon’s original pitch to HBO for The Wire

A little bit of history for you: David Simon’s original pitch to HBO for The Wire has emerged and been posted online.

Here’s how Stringer Bell was originally considered, for example:

STRINGY BELL – black, early forties, he is BARKSDALE’s most trusted lieutenant, supervising virtually every aspect of the organization. He is older than BARKSDALE, and much more direct in his way, but nonetheless he is the No. 2. He has BARKSDALE’s brutal sense of the world but not his polish. BELL is bright, but clearly a child of the projects he now controls.

Fascinating stuff.