Showing posts with label Community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Community. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 5, 2022

Podcast Episode 402: Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, Ramy Season 3 Premiere and Don't Worry Darling

 

In this week's episode David, John and Kyle discuss Trevor Noah leaving The Daily Show (1:55), the long-awaited announcement of a Community movie (9:55), Rolling Stone's 100 greatest TV shows of all time list (14:50) and Tom Hanks' top four films (23:30). We also look into the Netflix hit Monster: The Jeffery Dahmer Story (30:40). Finally, we review the season three premiere of Ramy (44:25) and give a spoiler-filled review of Don't Worry Darling (51:45).



Want more Dual Redundancy? Be sure to subscribe to the podcast wherever you get your podcasts!

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Podcast Episode 113: The Walk, The Martian, Steve Jobs and Back to the Future Day


In this week's episode we discuss Yahoo leaving the original content business (2:20), Homeland’s graffiti mistake (6:35), the announcement of Die Hard 6 (9:35) and a proposed new time travel show (22:50). We also recap everything about Back to the Future’s Future Day (14:20). Finally, we give movie reviews for The Walk (24:40), The Martian (31:50) and Steve Jobs (50:30).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Podcast Episode 101: The Premieres of UnREAL and Hannibal and the Community Finale


In this week's episode with guest host John Berwick we react to the Television Critics Association nominations (2:12) and to the winners of the 5th Annual Critics’ Choice Television Awards (9:04). We also discuss the possibility of Arrested Development season five (12:40). Finally, we review the series premiere of UnREAL entitled “Return” (16:43) the possible series finale of Community entitled “Emotional Consequences of Broadcast Television” (28:00) and the season three premiere of Hannibal entitled “Antipasto” (40:54).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Monday, June 1, 2015

Podcast Episode 100: Saying Goodbye to Mad Men and Our Favorite 100th Episodes of Television


In this week's episode audio expert John joins Mike and Dave in a milestone podcast for Dual Redundancy. First, we react to network live musical casting news (2:32) and give our thoughts on upcoming fall network series for (in order) ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC (7:47). Next, we look at the series finale of Mad Men entitled “Person to Person” (22:11). We also discuss how some notable series celebrated their respected 100th episode before finally reflecting on Dual Redundancy’s own journey to episode 100 (40:08).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Friday, March 20, 2015

Podcast Episode 93: The Community Premiere, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt Season One and the Empire Finale


In this week's episode we react to four upcoming Ghostbusters films (2:43), Andy Samberg hosting the 67th Emmy Awards (9:24) and many new streaming services including NBC's comedy service, HBO Now and the proposed Apple service (15:09). We also wind down the season six two-part premiere of Community entitled "Ladders" and "Lawnmower Maintenance & Postnatal Care" (24:12). Finally, we review season one of Netflix's Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt (spoiler free) (39:15) and the two-part finale of Empire season one entitled "Die But Once" and "Who I Am" (49:18).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Podcast Episode 79: Our 10 Most Memorable Halloween Episodes


In this week's Halloween special we react to Neil Patrick Harris being named host of the 87th Academy Awards (2:44). We also discuss television streaming news including HBO's stand alone service (6:55), CBS' All Access (9:56), Simpsons World (15:09) and Friends coming to Netflix (17:12). Finally, we countdown our 10 most memorable Halloween television episodes (19:02).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Podcast Episode 76: Winding Down: The Fall Pilots of How To Get Away with Murder & Black-ish and The Simpsons/Family Guy Crossover


In this week's episode we discuss Yvette Nicole Brown leaving Community (2:13), Donald Glover joining Magic Mike XXL (7:30), and a Twilight short-film contest (10:59). We also wind down the fall pilots of How To Get Away with Murder (17:54) and Black-ish (25:52) plus The Simpsons/Family Guy crossover called "The Simpsons Guy" (36:25). Finally, we get a second opinion on CBS' new show Scorpion (46:55).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Podcast Episode 67: Winding Down: Big Brother 16 and the Premieres of The Leftovers and Girl Meets World


In this week's episode we discuss the pre-premiere cancellation of Hieroglyph (2:21) and the post-cancellation revival of Community (4:19). We also discuss the film The Interview and the potential "merciless counter-measure" that may result (13:35). Finally, we wind down the first week of Big Brother 16 (20:25) and the series premieres of The Leftovers (37:45) and Girl Meets World (50:55).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Emmys 2014: Filling Out the Emmy Ballot - Who & What Should Be Nominated?

via Emmys.com

The deadline to submit ballots for the 2014 Emmy Awards is Friday, June 20th. For any Academy members still on the fence over what names to write down, here's a run-down of TV's best and brightest talent from the last season of TV, complete with some liner notes on why some picks were made and who/what just missed the cut.

OUTSTANDING DRAMA SERIES:
1. Breaking Bad, AMC
2. Hannibal, NBC
3. The Americans, F/X
4. The Good Wife, CBS
5. True Detective, HBO
6. Game of Thrones, HBO
7. Masters of Sex, Showtime
8. Mad Men, AMC
9. Boardwalk Empire, HBO
10. Orphan Black, BBC America

All of these shows wowed with their writing, directing and acting this year. But the Top 6 all had a sense of urgency about them, a boldness that demands their place in the sun. Masters and Mad Men  and Boardwalk were all subtly stellar, but with so many quality contenders in play, that's not enough for a nomination.

OUTSTANDING COMEDY SERIES
1. Veep, HBO
2. Orange is the New Black, Netflix
3. Girls, HBO
4. Community, NBC
5. Louie, F/X
6. Enlisted, FOX
7. Looking, HBO
8. Parks and Recreation, NBC
9. Brooklyn Nine-Nine, FOX
10. Getting On, HBO

Please, please, please, let this be the year Modern Family is usurped. Everything in slots 1-5 broke new comedic ground. Enlisted gets the last spot because it was genuinely fun and funny and maybe some Emmy love could bring it back somewhere.

OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
Bryan Cranston as Walter White, Breaking Bad
Jon Hamm as Don Draper, Mad Men
Matthew McConaughey as Rust Cohle, True Detective
Mads Mikkelsen as Dr. Hannibal Lecter, Hannibal
Matthew Rhys as Phillip Jennings, The Americans
Michael Sheen as Bill Masters, Masters of Sex

This was a pretty easy category to narrow down, as these gentlemen are leagues and bounds ahead of anybody else on TV (or, realistically, film) today. The toughest omission was Hannibal's Hugh Dancy, whose character's half-season stint in jail limited his screen time.

OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Lizzy Caplan as Virginia Johnson, Masters of Sex
Julianna Marguiles as Alicia Florrick, The Good Wife
Tatiana Maslany as Sarah, Beth, Cosima, Rachel (and More), Orphan Black
Elisabeth Moss as Peggy Olson, Mad Men
Keri Russell as Elizabeth Jennings, The Americans
Robin Wright as Claire Underwood, House of Cards

Kerry Washington's baby bump really hampered her performance this season and allowed Robin Wright to sneak in, as the latter's monologue about a terminated pregnancy was the season's most gripping sequence. Caplan balanced vulnerability and strength with grace. Russell played nearly as many characters as Maslany this season and will probably get half the credit. Moss still managed to charm while Peggy got nastier, up until her cathartic, triumphant Burger Chef pitch. And Marguiles is just plain outstanding.

OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
Louis C.K. as Louie, Louie
Jonathan Groff as Patrick, Looking
Jake Johnson as Nick Miller, New Girl
Joel McHale as Jeff Winger, Community
Chris O'Dowd as Tom Chadwick, Family Tree
Adam Scott as Ben Wyatt, Parks and Recreation

This category needs a drastic upheaval from last year. Keep C.K., because he's essentially the second-coming, and add these other hysterical, lovable, charming guys.

OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Malin Akerman as Kate, Trophy Wife
Lena Dunham as Hannah Horvath, Girls
Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Selina Meyer, Veep
Laurie Metcalf as Jenna James, Getting On
Amy Poehler as Leslie Knope, Parks and Recreation
Taylor Schilling as Piper Chapman, Orange is the New Black

Akerman balanced being quirky and straight in this role perfectly, perhaps alienating viewers who were accustomed to one extreme or the other. Dunham is finally fully comfortable making the rest of us uncomfortable. JLD is an MVP and will probably walk away with her third straight trophy. Metcalf channeled Steve Carell's Michael Scott in a thankless role on an outlier program, but damn if she wasn't great. Poehler is coasting on goodwill but still finds ways to draw humor from the Pawnee stone. Schilling's hilarity is understated but potent, if that makes any sense, and she belongs here waayyy more than she does in Drama Actress.

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
Josh Charles as Will Graham, The Good Wife
Peter Dinklage as Tyrion Lannister, Game of Thrones
Dean Norris as Hank Schrader, Breaking Bad
Aaron Paul as Jesse Pinkman, Breaking Bad
Jeff Perry as Cyrus Beene, Scandal
Jeffrey Wright as Valentin Narcisse, Boardwalk Empire

Charles Dance (Game of Thrones' Tywin Lannister) was painfully omitted from the lineup because he just didn't have enough to do. Everything he did do, however, was marvelous. He nearly bumped Jeff Perry, whose show is far from perfect but holds things together with his signature brand of arrogance. Jeffrey Wright was also on the fence (along with his co-star Michael K. Williams) but left a huge impact after all these months that his exclusion would be unforgivable. Josh Charles may have left The Good Wife, but don't forget the vehemence he closed the role out with in episodes like "Hitting the Fan." The Breaking boys did fine work and should be lauded eternally. And Peter Dinklage roared back into the awards conversation with his monologue at Tyrion's trial. Should his character really be offed Sunday night, this could be his last chance to win in this role.

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES
Christine Baranski as Diane Lockhart, The Good Wife
Anna Gunn as Skyler White, Breaking Bad
Monica Potter as Cristina Braverman, Parenthood
Gretchen Mol as Gillian Darmody, Boardwalk Empire
Maisie Williams as Arya Stark, Game of Thrones
Bellamy Young as Mellie Grant, Scandal

Sophie Turner had the GoT slot locked up until Williams' literal death glare in the season 4 finale really showed off her chops. Bellamy Young's drunk monologues are the highlight of Scandal. Gretchen Mol made incestuous, murderous, drug-addled Gillian Darmody a likable character by the end of season 4. Christine Baranski handled her show's change of tone admirably. Monica Potter kept the tears flowing. And Anna Gunn just destroyed her competition.

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
Fred Armisen as Various Characters, Portlandia
Raul Castillo as Richie, Looking
Adam Driver as Adam Sackler, Girls
Chris Pratt as Andy Dwyer, Parks and Recreation
Timothy C. Simons as Jonah, Veep
Parker Young as Randy Hill, Enlisted

Pratt has been so great for so long, his absence in the first half of this Parks season left the show worse off. Simons is a lightning rod of nasty jokes, taking a beating so the show can rise above. Young's show may be dead but his performance was so alive and fun that it must be remembered. Driver normalized Adam this year and turned out even stronger performances. Armisen was just uproariously funny in every sketch. On the other hand, Castillo wasn't even the slightest bit funny, but he brought an honesty to his role that made Richie lovable.

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Danielle Brooks as Tasha "Taystee" Jefferson, Orange is the New Black
Carrie Brownstein as Various Characters, Portlandia
Anna Chlumsky as Amy Brookheimer, Veep
Kate McKinnon as Various Characters, Saturday Night Live
Kate Mulgrew as Galina "Red" Reznikov, Orange is the New Black
Michaela Watkins as Jackie, Trophy Wife

The two OITNB ladies act their butts off in both comedic and dramatic moments. The two sketch comedy ladies constantly reveal new layers of humor behind their beautiful exteriors. Watkins, an SNL alum, brought the goofy to network comedy, and Chlumsky brought the venom. All these women are equal parts talented and hilarious.

OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
Jeremy Davies as Peter Bernardone, Hannibal
Harry Hamlin as Jim Culter, Mad Men
Robert Morse as Bert Cooper, Mad Men
Joe Morton as Eli Pope, Scandal
Michael Pitt as Mason Verger, Hannibal
Ray Romano as Hank Rizzoli, Parenthood

Davies won for Justified two years ago and, frankly, could have won again for his reappearance this year, but why not spread the love to an under-appreciated Emmy newcomer? Same goes for Pitt's diabolical Mason Verger. Hamlin played diabolical in a much smarmier way, shedding all stigmas associated with his early roles. Morse is the favorite here, a splendid performer on a chaotic Mad Men season. Romano has quickly ascended the ranks of beloved Parenthood characters, and if Jason Ritter could get a nomination for playing one of Sarah (Lauren Graham)'s beaus, why not Ray? And Joe Morton's role is a Shakespearean POWER. HOUSE. of epic proportions.

OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES
Gillian Anderson as Dr. Bedelia Du Maurier, Hannibal
Allison Janney as Margaret Scully, Masters of Sex
Margo Martindale as Claudia, The Americans
Hettienne Park as Beverly Katz, Hannibal
Carrie Preston as Elsbeth Tascioni, The Good Wife
Gina Torres as Bella Crawford, Hannibal

For as macabre and "bromantic" as Hannibal inherently is, Bryan Fuller casted some fabulous actresses in several meaty roles. Preston's character won last year and is strong enough to be spun-off into a companion series. Martindale is consistently great, though those who only know her from The Millers may be surprised. And Allison Janney's portrayal of an unsatisfied woman's journey to self-acceptance was a marvel to witness.

OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
Jonathan Banks as Professor Buzz Hickey, Community
Steve Buscemi as Marty, Portlandia
Gary Cole as Kent Davison, Veep
Mitch Hurwitz as Koogler, Community
Stephen Merchant as Leslie Higgins, Modern Family
Pablo Schreiber as George "Pornstache" Mendez, Orange is the New Black

Hurwitz isn't even an actor and he out-shone every other guy here. Banks did more subtle work but fine work nonetheless. Buscemi's celery salesman was classic wonky Buscemi that just fit together nicely. Merchant's memorable turn as an over-eager hotel employee helped make "Las Vegas" Modern Family's best episode in years. Cole and Schreiber were arguably supporting actors in their respective seasons, but since they're eligible here, they absolute need inclusion.

OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Uzo Aduba as Suzanne "Crazy Eyes" Warren, Orange is the New Black
Sarah Baker as Vanessa, Louie
Laverne Cox as Sofia Burset, Orange is the New Black
Gaby Hoffman as Caroline Sackler, Girls
Patti LuPone as Herself, Girls
Taryn Manning as Tiffany "Pennsatucky" Doggett, Orange is the New Black

More OITNB love, as its ensemble is TV's current best. LuPone parodied herself perfectly. Hoffman let everything go on screen. And Sarah Baker's "So Did The Fat Lady" monologue was such a watercooler moment of this TV season, an Emmy snub would be an egregious slight.

OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR A DRAMA SERIES
Breaking Bad, "Felina" (Vince Gilligan)
Breaking Bad, "Ozymandias" (Rian Johnson)
Homeland, "The Star" (Lesli Linka Glatter)
Mad Men, "Waterloo" (Matthew Weiner)
True Detective, "Who Goes There" (Cary Fukunaga)

Skyler choosing between phone and knife. Walt's last stand. Brody's devastating end. Bert's fantastical goodbye. Rust's 6-minute descent into madness. Wow.

OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR A COMEDY SERIES
Community, "Geothermal Escapism" (Joe Russo)
Girls, "Two Plane Rides" (Lena Dunham)
Modern Family, "Las Vegas" (Gail Mancuso)
Orange is the New Black, "Can't Fix Crazy" (Michael Trim)
Veep, "Crate" (Chris Addison)

Troy falling back into the lava. Hannah with her acceptance letter. The farcical comings and goings in the Las Vegas hotel. The Christmas pageant (and the battle in the prison yard). Everyone's reactions to Selina's change of status. Double wow.

OUTSTANDING WRITING FOR A DRAMA SERIES
The Americans, "Echo" (Joel Fields & Joe Weisberg)
Breaking Bad, "Felina" (Vince Gilligan)
Breaking Bad, "Ozymandias" (Moira Walley-Beckett)
The Good Wife, "The Last Call" (Robert King & Michelle King)
Mad Men, "The Strategy" (Semi Chellas)

Where's "Hitting the Fan" for The Good Wife? That's a much stronger episode of TV than "The Last Call", which is an extremely strong episode of TV. Everything here is great, but that was a home-run, even against Breaking Bad. Perhaps Jared's reveal and Don and Peggy's dance are enough to knock down the meth kingpins.

OUTSTANDING WRITING FOR A COMEDY SERIES
Community, "Cooperative Pollygraphy"(Alex Rubens)
Girls, "Beach House" (Jenni Konner & Lena Dunham & Judd Apatow)
Looking, "Looking for the Future"(Andrew Haigh)
New Girl, "Mars Landing" (Josh Malmuth & Nina Pedrad)
Orange is the New Black, "I Wasn't Ready (Pilot)" (Liz Friedman & Jenji Kohan)

Most of these deal with relationships. The study group's relationship to their dead friend and to each other in his absence. Old friends realizing their lives are changing. New relationships budding. Old relationships dying. And isolation from all relationships and the effect that has on someone. All these shows handle character consistently well, these are just the best exampled.

Who are you hoping gets nominated this year? Sound off in the comments or give me a ring on Twitter, @miketvladue. And be sure to check back at Dual Redundancy for all your Emmy awards coverage!

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Podcast Episode 61: Winding Down: The Network Upfronts, The "Trophy Wife" Series Finale, "New Girl" & "Survivor: Cagayan"


In this week's episode we discuss the network upfront for each network including NBC (2:23), FOX (11:19), CBS (24:00), and ABC (35:45). This includes Community's cancellation, the end of animation domination for FOX, CBS passing on How I Met Your Dad, and ABC's Marvel schedule, respectively. We also wind down the series finale of Trophy Wife "Mother's Day" (46:10) and the season three finale of New Girl "Cruise" (53:05). Finally, we preview the Survivor: Cagayan finale by analyzing the second to last episode "Straw That Broke the Camel's Back" (1:02:25).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Dual Redundancy's Renewal/Cancellation Scorecard 2013-2014


The last few days have been a firestorm of cancellations and renewals. Unless you are glued to your various social media accounts you may have missed the fate on your favorite show. Thankfully we are here to help! Below are the current statuses for all the network shows divided by network.

Are we missing a show? Did something change? Help us keep this updated for everyone by letting us know either in the comments or on Twitter @DualRedundancy.



ABC

Renewed:
America’s Funniest Home Videos
The Bachelor
Castle
Dancing with the Stars
The Goldbergs
Grey's Anatomy
Last Man Standing
Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
The Middle
Modern Family
Nashville
Once Upon a Time
Resurrection
Revenge
Scandal
Shark Tank

Cancelled:
The Assets
Back In the Game
Betrayal
Killer Women
Lucky 7
Mind Games
Mixology
The Neighbors
Once Upon a Time in Wonderland
Suburgatory
Super Fun Night
Trophy Wife


CBS

Renewed:
2 Broke Girls
The Amazing Race
The Big Bang Theory
Blue Bloods
Criminal Minds
CSI
Elementary
The Good Wife
Hawaii Five-0
The Mentalist
Mike & Molly
The Millers
Mom
NCIS
NCIS: Los Angeles
Person of Interest
Survivor
Two and a Half Men
Undercover Boss

Cancelled:
Bad Teacher
The Crazy Ones
Friends With Better Lives
Hostages
Intelligence
We Are Men


FOX

Renewed:
American Idol
Bob's Burgers
Bones
Brooklyn Nine-Nine
Family Guy
The Following
Glee
MasterChef Junior
The Mindy Project
New Girl
The Simpsons
Sleepy Hollow

Cancelled:
Almost Human
Dads
Enlisted
Raising Hope
Rake
Surviving Jack
The X Factor


NBC

Renewed:
About a Boy
The Blacklist
Chicago Fire
Chicago PD
Grimm
Hannibal
Law & Order SVU
Parenthood
Parks and Recreation
The Voice

Cancelled:
Believe
Community
Crisis
Dracula
Growing Up Fisher
Ironside
The Michael J. Fox Show
Revolution
Sean Saves the World
Welcome to the Family

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Podcast Episode 59: Winding Down: The Finales of "Community" "Parenthood" & "Scandal"


You're busy. We get it. Not everyone can spend hours all day monitoring and watching everything in television and entertainment news. That is why Mike and Dave are here to do it all for you. At the end of every week we will wind down all the important things you may have missed in a week full of entertainment.

In this week's episode we discuss judge changes on The Voice (2:22), Danny Boyle replacing David Fincher on the Steve Jobs biopic (11:44), and Aaron Sorkin's apology for The Newsroom (17:56). We also wind down the season five finale of Community "Basic Sandwich" (23:33), the season five finale of Parenthood "The Pontiac" (35:55) and the season three finale of Scandal "The Price of Free and Fair Election" (46:14).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Podcast Episode 48: Winding Down: "Sherlock" "Community" & "True Detective"


You're busy. We get it. Not everyone can spend hours all day monitoring and watching everything in television and entertainment news. That is why Mike and Dave are here to do it all for you. At the end of every week we will wind down all the important things you may have missed in a week full of entertainment.

In this week's episode we preview the 2014 Oscar race by discussing recent award shows including the Critics' Choice, SAG, and PGA (1:44). We also discuss the latest from the Television Critics Association Press Tour for NBC (11:52) and a lawsuit regarding FOX's New Girl (19:55). Finally, we wind down Sherlock's "The Empty Hearse" (26:17), Community's season five (36:16), and True Detective's "The Long Bright Dark" and "Seeing Things" (49:41).



You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Friday, January 3, 2014

TV Review: Community 501/502: "Repilot" & "Introduction to Teaching"


By: David Allen (@eastwoodmcfly)

We thought it wasn’t possible. Why would a network re-hire a self-professed “rude asshole” after he was fired for a television show that receives no love from the Emmys and is easily beaten by CBS reruns? In the small off chance that this did happen there is no way he would be able to recreate the magic spark of the show with most of his original crew on other projects. Right? You are forgetting that this is Greendale Community College! The number two community college according to GreendaleCommunityCollege.com!

While I could go on for pages about how David Guarascio and Moses Port messed up season four, we do have to thank them for somehow keeping this show on the air. Without them we may not have season five and these back-to-back episodes to talk about. However, what Guarascio and Port both failed to do when they were at the helm is easily seen between these two new episodes. Dan Harmon can somehow take this absurd world and keep it grounded. He can easily blend the sometimes dark and evil nature of a character like Jeff Winger and mix it with heart and comedy. However most importantly, he can make believable characters sound real and not like happy fun time cartoons.

Season five’s premiere “Repilot” is very similar to the original pilot of the show. Between Jeff’s mischievous intentions for forming the study group to Abed calling back the pilot’s dialogue (and then calling back to how callbacks is a reference to…) it was clearly Harmon intent to ground the show and fix up some of the problems and storylines from the “gas leak” year. But don’t worry “grounded” by Community standards still includes holograms, inner-monologues in French, and a criminology teacher/Breaking Bad alum who draws cartoon ducks. Don’t judge! It’s one duck, his name is Jim and publishers are interested!

After a somewhat exposition heavy premiere (which was needed but at the same time hilarious) we were all caught up on the Greendale Seven (well six without Pierce or eight if we count Chang and the Dean…whatever).  In the second episode “Introduction to Teaching” we are introduced to professor Buzz Hickey played by Jonathan Banks. Originally when I saw promotional pictures for this season with Hickey in Pierce’s old seat at the study table, I was worried we could just get a Pierce 2.0; another man with the similar characteristics.  So far that is not the case. Mixed in with a little bit of Mike Ehrmantraut, Banks can intimidate as well as make you laugh.

While Jeff enjoys the “perks” of being a Greendale educator and has to deal with Annie who soon joins his Fundamentals of Law class, the B-story was dealing with one of the biggest enigmas in our history. Who really shot JFK? Was the moon landing staged? Nope! Nicholas Cage: Good or bad? Kevin Corrigan returns as Professor Garrity for a mini-course exploring the actor’s “abilities.” After Abed watches a few too many Cage films trying to answer the question, we are treated to an impression that easily makes this episode Danny Pudi Emmy’s submission tape, if the day/miracle ever came that he was nominated.

After Annie learns that her A- for a witness intimidation project is due to Hickey’s dislike for her and him trying to get her to drop Jeff’s class, a full on riot ensues. Even though Jeff tries to calm the storm with a typical Jeff Winger closing-speech (much like how Zach Braff closes every Scrubs episode with a voiceover wrap-up) it doesn’t work. The dean realizes what Greendale now needs is a “Save Greendale Committee” and after Jeff created a fake one with his former study group, the group sits around the familiar table in hopes of saving Greendale (and Community in general).


In and Out Points:

- Get those conspiracy theories ready. A Reddit user already found differences between the Dan Harmon opening credit image. No glasses because Pierce left? A broken pencil to symbolize “Steve” from the original pilot? Harmon’s name now in ink over pencil meaning his mark is permanent and not temporary? If we are going to be changing anything, why can’t that pen be purple?

- One of my favorite visual gags after Annie’s witness intimidation project? Humphries' thesis project which soon after this breaks in two.

- I am glad Chevy Chase and Dan Harmon settled any differences they may have for that great surprise cameo tonight. Never in a million years was I expecting that. It was a fun way to help transition to his absence and motivate Jeff, whom he has always had a special relationship with.

- Finally some of my favorite lines/interactions from Jeff and the gang:
  • “That's like me blaming owls for how much I suck at analogies.” –Britta
  • “Re-piloting can be intense. Season nine of Scrubs, Zach Braff was only in the first six episodes.” - Abed “Son of a bitch! After everything Scrubs did for him!” – Troy
  • “…and when I asked you to explain the sixth amendment, you plead the fifth!” – Annie “I know my rights.” – Jeff “No, you don’t! That’s the problem!” - Annie
  • “I don't know. If I was in 70 films over 30 years and I spent each one talking at random volumes, I might accidentally win an Oscar.” - Shirley
  • "The whole world is watching this! Oh, wait. I'm out of data minutes. The whole world will be watching this on the first of next month!" – Britta


Episode Grades: B+/A- (See what I did there?)
Episode MVPs: Dan Harmon/Danny Pudi
Original Airdate: 1/2/14

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Podcast Episode 40: Winding Down: "Hello Ladies" "The Returned" & "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia"


You're busy. We get it. Not everyone can spend hours all day monitoring and watching everything in television and entertainment news. That is why Mike and Dave are here to do it all for you. At the end of every week we will wind down all the important things you may have missed in a week full of entertainment.

In this week's episode we discuss the guest stars of season five's Community (2:04), Sacha Baron Cohen's prank at the 2013 BAFTA Awards (8:20), and what crazy things Charlie Sheen has done now (13:50). We also wind down Hello Ladies' "The Wedding" (19:29), the U.S. premiere of The Returned (33:06), and season nine of It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia (49:46).



Every week we will discuss a show picked by the listeners and to vote on what show we should cover next week be sure to use our survey by clicking here.

You can also listen to past episodes of the podcast on iTunes or on our YouTube channel.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

TV News: Glover Graduates from “Community” College; Heads to “Atlanta”


DA- Donald Glover/Childish Gambino/James Franco 2.0 is leaving NBC’s Community this season and is off to create his own show for FX. News circulated last month that despite showrunner and creator Dan Harmon returning to the cult-comedy, Glover reduced his role to five of the show’s thirteen episodes. Reportedly this was done to focus on his music career as hip-hop artist Childish Gambino.

Even though Glover is headed back to television, this reasoning is still true. Atlanta, the tentative title to Glover’s new FX venture, will focus on the music scene in, you guessed it, Atlanta, Georgia. While Deadline reports that other networks were interested in the show, FX was able to accommodate his busy touring schedule. Glover will end up pulling a Lena Dunham for the show and will star, write, and executive produce the series.

Writing will not be new to the entertainment wunderkind. Before starring in Community Glover was writing for the Emmy award-winning 30 Rock from his NYU dorm room. While there is no premiere date set for the new series, Glover can be currently seen on the big screen in the raunchy comedy The To-Do List. Before season five of Community begins the ratings-challenged yet critics’ darling will enter syndication on Comedy Central on September 15th with a ten-episode marathon.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Podcast Episode 25: LL Dual R (Ladies Love Dual Redundancy)


In this week's episode we catch you up on the world of pop culture. We also discuss the Up All Night fiasco, Community's return to TV, and the latest in pilot casting news. We also wrap up the 55th Grammy Awards and recap the Survivor: Caramoan - Fans vs Favorites premiere. Finally, we also break up with the TV show Revenge in "It's Not You, It's Revenge."

To listen to the episode use the player below or download/listen to the episode on iTunes!

Saturday, December 29, 2012

TV Thoughts: Dave's Top 12 TV Shows of 2012


DA- Before we can close up 2012 and start judging the entertainment of 2013 we need to look back on what was so great about 2012. Below is what I believe to be the twelve best shows of 2012. (Possible spoilers below).



12. Veep
Based upon the 2005 BBC series, The Thick of It, comedy up-and-comer Julia Louis-Dreyfus is a vice-president that may even be cooler and funnier than Joe Biden. With episodes like “Frozen Yoghurt” where a terrible but hilarious stomach flu gets the best of her, it is clear why she won this year’s Emmy. While Louis-Dreyfus is the comedy anchor of the show, her coworkers including Tony Hale and Timothy Simons make one great political comedy team. 


11. How I Met Your Mother
After a little bit of lull in the story of how Ted met his wife, HIMYM is back on track with a hopefully clear end date. With another mother flash-forward sighting in the season’s opener “Farhampton” to the latest episode of “The Final Page” where Barney proposes to Robin, the show can still juggle comedy as well induce chills. While recently it was renewed for one more final season, let’s hope we meet the mother at the end of this season and we actually get to see Ted date (and probably break-up, date, break-up, and finally date again) with the future Mrs. Ted Mosby before he marries and the story ends.


10. Dexter
Anything was going to be a step up from the last two seasons but Dexter came back with actual consequences for Dexter and his six seasons of murders. With acting nobody saw coming from Jennifer Carpenter back in season one to a much more interesting villain in Isaak Sirko than Colin Hanks’ Travis Marshall could ever be, I thought this show was completely back on track. While it derailed before the season was out with “Helter Skelter” and Sirko’s death, there was a point that I thought we got the old Dexter back. Hopefully these glimpses back to the past (as we saw in the finale) will continue and this show ends on a higher note like its’ previous seasons.


9. The Walking Dead
For this one we have to include the second half of season two and the first half of season three (which both aired 2012). After an extremely slow first half of season two that even the walkers could out run, Rick shoots zombie Sophia and the series began to pick up again. After the shocking deaths of Shane and Lori and then an intense battle to take over the prison, things are looking up for the AMC juggernaut. Plus with a great villain in the Governor played by David Morrissey this is one series I don’t want to see die.


8. Parks and Recreation
Going into this season I was worried to see how they would work Leslie’s new government job and her boyfriend working in Washington D.C. but the writers know how to “treat” their audience with some swag. While not as strong as season three this consistently funny show has given us a hilarious debate episode written and directed by Amy Poehler, a great guest arc with Paul Rudd, and a sweet proposal between Ben and Leslie. With 30 Rock, The Office, and (probably) Community ending, at least NBC will have one show that will keep us tuned in and laughing to the peacock network. Plus they scored Vice President Biden in a guest spot…winning!


7. New Girl
After a rough first half of season one that focused too much on quirky and “adorkable” Jess, the writers turned to see the great ensemble of characters that live with her. Between Nick, Winston, and of course Schmidt the show has learned the strengths of every actor and plays to each one of them every week. Whether it is a crazy game like True American or guest spots from people like Olivia Munn, Parker Posey, Josh Gad, Rob Riggle, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Rob Reiner, I can’t wait to see what adventure the roommates get into next and how Nick will turn lemonade into lemons, which he has been doing since 1981.


6. Mad Men
Even though Mad Men lost what would have been their fifth Emmy in a row, this season did not dip in quality. With strong performances from the whole cast including Jared Harris as Lane and Christina Hendricks as Joan it is shocking Mad Men did not receive even more Emmy love, which it still very much deserves. Don’t believe me? Go back and watch “Far Away Places” or “The Other Woman” which was not only my favorite of the season but also perhaps my favorite of the series. Ever.


5. Louie
Oh Louie! I love how I can go into this show every week and never know what I am about to see. Every episode is Louis C.K. experimenting with what a television series is and should be. With a strangely hilarious Late Show arc that saw David Lynch, Chris Rock, and Jerry Seinfeld enter the world of Louie at the end of this third season, it is going to be extra hard to wait until 2014 to see what Louis tinkers with next.


4. Community
While only airing twelve episodes in 2012 this abused sitcom’s third season which is on and off of NBC’s schedule could only be described as Community at its’ finest. Between a perfect Law & Order parody, a Ken Burns documentary about a pillow and blanket fight, an even better clip show episode, and a video game episode that starred Gus Fring, it is hard to choose a favorite from the bunch. Not to mention there was a season finale that could have worked as a perfect series finale as well. However instead of going crazy and weird like many season two episodes, season three found the perfect blend of being bizarre and yet maintain believable relationships between the characters (even if Chevy Chase thinks we do not want any of this).


3. Girls
Lena Dunham as Hannah as said she think she may be the voice of her generation. Or at least a voice, of a generation. However despite all this uncertainty, Lena Dunham as Lena is definitely the new voice of television we all needed. As creator, director, writer, producer, and star of this hit HBO show, Dunham as not created Sex in the City 2.0 but instead a completely original and funny show that just happens to star four young women trying to figure out life in New York City.


2. Breaking Bad
No, Vince Gilligan you got me! Even after only airing eight episodes this year these eight episodes are television at it’s finest. While I was worried how it could top the explosive season four, Gilligan has set up for a final eight episodes that really will show the (much deserved) downfall for Walter White. While it was a slow build to Hank’s realization, there was still a lot of action packed in between. Whether it is convincing Jesse that it was Gus who poisoned Brock, robbing a train with new guy Todd, or using the power of magnets, it will be interesting to see what’s next for Walter in this last “batch” of episodes.


1. Homeland
While I have already blogged about my future concerns about the show, this season I was on the edge of my seat the whole time. In the first four episodes alone it was as though we were speeding down the highway to “Everybody Talks” and not looking what was in the way. With performances that will sure get more Emmy love from Damian Lewis and of course of Claire Danes, it is going to be just as interesting to see where season three will go especially with the possible absence from Lewis. But again it would not be Homeland if we were not let to sit and wonder what is going to happen next (as long as we know Saul and his beard are not going anywhere).

What shows are in your top 12 of 2012? Leave your list below in the comments or tweet them to me @eastwoodmcfly.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Mike's Emmy Nomination Predictions & Wishlist!


ML- Hundreds of thousands of hours of TV aired this past year, and when you filter out the Big Bang Theory reruns, anything ending in :Miami, :LA, or :NY and everything made fun of on The Soup, you're left with the contenders for the 2012 Primetime Emmy Awards.

But not all the contenders will make the cut come Thursday morning when Nick Offerman and Kerry Washington announce this year's nominees. So who's a lock for a nom, who's teetering on the edge and who can sleep in without bothering to act humbled? Keep reading to find out, in my annual Emmy Nomination Predictionpalooza!

Contenders are listed from Most-Least likely, and the percentages represent my confidence in hearing their names read as nominees. This doesn't necessarily mean the person in first place is my pick to win it all, just most likely to get into the nominations pool. I've also included my suggestions for episode submissions and some dream nominees I'd love to see get a shot at the gold.

BEST DRAMA SERIES

1. Mad Men, AMC (100%) Season 5
Tape A: Far Away Places & At the Codfish Bar
Tape B: Lady Lazarus & The Other Woman
Tape C: Commissions and Fees & The Phantom

2. Homeland, SHOWTIME (95%) Season 1
Tape A: Pilot & The Weekend
Tape B: Blind Spot & Representative Brody
Tape C: The Vest & Marine One

3. Breaking Bad, AMC (90%) Season 4
Tape A: Box Cutter & Problem Dog
Tape B: Hermanos & Salud
Tape C: End Times & Face Off

4. Downton Abbey, PBS (80%) Season 2
Tape A: Episode 1 & Episode 5
Tape B: Episode 6 & Episode 7
Tape C: Episode 8 & Christmas Special

5. Game of Thrones, HBO (65%) Season 2
Tape A: The North Remembers & What Is Dead May Never Die
Tape B: The Old Gods and the New & A Man Without Honor
Tape C: Blackwater & Valar Morghulis

And the Final Slot will go to either:
6. Boardwalk Empire, HBO Season 2
or
7. The Good Wife, CBS Season 3


BEST DRAMA ACTOR

1. Bryan Cranston, Breaking Bad (100%) Crawl Space
2. Jon Hamm, Mad Men (95%) The Phantom
3. Steve Buscemi, Boardwalk Empire (90%) To The Lost
4. Kelsey Grammer, Boss (80%) Listen
5. Timothy Olyphant, Justified (75%) Slaughterhouse

And the Final Slot will go to either:
6. Damian Lewis, Homeland
or
7. Hugh Laurie, House

BEST DRAMA ACTRESS

1. Claire Danes, Homeland (100%) The Weekend
2. Julianna Marguiles, The Good Wife (95%) Blue Ribbon Panel
3. Elisabeth Moss, Mad Men (90%) The Other Woman
4. Glenn Close, Damages (80%) Failure Is Lonely
5. Mariska Hargitay, Law & Order: SVU (55%) Father's Shadow

And the Final Slot will go to either:
6. Kyra Sedgwick, The Closer
or
7. Emmy Rossum, Shameless

BEST DRAMA SUPPORTING ACTOR

1. Aaron Paul, Breaking Bad (100%) End Times
2. John Slattery, Mad Men (95%) Far Away Places
3. Peter Dinklage, Game of Thrones (90%) Blackwater
4. Giancarlo Esposito, Breaking Bad (80%) Hermanos
5. Mandy Patinkin, Homeland (65%) Blind Spot

And the Final Slot will go to either
6. Neal McDonough, Justified
or
7. Alan Cumming, The Good Wife

BEST DRAMA SUPPORTING ACTRESS

1. Christina Hendricks, Mad Men (100%) The Other Woman
2. Maggie Smith, Downton Abbey (95%) Episode Three
3. Christine Baranski, The Good Wife (80%) Gloves Come Off
4. Archie Panjabi, The Good Wife (75%) Bitcoin for Dummies
5. Anna Gunn, Breaking Bad (60%) Bullet Points

And the Final Slot will go to either
6. Kelly Macdonald, Boardwalk Empire
or
7. Morena Baccarin, Homeland

5 DREAM DRAMA NOMINEES

Lena Headey, Game of Thrones in Supporting Actress over Christine Baranski
Michelle Dockery, Downton Abbey in Lead Actress over Mariska Hargitay
Jessica Pare, Mad Men in Lead Actress over Sedgwick/Rossum
Michael Pitt, Boardwalk Empire in Supporting Actor over Mandy Patinkin
Lisa Edelstein, The Good Wife in Guest Actress

Top 8 Drama Writing Episodes
The Weekend, Homeland
Crawl Space, Breaking Bad
Commissions and Fees, Mad Men
Episode 7 Christmas, Downton Abbey
Blackwater, Game of Thrones
Signal 30, Mad Men
Under God's Power She Flourishes, Boardwalk Empire
Box Cutter, Breaking Bad


BEST COMEDY SERIES

1. Modern Family, ABC (100%) Season 3
Tape A: Phil On Wire & Punkin Chunkin
Tape B: Lifetime Supply & Aunt Mommy
Tape C: Election Day & Baby On Board

2. 30 Rock, NBC (95%) Season 6
Tape A: Dance Like Nobody's Watching & Leap Day
Tape B: Kidnapped By Danger & Live From Studio 6H
Tape C: The Return of Avery Jessup & What Will Happen to the Gang Next Year?

3. Parks and Recreation, NBC (90%) Season 4
Tape A: Born & Raised & The Trial of Leslie Knope
Tape B: Citizen Knope & The Comeback Kid
Tape C: The Debate & Win, Lose or Draw

4. Curb Your Enthusiasm, HBO (80%) Season 8
Tape A: The Safe House & The Palestinian Chicken
Tape B: The Hero & The Bi-Sexual
Tape C: Mister Softee & The Bi-Sexual

5. The Big Bang Theory, CBS (70%) Season 5
Tape A: The Her Garden Germinator & The 21-Second Excitation
Tape B: The Justice League Recombination & The Engagement Reaction
Tape C: The Love Car Displacement & The Agreement Dissection

And the Final Slot will go to either:
6. Louie, F/X Season 2
or
7. New Girl, FOX Season 1

BEST COMEDY ACTOR

1. Jim Parsons, The Big Bang Theory (100%) The Werewolf Transformation
2. Louis CK, Louie (90%) Country Drive
3. Larry David, Curb Your Enthusiasm (85%) The Palestinian Chicken
4. Alec Baldwin, 30 Rock (80%) Live From Studio 6H
5. Jon Cryer, Two and a Half Men (75%) Frodo's Headshot

And the Final Slot will go to either:
6. Johnny Galecki, The Big Bang Theory
or
7. Don Cheadle, House of Lies

BEST COMEDY ACTRESS

1. Amy Poehler, Parks and Recreation (100%) Win, Lose or Draw
2. Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Veep (95%) Tears
3. Tina Fey, 30 Rock (80%) The Tuxedo Begins
4. Zooey Deschanel, New Girl (75%) Pilot
5. Lena Dunham, Girls (55%) The Return

And the Final Slot will go to either:
6. Laura Linney, The Big C
or
7. Laura Dern, Enlightened

BEST COMEDY SUPPORTING ACTOR

1. Ty Burrell, Modern Family (100%) Lifetime Supply
2. Eric Stonestreet, Modern Family (95%) Treehouse
3. Ed O'Neill, Modern Family (90%) Disneyland
4. Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Modern Family (80%) Leap Day
5. Nick Offerman, Parks and Recreation (65%) Pawnee Rangers

And the Final Slot will go to either
6. Max Greenfield, New Girl
or
7. Chris Colfer, Glee

BEST COMEDY SUPPORTING ACTRESS

1. Julie Bowen, Modern Family (100%) Little Bo Bleep
2. Sofia Vergara, Modern Family (95%) Tableau Vivant
3. Kristin Wiig, Saturday Night Live (80%) Mick Jagger
4. Betty White, Hot in Cleveland (75%) Happy Fat
5. Jane Krakowski, 30 Rock (60%) Dance Like Nobody's Watching

And the Final Slot will go to either
6. Chloris Leachman, Raising Hope
or
7. Kathryn Joosten, Desperate Housewives

5 DREAM COMEDY NOMINEES

Joel McHale, Community in Lead Actor over Jon Cryer
Gillian Jacobs, Community in Supporting Actress over Betty White
Damon Wayans, Jr., Happy Endings in Supporting Actor over Eric Stonestreet
Chris Pratt, Parks and Recreation in Supporting Actor over Ed O'Neill
Doup Stanhope, Louie in Guest Actor

Top 8 Comedy Writing Episodes
Remedial Chaos Theory, Community
Pilot, Girls
Win, Lose or Draw, Parks and Recreation
Tears, Veep
Kidnapped By Danger, 30 Rock
Aunt Mommy, Modern Family
Pregnant, Louie
Pilot, New Girl