avclub-7aee1b75b527e215f31e20a5c4e7a768--disqus
ToddVanDerWerff
avclub-7aee1b75b527e215f31e20a5c4e7a768--disqus

What, you can't find the sandwiches? We've made it very easy to find them with the new design!

Yes, before September, we typically posted pre-air reviews on the day of, 10-12 hours before air. Now, we're posting them a day before. This is a massive shift.

We have posted reviews of notable debuts before air since TV Club began, long before I worked here. That is not at all a change in existing policy. You just noticed it.

We're no longer covering it weekly.

See, just as you used an incredibly convoluted method of saying I'm fat, I thought I might use an incredibly convoluted method of saying your grasp of the English language is perhaps less than exemplary.

There's a lot more to a review than what happens, though most reviews will also necessarily contain a bit of information on the setup of the plot.

We work meticulously to make sure that nothing in these reviews would spoil your experience of watching this stuff for the first time and always, always, always err on the side of caution (as noted above). But there are always going to be people who don't want to know ANYthing going into something, and for them, I

I'm trying to figure out how the sandwich fits in here…

Well, I did assign it to him…

To say too much would spoil too much.

You will!

They may try again in a future development cycle. These cable shows sometimes hang around for five or six years before someone cracks them.

I have seen two episodes and quite liked them!

Much closer to Cooperative Calligraphy, though it riffs off Mixology in one scene.

They committed to six episodes off the script, I believe.

It is not a great pilot, but in almost the opposite way of Low Winter Sun. Where that was overfamiliar and kept overexplaining itself, Turn is telling a story that's fairly new in TV terms (how a small group of friends spied for George Washington, who doesn't appear, during the war), and it's explaining almost none of

I have it on pretty good authority it's the latter.

Weirdly, the one of those that I think has the best chance to break out is Mind Games. It probably won't, but it's a pretty solid network interpretation of a USA-style procedural. Weirder things have happened.

Depends when we get the screeners. But it depends on the reviewer, honestly.

I am guessing it's not happening, since it wasn't on their development slate for the year.