Week two of the revival of TV Squad's APB podcast has arrived! In this episode, Bob Sassone and Danny Gallagher join me to talk about TV's doings this week:
The cancellation of Southland and the role of The Jay Leno Show in that cancellation,
Loyal TV Squad readers will recall that Bob wrote a post yesterday that criticized the ever-annoying Hoda Kotb and Kathie Lee Gifford for the lame "dirty secrets" they gave during the lighter-than-air fourth hour of Today that morning (they originally talked about "bad habits," which turned into a talk about "dirty secrets"). For those who care: Hoda doesn't wash her hair that often and Kathie Lee doesn't floss as much as she should. I know: scandalous, right?
Anyway, at the beginning of their first segment this morning, the hosts called Bob and TV Squad out on his post -- initially they said he "wrote in," as if Bob's sitting at his computer writing angry e-mails to the Today show staff -- and invited him to e-mail them his dirty secret:
For those of you who have asked us whether Bob has busted into the TV Squad offices and taken over the blog by force, I'm here to say that nothing of the sort has happened. First of all, we have no offices. And second of all, the short posts Bob has done this week are something new that we're trying out (as I've mentioned in the comment sections of many of his posts this week).
Why are we doing this? Well, why not? There are plenty of occasions when a video or picture -- or even a show we don't cover -- deserves a post, but doesn't need a lot of commentary attached. So, what I've asked Bob to do (actually, it was his idea, and I just said "sure") is to post these things with a few sentences of comment, and then open it up to the readers. Some of the posts have gotten some nice discussion going, which is what we were going for.
But this does not mean that we're substituting these shorties for our normal posts. These are supposed to fill in the spaces between the normal posts we do. More info after the jump.
Welcome to TV Squad Lists, a feature where each blogger has a chance to list his or her own rundown of things in television that stand out from the rest, both good and bad.
Sanjaya's gone from American Idol: Do you hear that roaring noise? That's the sound of all the Idol purists celebrating that Sanjaya is now gone from their show. This means that they can now get back down to business in choosing who will be the next winner of an exclusive recording contract. Of course, while that finalist will record and receive a good deal of money he or she will probably fade into the background. In the meanwhile, Sanjaya will probably win the Nobel Peace Prize sometime in the near future. I wonder what hairstyle he'll wear during the award presentation?
As much as I've complained, bitched, moaned, and complained (yes, I said "complained" twice... that's how much I did it) about Studio 60, I never stopped watching the show.
The reasons why I did so changed over time. For a while, I thought I was "rubbernecking;" I just couldn't resist seeing what train wreck Aaron Sorkin wrote for himself each week, and then couldn't wait to get on to TV Squad and other sites to see the critics and the commenters ravage the episode. Then, for a while, I thought I was watching the show out of the hope that such a talented group of writers and actors could get their act together long enough to run off a streak of quality episodes. Finally, I thought I was watching merely for the fact that there was nothing else to watch on Mondays at 10, and I figured I could just watch it while I wrote my review for How I Met Your Mother.
Turns out it was all three reasons. And, now that The Black Donnellys is taking S60's place starting next week, I'm going to miss the show a little bit.
Last year, Bob Sassone
asked if the Internet would one day replace
television. One of the points he made was why BitTorrent software wasn't being used by the networks to allow
viewers to download an episode of their favorite show to watch at their convenience.
Well, BitTorrent is
now being used by a number of users in an, um, illegal fashion. OK, the networks are pretty much calling it piracy. In
a recent development, HBO has sent letters out to a number of
cable companies asking their subscribers to stop BitTorrenting episodes of such shows as The Sopranos.
What's happening here is that HBO is watching the BitTorrent sessions come through a particular IP address and then
they are tracking the address back to its source. Once they find out it's a cable company they send a letter
out that, subsequently, goes out to the subscribers.
At this point it doesn't seem like the networks or cable
companies will change their minds any time soon to exclusively use BitTorrent. However, with the recent influx of
downloadable shows going to places such as iTunes and the increase of DVR machines this could change.
MediaPost pretty effectively goes through
some of the reasons
why the airline industry should do whatever it can to keep The Loop on the air. The show is all about the
airline industry, and features a lead character that is enthusiastic about the job, even if he doesn't do it too often.
More than that, it features great opportunities for product placement by airline companies looking to pull their
reputation out of the gutter. The constant chatter about the industry leaves plenty of room for casual name-dropping of
competitors to the fictional airline the show's characters work for.
Of course Bob might have some problems with
the show sticking around based on his last
review. Then again I think we should devote ourselves to encouraging that which irritates Bob Sassone. Sounds like
a mission statment if I ever heard one.
Hello! For those of you wondering where the heck I've
been lately (you have missed me, right? Right??), I just moved to another city and my web access has been spotty at
best. There's been a delay hooking up the DSL at my new apartment (not sure why), so I've been surfing from various
Borders locations. I like having the option of taking my laptop and logging on from outside the home, but I'll be a
very happy camper once I can get online from the comfort of my couch.
In the meantime, I'm going to still
post when I can. The world is my office right now. I just wish these places provided TVs as well as wireless.