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Thursday’s “Eccles clash” news

Sarah Michelle Gellar in Ringer

Doctor Who

Film

  • Ben Stiller to direct The Secret Life of Walter Mitty
  • Teaser for The Amazing Spider-Man

British TV

US TV

News

Thursday’s “Eccles clash” news

Sarah Michelle Gellar in Ringer

Doctor Who

Film

  • Ben Stiller to direct The Secret Life of Walter Mitty
  • Teaser for The Amazing Spider-Man

British TV

US TV

Question of the week: your favourite TV comedy moment

Quite a simple question this week. So everyone may have a favourite comedy show, but sometimes individual moments from shows might be even funnier than the show itself. So this week’s question is:

What’s your favourite TV comedy moment?

Mine is from episode two of Community: it’s Pierce’s and Jeff’s presentation to the Spanish class, not just because it’s funny in its own right, but because of all the foreshadowing earlier in the episode. It’s not just clever, it’s funny and it has just the right ending.

For the uninitiated, the story is that Jeff and Pierce have to present a dialogue of five Spanish phrases to the class. However, they have a fight while writing them because Jeff just wants the easy option and Pierce wants to write something more complicated – which Jeff describes as over long, focusing too much on the Israeli Palestinian conflict and, most importantly, not featuring any of the five set phrases.

Although I do have to love the idea of a clips show montage from episodes that were never made.

Answers below or on your own blog, please

News

Wednesday’s “sexless Touchwood” news

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy poster

Doctor Who

Film

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The CarusometerA Carusometer rating of 3

Third-episode verdict: Necessary Roughness

In the US: Wednesdays, 10/9c, USA Network. Available on USANetwork.com

So we’re three episodes into USA Network’s "sports and entertainment therapy" dramedy, Necessary Roughness, and it’s still hard to work out why. While the first episode wasn’t badly made, the big question hanging over it was: "What is the point of this programme?" After three episodes, that question’s still here.

I guess if you’re into sports, having a show about sports and sports psychology might be interesting in and of its own right. However, given these are fake players, the sports psychology is a little bit vague and "Oh, you’re really worried about your father. Well, now you know that, you’re fixed", and the show is also delving into other problems of the rich and famous (or journalists), this probably still isn’t the show for you.

On its own terms as a drama, it’s also a bit lacking. Callie Thorne is charismatic enough, but she never seems fully to commit to the moment – she’s always looking for a way to play the funny, even when she’s supposed to be angry. Her relationship with Marc Blucas, sports trainer extraordinaire, is slightly different from what we’ve come to expect of "will they, won’t they?" TV relationships, but neither character has enough depth or charm for us to care.

Blucas is, as he was in Buffy and more or less everything he’s ever been in, largely only there to give Thorne’s character a love interest, and while there are countless shows with female characters only there as love interests for the male characters, those shows suffer from the same problems as Necessary Roughness but in reverse. Add on that the usual dollop of misogyny you’d normally expect from male sports stars (certainly on TV) and it’s not really a hospitable environment for either male or female viewers, particularly when you factor in Thorne’s whiny teenage children.

If there is one glimmer of hope in the entire show, it’s Scott Cohen’s Nico, the security detail for Thorne and Blucas’s employer. He’s a nice edge to a somewhat edgeless show, but isn’t in it enough.

Nevertheless, it’s not a show devoid of merits and it does have a few charms. Not enough for me to carry on watching, but a few. If you watched it, I wouldn’t blame you. I’d wonder why, but I wouldn’t blame you.

Carusometer rating: 3
Rob’s prediction: Might get renewed for a second season, but probably doesn’t deserve it.