Posts with tag blood
Posted Mar 30th 2007 4:20PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Animation, South Park, Comedy Central
A lot of stories are popping up about the scene in the most recent episode of South Park that shows the Queen of England putting a pistol in her mouth and blowing skull fragments and brain matter all over the wall behind her. These stories, mostly coming from the UK, tell of the "controversial" scene and how it "shocked viewers."
And yet, not a single one of these stories, from what I can tell, gives any real evidence that the scene in question stirred up any controversy whatsoever. The stories merely suggest that, given the series' knack for courting controversy, people were probably bothered by the Queen's suicide, as well.
I'm not from the UK, but I am a South Park fan, and as I said in my review of the episode, the Queen's suicide was so quintessentially South Park I hardly batted an eye. If anything, the whole sequence seemed a little too easy, especially by South Park standards. I'll admit I'm not easily offended, but South Park hasn't shocked or surprised me in several years. That's not a slag against the show, it just means I'm tuned into its sensibility.
Posted Feb 26th 2007 7:19PM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, HBO, Celebrities
Almost Famous and
The Piano actress Anna Paquin has signed on to the lead role in a new series for HBO from Alan Ball. That name should ring a bell for all fans of
Six Feet Under (Ball also wrote
American Beauty).
This time around, Ball is diving into the world of vampires.
His new series, appropriately called
True Blood, is based on the "Southern Vampire" series of novels by Charlaine Harris. In the story, vampires don't have to kill humans for their blood because the Japanese were kind enough to invent a synthetic blood that does the trick. Paquin will play a non-vampire waitress who hooks up with a vampire.
Paquin is also appearing in an
HBO mini-series about the displacement of Native Americans, called
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee.
Posted Jan 12th 2007 4:25PM by Will O'Brien
Filed under: Animation, Spike

(S01E01) Afro Samurai is Samuel L. Jackson's latest venture. It's a captivating mini series that's something of an americanized cross between Tarantino violence and high quality anime. Aside from providing his voice for two characters, he's also co/executive producing it.
"Revenge"
begins in the past with the death of the boys father at the hands of Justice, a cackling creepy character, over posession of the #1 headband. I had to watch the fight a couple of times, but I still don't know just how Justice defeated #1. (A weaponized eyeball maybe?)
Continue reading Afro Samurai: Revenge
Posted Dec 17th 2006 11:31PM by Jonathan Toomey
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Showtime, Premium Cable, OpEd, Dexter

(S01E12) What an absolutely spectacular show. It's going to be a shame if Michael C. Hall doesn't get the Golden Globe because he certainly deserves it. It's funny because at the beginning of the season I said I was going to have a hard time picturing him as anything other than part of the Six Feet Under ensemble. Now that season one of Dexter has come and gone, I can't imagine how Hall ever played the role of David Fisher for five seasons because this is the show I associate him with. He owns this role.
Continue reading Dexter: Born Free (season finale)
Posted Dec 13th 2006 9:02PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Animation, BBC
Christmas isn't just about hanging stockings, decorating the tree, buying presents, burning the Yule log and cleaning the vomit off your roof from airsick reindeer. Sometimes it's about shooting your wife and son in the face and sawing through your son's skull, or so animator David Firth imagines in this graphic animated Christmas card (extreme cartoon violence, so be warned). This was supposed to appear on the BBC Four program Charlie Brooker's Screen Wipe, but Brooker rejected it. Firth has apparently made animated shorts for the series before, but this one wasn't family-friendly enough according to Brooker. Like Firth says, more people will probably see it on the Web, anyway. I figured I'd help that along and mention it here, because it really is quite funny if you have a twisted sense of humor.
[via Cold, Hard Flash]
Posted Dec 11th 2006 12:39AM by Jonathan Toomey
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Showtime, Premium Cable, OpEd, Dexter

(S01E11) Oh. My. God. This may very well have been a perfect hour of television. Could this show possibly be any better? Frankly, I have no idea how I'm going to spend my Sunday nights after next week's season finale. Maybe I'll take up crocheting? Or try watching Brothers and Sisters? Nah... Sally Field freaks me out. Doesn't matter really. Nothing else will compare to Dexter. For those that have doubted Showtime and this show still hasn't sold you on the quality of the network? Man, maybe you should be the one taking up crocheting.
Continue reading Dexter: Truth Be Told
Posted Dec 3rd 2006 11:31PM by Jonathan Toomey
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Showtime, Premium Cable, OpEd, Dexter
(S01E10) Wow... I am just so in awe of this show. It does everything that good TV is supposed to do. I'm not quite sure how to talk through all of this, but let's get one thing out there: Malcolm-Jamal Warner gained a ton of weight. As much as I enjoyed seeing him guest star as Dexter's lawyer buddy, every time he was in a scene I couldn't stop picturing him tap-dancing in the opening sequence of The Cosby Show. That guy is forever Theo Huxtable.
Moving on, let's talk about blood.
Continue reading Dexter: Seeing Red
Posted Nov 21st 2006 6:33PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Industry, OpEd, Celebrities

Ever watch a steamy or somewhat violent network promo during the 8:00 hour, or see something particularly risqué at that time and wonder "didn't there used to be a family hour?" Well, Steven Spielberg is wondering the same thing. He
told an audience at the International Emmys board of directors meeting that networks need to be more mindful of what they show during times when children may be watching, according to
The Hollywood Reporter.
During his on-stage interview, he cited promos for
CSI that showed a lot of blood and dissections. Even his favorite new show of the season,
Heroes, showed a scene of someone being cut in half. And, since it was during the 9 PM time period, his kids were still awake; he had to send them out of the room.
Continue reading Steven Spielberg says networks need to be more responsible
Posted Oct 20th 2006 1:31PM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, HBO, Industry, Syndicated, The Sopranos

Basic cable channel A&E bought the syndication rights to
The Sopranos, and now the network is busy trying to clean up the show for its audience. What can and can't they air? It's a fine line that basically says blood is okay but brain spatter is not. Case in point: the last episode of season one has Jimmy Altieri getting whacked with one bullet to the back of his head. When the episode aired on HBO, the audience saw blood spatter on the wall and chunks of brain slide down the wall. A&E's audience won't see the brains. There are about one hundred other instances where executives have to make similar decisions about violence, language and nudity. The newly edited versions of
The Sopranos air on A&E in January.
I'm wondering if it's even worth the effort. A&E bought the right to air all 85 episodes of
The Sopranos... for a staggering $2.5 million per episode. But how much fun is it really going to be without all the naughty stuff?
[Via
TV Tattle]
Posted Oct 9th 2006 7:25AM by Jonathan Toomey
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Showtime, Premium Cable, OpEd, Dexter

(S01E02) This show is just too cool. Everything about it is just so smooth and flashy and slick. Very slick. Just look at the opening title sequence. This is new since it wasn't attached to last week's pilot. It looked great. The way it incorporated blood into every aspect of Dexter's life? He wakes up being bitten by a mosquito. He cuts himself shaving. For breakfast, he even juices a very ripe blood orange. See? Slick.
Continue reading Dexter: Crocodile
Posted Sep 26th 2006 9:26AM by Jonathan Toomey
Filed under: Showtime, Premium Cable, Web

I think I'm reading too much into this, but it's still fun. Pictured above is some desktop wallpaper from Showtime's new original series Dexter. I was looking at it and wondered if there were any hidden clues about the upcoming premiere season. I know CSI did something like that to pump last year's season finale but that was an actual promo poster and this is just plain ol' wallpaper. Regardless, there's still a lot going on in the picture. There's a guy in the second floor window, the three women gathered around something (someone?), police lines blocking off the sidewalk, and what appears to be a couple of shirtless men to the far right. You can see the full size image here. Anyone else think there might be something more to this? It just looks like one of those pictures that has some kind of hidden message...
Posted Jul 31st 2006 10:35AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Comedy Central, Reno 911!
(S04E04) After a pre-credit opening where the male deputies try to conduct a "panty raid" and end up face to face with a completely naked and pregnant Wiegel, we cut to the first real scene of the episode where a motivational speaker Dangle found on the internet gives the deputies some rather confounding advice, including this diatribe:
"I ask you, does the belt not go through all the loops? You all see yourselves as brilliant little pebbles just waiting for your code word. Well, what if your code word doesn't come, huh? Are you gonna sit around in your cruiser and wind up ejected from somebody's crazy physics package?"
More profound advice I've never heard. Let's move on.
Continue reading Reno 911!: Rick's On It
Posted Jun 5th 2006 3:42PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Animation, Adult Swim
(S01E01)
The new Adult Swim series from SpongeBob SquarePants writer and storyboard artist Aaron Springer, Korgoth of Barbaria, which also features the talents of Bill Wray (Ren and Stimpy, Mad Magazine) and Genndy Tartakovsky (Dexter's Laboratory, Samurai Jack) does not officially debut until September, but last night a sneak peek was shown. Actually, I don't think this is the first time the pilot has been shown, but it was the first time I saw it, and I have to say I thought it was pretty good, especially if you like creative violence.
Continue reading Korgoth of Barbaria: Pilot
Posted May 6th 2006 11:00AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Cable, OpEd, Wonder Showzen
(S02E06) If there was any doubt in my mind about the brilliance that is Wonder Showzen, it was put to rest by last night's episode, which was by far the funniest and most insane episode so far this season. There are a lot of comedic elements that come easy for Wonder Showzen: the gross-out humor, the surreal twists, and the acid-induced logic, but what really makes the show for me are those moments when it outright defies the viewer to keep watching. Last season they did it with the episode "Patience" in which the whole last half of the episode was just the first half of the episode played backwards. In this episode, after a fight breaks out between the regular show and a bootleg knock-off of the program, they decide to split the television screen 60/40, so the audience can watch both shows at once. Eventually more and more shows begin to take over the television screen, which resulted in four minutes of sometimes as many as eight segments all being shown simultaneously at equal volume.
Continue reading Wonder Showzen: Cooperation
Posted Jan 9th 2006 4:59PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Cable, Programming, Animation

Last month there was some speculation as to whether
or not Comedy Central had caved in by not airing the "Bloody Mary" episode of South Park, which featured a
statue of the Virgin Mary spraying blood from her ass.
Some Catholic groups were
upset about the episode, and its omission from the marathon caused many people to think Comedy Central had finally
succumbed to outside pressure.
Boing Boing
published a form e-mail Comedy Central sent to those who e-mailed the network to complain. If I'm reading the letter
correctly, it appears Comedy Central chose not to air the episode just that one time in the name of holiday solidarity
and whatnot. Here's the letter:
Continue reading Comedy Central letter explains South Park omission