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DNA-related stories
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In today's crowded world of television, procedural crime dramas are a dime a dozen. Actually, make that a nickel a dozen, since there are so many of them. Each one is slightly different than the other, but they all have pretty much the same formula: a crime is committed (on or off screen), the police go in to investigate, clues are discovered, crack forensic and computer scientists discover even more clues, the wrong person is brought in for questioning, and the real culprit is finally brought to justice two minutes before the credits roll.
Continue reading Life -- An early look - VIDEO
(S01E17) Brothers and Sisters continues to give good episode, and good story. I particularly enjoyed how they used Nora's writing class and the story she was writing to give structure to the episode. She wrote a narrative about all of the crazy threads of her family and all of the story lines.Continue reading Brothers and Sisters: All in the Family
CBS' Crime Scene Investigation franchise has done well with shows like
CSI, CSI: Miami, CSI: NY, and CSI: Plus Calcium, but what about CSI:
Mozart? That's what a TV station in Austria dubbed a forensic analyzation of a human skull which may or may not
have belonged to the famous composer. The story goes that Mozart's skull was removed from his grave ten years after his
death by the same man who buried him. The skull was kept on display before being moved to a safe in the Mozarteum in
Salzburg. Tests, unfortunately, proved inconsequential, though I'm not sure that really matters. It's not like it's his
brain or anything, which, had it been preserved, would be much more interesting to study, and/or feed to a bear. At
any rate, I think the scientists who studied the skull's DNA may have a great idea for a new show on their hands, one in
which investigators study a different deceased celebrity's skull in each episode. They could call it CSI: Famous
Skull Unit. I'd watch something like that.
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