seastoofartoreach--disqus
SeasTooFarToReach
seastoofartoreach--disqus

What happened with American Dad? I didn't watch it but it's been on for 12 years.

Looking at the ballots I'm amazed people are willing to bet against Shonda Rhimes and Seth MacFarlane! You are all brave people!

I set it to record because I thought it was one-hour block so I missed the second episode. (Not that I matter because I'm a nobody without a Nielsen box!)

Drop: Blindspot
Swap: Bones

I think that Executive Producers are more about characters and stories. A person may hold an EP credit for a project they're not involved in as long as it's the same creative concept. The Producer is the money person and is more involved with the day-to-day decisions that will get things done.

It's LA. Everyone has thought about acting.

He's 34 so clearly disqualified. That's about the same age as Harrison Ford at that time so they should be looking for early-20s if they want to make more than one prequel. I was about to ask if they wanted to make more than one prequel but then I remembered this is Disney.

Really? Because I gladly skip the opening monologue and watch the bits behind the desk. They tend to be closer to the Report and the extended topic makes the jokes land better for me.

Damn, better throw away my spec script about teenage Harrison being the Treadmill Killer.

My guess: they did it because it was ChumHum. Remember that LG got their business because they kept beating them in court. Though I agree it wouldn't make much sense to trust Monica after the video otherwise.

Diane is a prestigious lawyer with many years of experience and connections so it makes sense that she gets first billing. How they ended up making David Lee a named partner escapes me, considering they both hate his guts!

"Sexy" goes without saying.

I really, really wish people would stop referring to Lucca as "new Kalinda." It's pretty clear that Jason is the new Kalinda, not because he's an investigator but he's the mysterious bad-ass who carries blunt objects in his car as a means of intimidation and speaks few words.

Yes, I feel like we don't really know who Cary is anymore. I'm sure that S6 ordeal changed him but there hasn't been any exploration of his character since.

I think this might be one of those shows were the pilot was the best episode. Can't say I enjoyed anything past that, perhaps the finale because it featured the opening night of the production.

I wouldn't dismiss this as possibly being the last season, perhaps they just haven't announced it yet. The show feels aimless right now and there is no narrative momentum. Characters appear to be on the show to serve plots instead of the other way around.

The show has never sold me on Alicia actually wanting or being a successful politician. The season premiered with her claiming she didn't have to answer to anyone anymore and that it made her free and happy. Someone who is in the public eye will NEVER be free. As a wife of a presidential candidate, she now has to

Not to mention that if they secured so much money in billing, they probably don't really need to work with Canning either.

I didn't mind the discussion between Cary and Monica that much, if only because people can be that blinded to their own biases and privilege. I thought they were trying to portray that, not to make him look like a total bigot. And the lightness of touch in the discussion made it entertaining to watch. So I thought it

I didn't really mind the change in format. I think the problem with this episode came from a narrative point of view and what they're showing of these characters. Not sure how many times we need to see that Cole is self-destructive or that Noah is losing himself even deeper into his own asshole. It's time to move to