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Watcher’s Guide: RETCON EDITION American Horror Story Season One part II
Hello reader,
Welcome back to another addition to my American Horror Story Watcher’s Guide Season one retrospective. On this post I’ll be reviewing episodes 2 to 4.
EPISODE TWO
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“I’m hurt and in needing some help.”
Episode info
Season 1 Episode 2 “Home Invasion”
Original airdate: October 12, 2011
Written by Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk
Directed by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon
Episode synopsis
While Ben is away on abortive business the Harmon women fall victim to a house invasion plot by a group of serial killer wannabes. 
Episode Notes  
Character study:
THE HARMONS
In this episode Ben has to deal with the repercussions of his infidelity with Hayden. This whole subplot where he wants to be a good family man and do the right thing is kind of stupid. If he wanted to do the right thing he would’ve just told Vivian the truth, I mean she already knows that he’s cheated on her would it be that much of a surprise that he didn’t use protection. But no instead he lies to his wife and goes to make sure Hayden goes through with her abortion. This show again lays Ben’s dilemma on really thick when his lie makes him out to seem like a genuinely good therapist as clarified by his wife saying “You’re a good person, Ben.”
Ben is not a good person nor is he a good doctor or father.
When we meet Hayden it’s clear he doesn’t know how to deal with her and also she’s out of her mind crazy. This is the evidence that he’s a bad doctor being that he is unable to help her or relate to her. If it’s not the evidence of that then it’s at the very least evidence that he’s an awful human being for taking advantage of this girl’s condition in order to have his way of her. I don’t understand how the writers expect us to root for him.
We also have Vivian and Violet in this episode with their whole intolerable Mother and daughter dynamic. I don’t know what is about them but it just seems like they are both playing off of different things. It’s super annoying. Vivien reacts to Violets disrespect in a way that doesn’t seem genuine to what was said. Like when Violet says “I think you’re weak” it sounds like she’s telling it to a turtle. Then we have Connie Britton react in a sigh. A really weak sigh, as to say well she’s right, I wonder what’s for dinner.
By the end of them surviving the home invasion thing, Violet has a newfound respect for Vivian which is good arch for the two of them.
NOTABLE CAST
Home invaders
Bianca is one of Ben’s patients and she is supposedly inflicted with nightmares about being split in two by an elevator. As it turns out she is one of a trio of psychotic serial killer fanatics who want to recreate murders of notable slashers. She scopes out the place on her psychiatric visit and then uses her know to let in her buddies for some murder mayhem.
These three were kind of stock nut balls with irrational need to recreate the murders exactly. Why? Who knows probably because they’re crazy? That’s probably the answer the writers would give, truth being they didn’t put that much thought into it.
The Nurse ghosts
These characters were pretty interesting in conception. For some reason you don’t really need much motivation in ghost stories like these. They were merely reciprocating vengeance to people willing to recreate the very crime committed against them. That sounds pretty solid to me.
Hayden
I like Kate Mara. I found her to be a memorable actress when she appeared in shows I liked like Jack & Bobby, Everwood and Nip/tuck. She’s a fine actress. They don’t give her a lot to do here. Just be crazy needy. That’s what she is. She’s just a crazy needy chick that doesn’t have any other depth than that. 
The Good:
I’m guessing the series will make a habit of having prelude teaser opening where they highlight a past murder. I think that works for what the series is trying to do. The way the flashback teaser weaves into the story in the present is actually really well done. You set up this incident and the victims establish their ghosts in the house and then have a situation that involve serial killer fanatics wanting to recreate those murders and have them fall victim to their own fanaticism. It’s a pretty satisfying comeuppance.
Another thing that was good was that the mythology of the House is actually being developed. We get a sense that the ghosts are the most powerful when they are in the basement. That’s where the twin red headed boys were killed, that’s where Tate tells Violet to lead the home invaders so the ghosts could take care of them. It permits that this universe has its own rules.  
The Bad:
I already talked earlier about my annoyance of the mother daughter dynamic of Vivian and Violet, that counts as a bad.
I really thought that Violet becoming friends with her bully was also bad. Like really you were so bullied by this girl that you wanted to scare the crap out of her so she would leave you alone and now you’re talking to her in a skateboarding ring like you’re old pals. Give me a break. If I was that girl and I had seen the devil in Violets basement I wouldn’t talk to her or be around her ever again. Also, doesn’t she have other friends to talk to about her ordeal?
Okay, maybe the incident was so severe the thing the bully girl felt she couldn’t talk to anyone else about it other than someone who was there. But I’m not going to give it that because it’s not on the screen I’m just trying to create some logic where there isn’t any.
Another thing about this bully character that I thought was bad was that they have her smoking now. Why? This is against her previously established characteristics. In the pilot she was against smoking. If it’s to show how traumatized this girl is, well then you didn’t need to have her hair go grey too. I mean okay we get it she’s grey haired, she’s smoking, she’s wearing sunglasses and she sympathizes with her tormentor, great job hammering that little nugget home, writers. 
The Ugly:
I’ve got to say I just hate it when plot points just go nowhere. The whole Constance and her daughter subplot really could’ve been excised out the script entirely because it really seems like pointless fluff.
Like why did Constance drug Violets muffin with laxatives? Did she know that the home invaders were coming and planted it for them to eat as it so happened or was that just a coincidence? If Violet was the intended Lax victim then why so? What reason would Constance want to cause Violet ill?
The answer is not in this episode.
Also when Constance daughter sneaks in to the Harmon house and sees the home invaders and goes back to tell Constance are we expected to believe that Constance would’ve helped the Harmons with their situation had she known that it was the case. I don’t know that she would’ve.
Another truly ugly thing about this episode was that closet with the mirrors. What was that all about? What kind of punishment is that and also Constance was trying to get it on with that guy in her room right? so why did she think locking her daughter in a room with mirrors and allowing her to scream bloody murder that doing that would not be a distracting thing while trying to get back to business. I mean come on!
One Button Review
PLAY
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My One button review for this episode is PLAY, and I’ll tell you why. This is not a bad episode for what it’s trying to do. It’s a decent ghost story with pretty straightforward narrative. The mythology of the show is present and seems to be developing in a good way. I’m more interested in the series based on this episode than I was with the pilot. The characters are still hollow I’m more optimistic that it can improve.
EPISODE THREE
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“I was and continue to be one hell of a shot.”
 Episode info
Season 1 Episode 3 “Murder House”
Original airdate: October 19, 2011
Written by Jennifer Salt
Directed by Bradley Buecker
Episode synopsis
After surviving an in house attack Vivian insists that they move away and sell the house but finds that it’s easier said than done.
Episode Notes
Character study:
THE HARMONS
Here we have Vivien willing to do the smart thing and sell the haunted house where she was assaulted by home invaders. She’s taking charge and really making an effort to get out of that house.
Ben has to deal with the return of Hayden who is dead set on making things hard for him. She didn’t go through with the abortion and has decided to keep the baby and keep Ben as the baby daddy as well. Ben is having women problems all around because the maid is also giving him trouble by tempting him. This week’s patient also threatens to kill herself and Ben doesn’t really dwell on that too much being that he has so much on his plate.
The thing with Violet in this episode is that she wants to stay at the house while her mother wants to move out and her dad is just oblivious to her. I still really dislike the dialogue they give Violet because she sounds dumb saying things like
“I love our house… It’s where we kicked some ass.”
Which I think is actually an interesting idea that she feels that to be empowering to be in the house, but for some reason this actress just seems to just fumble the delivery where I don’t take her seriously.
Sorry to say Connie Britton’s tone in her response doesn’t help when she says “I love that you see it that way” like some kind of hippie chick on a mellow. It’s undermining for both characters.
NOTABLE CAST
Constance and Moira
We get a little bit more back story on these two in the opening teaser of this episode. Moira died at a young age which is how she appears to Ben and any male guest, but her ghost has aged (somehow) as the women see her.
Constance had discovered Moira in a compromising way with her husband at the time which in a crime of passion causes her to murder them both. Somehow I don’t blame Constance for murdering those two. I kind of enjoy the way she digs in at Moira and taunts her. Moira is clearly the character the writer wants us to sympathize with and that would be the case if her ghostliness wasn’t so confusing.
I mean why do the male guests see her as she was when she died and why do the women see her as old? The obvious answer is that the writers thought that would be cool. The answer given (as explained by Moira) is that men only see their need for dominance and desires and women see into the soul of a person. That’s a load of malarkey. That is really degrading towards men and women, because it makes it seem like all men have no real free will and are subject to their animalistic needs and also that’s the only way for women to be better than men is that they be more pure. Men and women both have these animalistic needs of dominance and desires; they just have different ways of expressing them. Neither one is more pure than the other.
But you know even though that’s the explanation given, I’m going to try to see past that and interpret it differently because it’s obviously not the case that women guests and men guests see ghosts differently because they all see Tate and the nurse ghosts just fine. I think the better explanation would be that all these ghosts have different faculties that constitute their ghostly afterlife in the house. The nurses appear in their uniforms as they died, Tate appears unassuming in teen adolescence. For some reason Moira has taken upon her ghostly self to take on two visages somehow cursed by her guilt of sleeping with Constance husband. So her answer is true because she wants it to be true.
Hayden
Well I guess we haven’t seen the last of Hayden. She’s come back because Ben left her at the abortion clinic. I mean, wasn’t it the whole point of Ben going over to Hayden to make sure she goes through with it. Well she didn’t go through with it and now she’s back because she wants him to play father and support her baby and take care of her. Well now he has to kill her and bury her under a freshly made Gazebo.
The Good:
I really dig Vivian taking charge and wanting to get out of the house and really sticking it to the realtor, although I think she may have been too harsh on her, but nevertheless I like her attitude and resolute.
I like the Moira and Constance storyline more now that they’ve brought out the depth of their relationship. How Constance taunts her all the time and even after her bones are found only to get reburied along with Hayden’s is great. I’m actually am finally getting Moira a little more now that her motives has been revealed that she was trying to get Ben to discover her bones so that she won’t be trapped in the house anymore. Also it brings up more questions too; I might have to get back to that later.
The mythology of the house is building with the back story of the Murder house on that bus tour which was very serviceable. This is clearly the creepy camp they were going for with this series.
The Bad:
I still don’t like Violet a whole lot. I thought it was cool her saying that surviving the home invasion was a source of empowerment rather than an excuse for feeling victimized. I liked that she said it not the way it came out. It still seemed like she was just saying it to say it, and the only real reason she doesn’t want to leave the house is because she’s hanging out with a cute boy and she doesn’t want that to end. It’s not really bad writing that I’m reeling against here because that’s actually interesting stuff, what I don’t like is that’s it’s undermining the empowerment stuff with this shallow motive. Why can’t Violet see that her Mom is doing the smart thing in wanting to leave the house? Is it because she’s a hormonal teen?  
The Ugly:
I guess now is a good time as any to get into my distaste for the therapy sessions. Really it could’ve been cool and I get it the purpose for them is to create more shock horror with no consequences. But really they go nowhere and that I find awfully annoying.
I mean, episode 2 at least used that angle to be part of the narrative of the home invasion sure, but there wasn’t much depth in even that. I mean the girl had nightmares about being cut in half and that was obviously a fib for her to stake the house but did she eventually get cut in half in the episode? If so they didn’t play off the irony at all. It makes these sessions even more pointless.
The sessions with Tate seem like they’re going somewhere sometimes but don’t really. I mean, they have a session where Tate is clearly trying to instigate a reaction out of Ben and Ben is unmoved and it’s suppose to give off this sense of professionalism but it just seems like Ben has no sense of awareness and I blame this on the directing and Dylan McDermott’s performance. These unilateral shots between patient and doctor creates disconnect between them and more so with the constant obtrusive zooming in and speed cut edits.
The session in this episode is also as needless and disjointed. We have the woman who feels she is boring and is pushed to the brink of suicide. Ben doesn’t seem to care about the resolution of this patient at all. I think the writers as well because they introduce a character investigating the whereabouts of the patient because she had gone missing after her session with Ben, and through exposition the detective shows no real sympathy for the missing woman because everyone says she’s boring. Then later on after her suicide attempt the same detective returns to investigate Ben’s part in the woman’s condition to find that Ben was inactive and unsympathetic and now the detective is disgusted with him. What is this sequence trying to say? That some people see other people as worthless unless they have something interesting to offer and that extreme situations invoke sympathy even where there wasn’t any before. So what!?
I was really interested in the potential for interesting stories that could’ve been told through this psychiatric session’s conceit, but what they have given us has been awful. I really thought that there could’ve have been really cool anthology type stories could’ve been told in this format, but so far I’m not seeing it.
One Button Review
FAST FORWARD
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I have to give this episode a FF as my one button review because, and I admit that this episode isn’t as bad as the pilot, but it’s a long way from being as good as the second. There are some interesting answers in this episode that I can say I didn’t really get upon my first viewing, I don’t know why I just didn’t pick up that Ben was being compelled to dig a grave because he was under Moira’s spell to help her leave. That was very good, but then there is the rest of the episode that is really mucky and I just want to skip over a lot of it. But that may just be me.
EPISODE FOUR
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“It’s okay actually, kind of scary sexy.”
Episode info
Season 1 Episode 4 “Halloween (Part 1)”
Original airdate: October 26, 2011
Written by James Wong
Directed by David Semel
Episode synopsis
On Halloween night Vivian unknowingly enlists the aid of ghost home “buffers” to raise interest in the house for potential buyers.
Episode Notes
Character study:
THE HARMONS
In this episode we have Vivian confront Ben about talking to Hayden and Ben confessing to her some of the truth. I don’t understand why he doesn’t tell her the complete truth; well maybe because it’s insane to admit that he was helped in murdering and hiding his mistress’s corpse under a gazebo. Well okay then show, you got me there. Now Vivien tells Ben to leave which makes sense and even more so since she seems to have other prospects in Luke the security guard. I like Luke as character, I think they do a good job at making him likable and that’s not hard to do really when comparing him with Ben, right?
Violet is hanging out with Tate more and I don’t know, I would think that if Ben was any kind of “good” father he would be more involved in what his daughter is doing and see that she’s hanging out with one of his more disturbed patients is really something that’s to be kept an eye on. So Violet learns that there is something living in the basement and hangs out with Tate a whole lot. Boring! This is like the part of the storyline I don’t think any of the writers really want to tell because they just breeze by these points like they don’t matter and I feel like I don’t have to care.
NOTABLE CAST
Chad and Patrick
These are the former homeowners that restored the house in order to flip it for more money or something. They establish that basically they’re relationship was on the rocks and that Zachary Quinto’s character Chad was basically forcing Patrick to stay with him despite his adultery. Did I forget to mention they are homosexuals? I probably forgot to because it’s so abundantly clear that they are when you see them on screen. It really is ridiculous.
I remember when I first saw this that Zachary Quinto had recently outed himself as a homosexual right before the airing of this episode and I thought good thing to because if he hadn’t he would’ve been accused of awfully reinforcing terrible homosexual stereotypes and probably been sacked by the gay community. I really felt his performance was so over the top it was insulting really.
Larry
Oh god Larry, how have I gone on this long without talking about Larry? He’s been here since the pilot. I probably neglected to mention him because I hate Larry. He’s an annoying and his presence really diminishes the show more than I would care to. He’s here most likely for comic relief but I don’t find him funny. I mean in this episode he’s standing in front of the Harmon’s residence with a children’s pumpkin shaped treat container and demanding money for murdering Hayden for Ben. I mean this character is not threatening and everything we learn about him is lame. He wants the money so he can start his play acting career he was imprisoned but let out due to him having cancer or something. I mean who can take this guy seriously.
The Good:
I like Vivian a little more here, I like what Connie Britton is doing but I tell you it surely doesn’t go with what everyone else is doing so I don’t know. I like her and the introduction of Luke, they have a good dynamic and I prefer the story to follow him. I find it weird though that I like Luke because I’m supposed to be rooting for Ben and the family unit right? I find it very hard to do that though.
The ending with Hayden was expected but good nevertheless. Sometimes I find when a show does something that is expected it can be good thing.
The Bad:
Tate and Violet’s storyline is boring and Larry’s situation is just weird. I can’t say I liked this episode very much or can say too much on what I thought was bad really, which I consider that to be a bad thing.
The Ugly:
Just everything about the gay couple was offensive and over the top in an unbearable way. I mean we have Zachary Quinto say something really abrasive and accusatory towards Patrick then dismiss it with something stupid errand he wants him to do not one once, not twice but thrice! I just thought it was barely funny the first time, but this is a show that is going to run things they like into the ground, they are going to glare shocking humor and imagery for kicks. But I for some reason did not find it fun.
One Button Review
SKIP
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I’m going to have to go ahead and say SKIP for this one button review. There was just too little substance in this episode that I found worthy of watching. There wasn’t anything interesting really going on and what the writer considered to be fun was dumb to me. I would say just skip this episode and watch the next part believe me you’re not missing anything.
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Alright, that concludes this section of my season one review of American Horror Story. Thanks for checking in.
Stay tuned.
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Watcher’s Guide: RETCON EDITION American Horror Story Season One part I
Hello reader,
Welcome back to another one of my “Watcher’s Guide” season retrospectives. On this column I will be taking a look at a single season of television by watching a marathon of episodes and reviewing them here in an episode by episode format.
This next series that I’m reviewing will be what I am labeling a “Retcon Edition” and it will be a little different from my previous Tower Prep series which was tagged as a “Recon Edition.”
The “Recon edition” subheading will be used here to signify a series in review that will be viewed by me for the first time. The “Retcon Edition” is different in that it marks a TV series that I may have already seen prior but have decided to review here with the intent to reevaluate it for this blog. I have other editions planned for this watcher’s guide series but I’ll address them later as they develop.
The subject for this retrospective season watch will be the FX horror drama series “American Horror Story.” I decided to review this television series in the wake of its recent season end announcement that next season will be a new story entirely. This has brought a lot of attention for the show and has brought out a surprising amount of both appraisal and condemnation.
I had not too long ago dismissed this show entirely having been disappointed with the first half of the season but upon talking it over with my Brother David he suggested that I try to write about my grievances with the show in a blog post. I thought it was an interesting proposal and so I figured since it is a very talked about Television series that it may be worth taking another honest look.                
Review Format
The way I will be formatting these reviews will be in four parts similar to my previous retrospective series. For example, this first post will be labeled as “part I” and it will contain a review for the American Horror Story series pilot. The second part will be labeled part II and contain reviews for episodes 2-4 and the next part will be for episodes 5-8 and the final part will be for episodes 9-12.
The episode reviews will be formatted with a heading of the episode title and general episode info. The body of the review will have a brief synopsis, my episode commentary and conclude with a review grade.
The brief synopsis will be basic episode summary much like you would find in a TV guide blurb or DVD booklet. Episode notes section will be my notes about the episode. For reviewing these shows I will be using a simple four point grading system that range from a low grade of SKIP, a passive grade of FAST FORWARD, the qualified grade of PLAY to the high grade of PAUSE.
See, pretty simple.
Alright now it’s time for me to begin my American Horror Story review, but before I do that let me start off by giving a really brief introduction to the series.
Series overview
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The series is premised on a nuanced send up of the typical haunted house story as it plays against the deconstruction of a modern American family. This is an FX series that is trying its hand at creating pulpy anthology like horror series. The potential for horror chills and contemporary family issues are palpable. The added element of making the father’s profession being a psychiatrist adds the potential for a week by week standalone story lines that could go along with the mythology of the haunted house.
The series focus on a family surnamed the Harmons who move into the haunted house and are privy to the supernatural elements and history of the houses previous owners.
Creative Team
American Horror Story was created by Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuck
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WRITERS
Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuck, Jennifer Salt, James Wong, Tim Minear and Jessica Sharzer
CAST
Dylan McDermott, Connie Britton, Taissa Farmiga, Jessica Lange, Evan Peters, Denis O’hare.
Available Media Formats
The show originally premiered on FX on October 5, 2011 and ended its first season on December 21, 2011.
The series was renewed for a second season set to return in 2012.
Currently this series is not available as home video release but will most likely have a DVD box set to be released in 2012.
I will be reviewing these episodes from my own DVR recordings of their original airings.
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“You’re going to die in there.”
Episode info
Season 1 Episode 1 “Pilot”
Original airdate: October 5, 2011
Written by Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk
Directed by Ryan Murphy
Episode synopsis
The Harmon family moves into a haunted house after the mother has had a miscarriage and the father was found cheating with one of his patients.
Episode Notes
Character study:
THE HARMONS
The Harmon family consists of psychiatrist Ben Harmon his wife Vivian and their daughter Violet. As a unit this family is disjointed which I guess is the point being that they had experienced the horrors of a miscarriage.
Dylan Mcdermott as Ben Harmon really didn’t do much for me being how oddly chipper he was, which just made him seem oblivious and unsympathetic. I don’t understand what’s keeping him tied to this family or why he wants to make it work with Vivian other than that’s what society expects of a family to stay together and work things out. The thing about this character is that he’s suppose to be the characterization of the typical American straight male who’s only active drive is lust but they have a moral compass that they manipulate to justify their awfulness and here it doesn’t work. The reason it doesn’t work because this character is taken to a level of cartoonish and that would be okay if the show wasn’t also demanding for you to take it seriously as well. There is tongue in cheek and then there is tongue through an open cheek wound. It’s too horrific to be funny.
Vivian as portrayed by Connie Britton is an enigma of a character, but in a really bad way. I’ve seen other shows written by Ryan Murphy and I have an idea of how he wanted this character to be like. He typically writes this type of character as the woman who is smart but still wants to be with the bad boy because she herself is screwed up and is driven by that kind of crazy and despite knowing there is something wrong with being that person it’s clear that Vivian’s character is making the choice to stay. I think Connie Britton is a great actress but I’m fairly sure she doesn’t understand this character and is trying to do the best she can with it. She definitely comes off as a smart woman who knows better than to stay with someone who is as screwed up as Ben, but she doesn’t convince me at all that she’s damaged enough to stay mixed up with him. She’s too plain and sane to come off any other way. But maybe that’s the way Ryan Murphy wanted it.
Lastly we have Violet. Violet is this cynical creepy cool chick that would’ve been Goth if Goth was still around. Instead this girl is what “cool kids” would interpret as Goth which is now simply known as “Emo.” She listens to “the Smiths” and the like and contemplates suicide and why? Is it because she’s being bullied at school or because her parents are fighting? I have no idea why this girl wants to kill herself. At least if she were Goth it would make sense because she would think it would be cool to die and there’s a certain sick romance to that. But she’s not and her problems don’t match the measures she’s willing to take to remedy them. I mean does she want to run away even that would make more sense, you know, if she’s tired of her parents fighting and just wants to leave. But no she seems to like her mom and has literally no relationship to her dad. I mean really the only interaction she has with him is a moment that’s meant to bring shock value but apparently has nothing to do with the narrative because they don’t offer any kind of resolution nor address that moment.
NOTABLE CAST
Tate
He is one of Ben’s psychiatric patients and is the closest thing to an interesting character that this show might have to offer. He is a bit of a sociopath with dark brooding inclinations and issues. He takes a liking to Violet, who knows why, and tries to flirt with her in the creepiest way possible (correcting her suicide cutting to better insure death). Tate comes off as a very en vogue type of sociopath (so much in fact that I felt it was too over the top even for my liking) but out of all the characters to like in this show he was the most appealing. Evan Peters gives a pretty good performance as Tate. I think he’s really putting forth the vision the creators have for him.
Constance
There is no doubt Jessica Lange is a great actress but to say this is a great character maybe reaching. The most interesting thing about Constance is that she’s being portrayed by Jessica Lange. It’s clear to me that Jessica is having a ball playing this ominous yet colorful antagonist. She has an agenda and I think out of all the characters she has the most mystery to reveal here and I am actually interested in knowing what they are.
Episode Notes
The Good:
I did like the opening musical choice of “Tonight you belong to me” by Patience and Prudence and also found it pretty clever that it was used in the context that “the house” was taking those kids lives as though now they belong to the house.
Tate was mostly an interesting character throughout the pilot, even though they kept trying to invoke sympathy by having him adopt iconic Kurt Cobain type fashion. It’s as if they are trying to connect all these iconic cult traits onto one character in order to make him interesting or maybe to show that a sign of sociopathic behavior is this relentless loss of identity through emulation of pop culture iconography.    
The introduction of Constance was pretty neat; her character was a character for sure. Jessica Lange seemed like she was having fun playing this role and her campy portrayal worked for what I think this series wants to be. I think there are a lot of history possibilities for this character and am interested in seeing where this series take her.
The Bad:
The opening sequence was a bit odd to me, because we get this little snippet of these twin red headed boys with bad attitudes and them being so color coordinated that it just felt like visually loud set dressing that was hollow. I began to wonder about why these boys were killed, I mean, is there any rhyme or reason to their demise at all? That sort of thing irks me because whenever someone dies I would like it to mean something or have some kind of resonance. To have kids murdered for no other reason than to illicit shock value feels really cheap to me.
This can be rectified if the house is revealed to have some kind of mischievous plan for those kids or something, but as it stands I think that scene is pretty bad.
I found about everyone in the Harmon family to be highly unlikeable and/or terribly uninterested. I know that Vivian has had a traumatic miscarriage but she isn’t any sign of her predicament anywhere in this portrayal except in the scenes where she is reminded of it. It’s as if the writers are not interested in showing dramatic subtlety, they want everything to be flashy and grating.
Ben is a lust ridden shadow of a man whose plight when revealed is cartoonish and silly and I don’t think anyone could take seriously. I mean to cheat on your wife because she’s not recovering quickly enough from post traumatic stress after a miscarriage is hardly a sympathetic plea. And we are to believe that these two are still in love with each other?
I’m not trying to be unreasonable but I get no sense of their relationship and what they do show doesn’t hold water. He says she hasn’t made love to him since she lost the baby and I don’t know how long that’s been but here he just comes off as a sex crazed selfish lunatic by using that to justify his cheating on her. The show doesn’t give us any sense of how they were before things got bad and I honestly can’t see why they don’t just end the marriage.
They are staying together because they love each other; the show tells us this but doesn’t show it. Where does Violet fit into this? She says that they should just divorce; she seems adjusted and not shaken by their fighting which brings me to wonder: Why does she want to kill herself again? What are her problems that she has to cut herself for fun? There is no hint of an explanation that I can see.
Is it because of that one bully at school with the worst excuse for justifying her bullying? I mean seriously this chick is going to pick a fight with Violet just because she was smoking on school property and the explanation why she’s tough about it is because her grandmother died from cigarettes or something?
When I saw that scene play out I was like “Hey why is that girl being such a bitch to Violet?” then that other girl gives that throwaway line about the girls grandma and I was like “Oh that explains that, oh wait! No! If that’s it, then that’s stupid.”
Also what’s with the Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love references? I mean they obviously dress Tate like Kurt and they give Violet the name of “Violet” which has to be an obvious nod to that song by Hole?
Maybe I’m reading too much into it, but I bet you I’m not.
The Ugly:
Can we all agree that the Dylan Mcdermott masturbation scene was the dumbest thing ever committed to television? That was beyond awful. I think the writers thought that it was really funny and kept it in because of its gross out shock value and they would probably try to justify it as an important character trait somehow but I will not give them that. That is a moment in that characters life I could have done without. I’m not trying to sound prudish, but seriously what this scene is screaming about Ben Harmons character is “Oh, I’m so screwed up and horny, I need to feel sex all the time, I wish I could stop masturbating but I can’t, oh pity me won’t you. Look I’m even crying.” Blech!
And lastly that scene where Moira the ghost maid is trying to seduce Ben but Violet walks in to find them compromised. Like what was the point of that and what was the impact of it?
I ask because right after that scene we see Violet get her ass kicked by that bully bitch and then after that we find Ben trying to have sex with Vivien leading to their expository fight and then nonsensical make out session. Doesn't make any sense to me.
One Button Review      
SKIP
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My one button review for the pilot episode is simply SKIP. I’ve watched this episode fully a total of three times. The first time I watched it was sometime after its premiere airdate, the second time was for trying to give it another chance and the third time for this retrospective. The more I watch it the more eye rolling bad I find it.
I’ll admit this much I had a similar difficulty with the pilot episode of Ryan Murphy’s other current standing series “Glee” where I felt the tone was all over the place and it was asking me to care about overly convoluted characters but with obvious quirks that scream out “like me!”
I feel that AHS suffers from a similar pandering policy where it offers scares without substance and without meaning just trying to invoke a visceral feeling. I’m not saying that that is a bad thing necessarily just that the chills come off as hollow when I could not get on board with most of these characters or their situation.
Hopefully the next episode will be better the second time around. That one I haven’t seen since my initial viewing.
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Alright, so that’s all for this installment. Thanks for tuning in to this edition of the “Watchers Guide”. I’ll be back fairly soon with my next part to the series.
Stay tuned.
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Hey just thought I'd tell you that Dexter and Deb aren't blood related. Dex's dad is that guy that died in Season 1 and Dex, Deb, Rita and Brian go and clean out the house. There was some crap about how Dex needed blood as kid, but his type was rare and the guy who claimed to be Dex's dad just happened to have the same rare blood type. Also in Season 2 it shows that Harry and Dex's mom were fucking after Dex had been born.
Hey thanks.For some reason I just assumed that since Harry was boning Dexs Mom that he was his father, but you're right there is no evidence of that.I really appreciate you clearing that up for me. I'll re edit the post to correct the error. But even so I still think its kinda creepy if Dex and Deb ever did hook up because he grew up with her like a sister, yknow. Anyway thanks again.JP
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Stray Observations: the true Amityville horror in full effect on Cable TV
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Hello reader,
Welcome back to Stray Observations, a column where I post my thoughts on television related topics.
The subject of today’s blog entry is what I like to call “the true Amityville horror” and its presence in a few of the television series that I’ve watched in the past year.
Now before I explain what I mean by “the true Amityville horror” let me first warn you that this post will be unveiling some fairly spoiler-y things about the third season of “Bored to Death” and also the sixth season of “Dexter.” So if you haven’t seen either of these seasons yet and do not want to be spoiled I guess you may want to avoid scrolling down past the Amityville horror image.
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Still here? Good.
Now to explain what I mean by “the true Amityville horror” I must refer to the second Amityville horror film which was subtitled “the Possession.” I remember thinking to myself after I watched this movie that the scariest thing in it wasn’t the ghostly haunting or the murderous mayhem that befell this family, no for me the true horror in that house was the horrible incest. Now ever since then I would refer to any kind of incestuous behavior as the Amityville horror.
Okay, so recently I've noticed this topic come up in some of the shows I watched this year and there are two in particular that I thought were interesting and wanted to write up about their use on these shows. First we have Dexter.
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  In the recent season of Showtime’s Dexter they have placed Dexter’s sister Deborah into therapy sessions where her psychiatrist insists upon her that she is in love with her brother. The situation is very muddy because Deborah is under the assumption that she and Dexter are not blood related when in actuality they do have the same father.*
*It's been brought to my attention that Dex and Deb do not actually have the same father, they were only raised as siblings.*
This isn’t entirely out of left field though because Deborah has always been Dexter’s entry to human emotions and it’s perhaps understandable that those feelings would manifest into a romantic inclination. Now whether her feelings would be reciprocated is a different matter.
In season one Dexter had mused that even though he was an emotionless monster that if there was anyone that he could have feelings for it would be Deborah. Dexter was a much darker and more hollowed character back then so much that a romance would have never been reciprocated because at that stage in his life he was too far removed from his own humanity.
In that first season Dexter felt he was an inhuman being that only wore a mask of normalcy in order to serve his selfish need to murder; his passenger. It was a desire that pulled at him so much that he could not control it, only concentrate it through a set of rules that he and his father devised which Dexter called “Harrys law.”
At the end of that first season Dexter began to accept that he did have humanity in him as evidenced by him not joining his brother in killing his “Sister.” In that first season Deborah was the symbol of his humanity and his brother was the symbol of his dark desires. When Dexter chose compassion for Deborah over detachment he accepted that he wasn’t as hollow as he had originally thought. He could then allow Rita into his heart and her children and later on his own son Harrison.
Dexter’s emotional journey did begin with Deborah and it surely does make sense that there would be a special bond between the two but I don’t agree that it should end in a romantic relationship.
This past season of Dexter with Deb discovering her romantic feelings for her brother have been pretty entertaining and I’ll give credit to Jennifer Carpenter she really pulls off those scenes with Michael C. Hall where’s she’s looking at him bright eyed and he’s all aloof, just really funny and fun. But I hope that in the aftermath of the season finale cliff hanger that next season they drop the romantic stuff and really deal with their relationship.
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The Amityville horror reared its ugly head on this past season of Bored to Death as well. I had just caught up with the last three episodes and finally got the butt end of the storyline where Jonathan looks for his sperm donor dad.
His amateur investigation doesn’t take him very far until he is aided by a like minded female investigator also looking for her sperm donor daddy. Their search takes them to a novelty shop owner whom turns out to be a con man type who set up a whole sperm bank operation by providing all the sperm from himself. Jonathon of course only learns about his brother status after bonding with his sister romantically.
The twist here is that Jonathon and his sister weren’t aware that they were related before embracing their romantic feelings. In the end of the season (and series as it turns out) Jonathan decides to ward off telling her the truth about them for a little while longer and just enjoy the moment while it last.
This got me thinking which is worst being attracted to someone you didn’t know at all but then finding out that you’re blood related or being attracted to someone you’ve known you’re entire life but not think that you’re not blood related?
I really don’t know but I’m going to say they are equally as bad.
The real surprise for me is that two separate writing rooms came up with these contrasting points on a similar theme. But that’s just how the creative zeitgeist works I guess.
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I just wanted to throw out something I heard recently that somewhat pertains to this subject. The show brothers and sisters apparently also dealt with some form of incest in its writer’s room as well. Apparently the characters portrayed by Emily van Camp and Dave Annable were originally half brother and sister but during the production of the series the two actors had so much chemistry together that the writers felt they needed to retcon the whole half brother and sister thing in order to allow them to become a couple without it being too creepy.
It’s too funny how these things just happen sometimes.
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So that’s it for “Amityville horror” on the small screen. It’s not the first time it’s happened and I’m sure it won’t be the last. Thanks for reading and tune in next time for more stray observations.
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The Television Writers Pantheon: Darin Morgan – Tower Prep
Hello reader,   Welcome to the final installment in my Darin Morgan retrospective series. It may be the last only for now, here’s hoping that Darin Morgan would return again in another series at some point. When that happens you can be sure I will be her posting again as well.   On today’s post I will be taking a look at Darin Morgan’s contribution to the short lived Cartoon Network live action TV series “Tower Prep”.   Here’s my overview of the show.  
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TOWER PREP 2010-2010 The show was developed into a pilot by Paul Dini who is known for his production involvement in animated series such Batman: The Animated Series and Justice League Unlimited, this show was picked up for a full 13 episode season by Cartoon Network. The shows premise devised of a young teen that was sent to a mysterious prep school with a mysterious agenda and it was his sole goal to escape the school. While at the school he found likeminded allies who would aid them in his goal. When Tower Prep went into series production Paul Dini tapped fellow television series writer Glen Morgan to aid in the mythology. The world of Tower prep expanded with each new episode and only improved as it continued its run. The series aired from October 2010 to December 2010 and was then placed on hiatus. No sign of renewal was announced until the first week of December 2011, where it was officially announced that there would be no season two. A true shame because for a teen series it was extraordinarily well done and written with a really good cast. The only consolation would be for a DVD release and currently there is no word on that.
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"Book Report" Season 1 Episode 06 Original airdate: November 23 2010 Credits:
Written by Darin Morgan Directed by Peter Deluise Episode synopsis: Ian and his friends are assigned Homer’s ‘The Odyssey’ as a book report assignment and they all neglect to finish it before test day and have to catch up or else they are doomed to repeat the grade, prolonging their stay at the school. Characters Study: IAN In this episode it’s great because we see our hero Ian come to terms with his destiny in a way. He discovers that there is a way to escape that the previous owner of his Odyssey book had utilized. Ian is put through trials in order for him to understand he’s not suppose to leave, it’s up to him to find out what’s going on at Tower Prep and to help the students there overcome their repression. It’s a journey that he’s accepted and I’m sure would’ve been delved into if this series had continued. GABE Often the comic relief and sidekick to Ian, although he’s not at all sycophantic to Ian you can tell he looks up to him. He’s got a lot of heart and is quick to go to battle side by side with the hero even though he’s not quite as fit for the role. He’s sort of scrappy that way. In this episode there isn’t much of an arc as he as well as the rest of the team comes to terms with Ian having to go on the journey on his own. CJ Somewhat put on the sidelines here although they do play up her teen age mentality here, she keeps in the same arc as mentioned on Gabe. SUKI Another character not totally developed in this episode other than again the arc of coming to terms with Ian to go solo. NORMAN Norman although not seen plays an interesting role that I recognize Darin Morgan’s interests playing here. Norman appears to have a similar ability that Clyde Bruckman had in the X-Files episode. Norman can know about things that will be and therefore was able to write to Ian from the past. The interesting thing about Norman is that he underwent his own heroes journey but tapped Ian to take on the true heroes role and save all the students and why, probably because Ian has the skills and ambition of a hero and is clearly the one for the task. Although I appreciate Norman choosing Ian because he had the ability, Norman was able to be a hero in his own way for his girlfriend who he promised he will have her rescued somehow. It’s possible, and this is just me thinking, that maybe Norman attempted to escape but couldn’t and knew that he wouldn’t, because of his ability, but tried to anyway and then was probably killed. It’s a tragedy with a glimmer of hope that survives in Ian. Episode Themes: Mission The mission for our team was basically to read the Odyssey and pass their test on it so that they wouldn’t be left back a grade. Our teams all procrastinate till the last moment of course and have to figure out how to do it without actually reading it. They do their best and manage to pass by the skin of their teeth. The Great Escape In this episode the great escape is very closely reached but of course it fails. Ian uses all the clues that Norman placed in the book in order to lead him to his epiphany. The Cyclops grave was the exit but was closed off so Ian could accept his journey. Teen Drama The extent of the teen drama was played up for laughs being that the stakes were fail the test you are doomed to repeat the class until you do pass, which could be ten years if need be. Also the group had to deal with the separation anxiety of Ian’s possible lonely and doomed departure. Notes: I really liked this episode and thought it was very good for a standalone episode to enter the series if need be. It has an interesting play off of the hero’s journey theme that I very much enjoyed. The show I feel benefitted from this what some would consider filler episode because it kind of establishes the series firmly on its serial path and we understand what this series is and what the characters goals are and it’s done really well.
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“Dreams” season 1, episode 09 Original airdate: December 14 2010 Credits: Written by Darin Morgan Directed by Brenton Spencer Episode synopsis: All but one of the team shares a vision of yellow elevator doors in their dreams and they all try to figure out why. Characters Study: IAN We learn a lot of exposition about the history of Tower Prep and Ian may have a connection to the founder as established in a photograph of Ian and Cornelius Tower. We find out that the heroes journey is probably more deeply ingrained in Ian more than has been established before. GABE In this episode we get more comedic relief play from Gabe’s character that involves his dream sequences and his talking sock monkey. CJ There is something really interesting going on with CJ in that seem as though she is not one hundred percent on board with the team’s goal of escape. For instance she did not see the yellow elevator or was affected by the subliminal messages that cause them to dream of the voice. There’s just the slightest hint of suspicion about her. SUKI Not particularly featured in this episode but I really like her character. CONNOR I really liked his role in this episode sort of to call out the absurdity of the school as well as bringing in his own mysterious agenda that I’m not sure what that could be. Episode Themes: Mission The mission was to figure out why they all were dreaming of similar symbols and what they meant. They then find the secret laboratory where they erased people’s memory and then Connor turned out to know more than he said and then vanished. The Great Escape The escape plan was to find the yellow elevator and try to figure out how to use it to leave Tower Prep. It turned out to be the passage way to a secret lab and also a study for the founder of Tower Prep. Teen Drama There was some notable tension between the team and Connor in whether they could trust him with their escape plan or not. Also some suspicion against CJ that may play out later.
Notes:
This was a really solid episode with some really cool interplay of dreams and reality and subliminal message coding that are all things I know Darin Morgan is familiar with. There was one thing I noticed and this could be wrong but the sequence where we learn a mess of exposition about the founding of the school turns out to be a dream sequence which I believe was an out for other writers of the series to either write towards or omit at their leisure. I think Darin Morgan may not have been confident in his mythology creating that he would allow for a way around his inset of mythos. Nevertheless another really good episode of Tower Prep and I’ll say if you ever come across the series check it out it’s a good show.
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Alright that’s it for the Darin Morgan retrospective, well at least for now. Check back in again when I enter another TV series writer into the Showfollower’s pantheon of TV Writers. Stay tuned.
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Watcher’s Guide: RECON EDITION Tower Prep Season One part IV
Hello reader,   Welcome to another installment of Show follower’s Watcher’s Guide for Tower Prep Season One. On this post I will be reviewing Episodes 10-13.    
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“MERRY X-MAS!”  
Episode info
Season 1 Episode 10 “Phone Home”
Original airdate: December 21 2011 Written by Aury Wallington Directed by Michael Robison Episode synopsis On his birthday Ian gets so homesick that he heads into Headmasters office and demands that he gets to phone his mother. When Headmaster does allow Ian to speak to her he discovers that the person he was speaking to was definitely not his mother. Episode Notes Character study:
IAN We get a little back story and his longing for escape becomes very predominate in this episode. I like how he takes initiative and just charges into Headmasters office and demands he get his phone call. TEAM We find out a lot more about Suki in this episode and her back story. We see how skilled she is and how opposed to the family business she is. Clearly she’s becoming aware of the stronghold her family has over the school and over her and this motivates her wanting to escape. CJ and Gabe take the backseat in this episode and it’s just as well. Mythology questions: Why are they faking phone homes? From what it appears they are doing that because they want their students to be compliant. It makes you wonder though do the parents even know that they are at the school. What is Sukis brother doing with headmaster? Sansei was sent to the school to upgrade Whisper119 because the system had become sympathetic for the students of Tower Prep. What changes are coming? The changes that were coming that Whisper119 was afraid of were the upgrade to Whisper120 as it turns out. Does Gabe dig Sukis?  They hint at Gabe being jealous of Ray’s interest in Suki and could it because he has an interest in Suki for himself. I mean he does ask her to kiss him when they were in peril. What do the parents know? Ian’s mom does know that Ian is at Tower Prep that is confirmed in this episode, and that was definitely his mom too. But she says that it’s very dangerous for him to be calling her, which gives a strange ominous feeling about what is really going on. One Button Review PRESS PLAY This is a very well shot episode, with some really interesting transitions and well choreographed fights. The story started off strong and really had some interesting character conflict that didn’t really amount to much in the end. Although this episode does have a pretty neat Star Wars reference and for that alone makes this episode very watch able.
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“Are you broken?”
Episode info
Season 1 Episode 11 “Trust” Original airdate: December 21 2010 Written by Riley Stearns Directed by Michael Rohl Episode synopsis Ian is suspected of working with a resistance group known as the broken and so decides to learn more about them possibly to aid in their escape. Episode Note Character study: IAN Constantly suspicious Ian is worrisome about CJ’s relationship with Cal for many reasons. One of which being he knows that Cal was turned into a Gnome and they don’t know where his allegiance lay. Also he likes CJ and must hate seeing her at all with his antagonist. Ian’s goal in this episode is to meet with the resistance group known as the broken and see that they don’t try to interfere with their goal to escape. Ian discovers that he may need their help in order to escape. TEAM The team are somewhat spread out in this episode, Suki is in the back seat this time around and CJ is in the front with her issues with Cal. CJ seems to be torn between two worlds in this episode where she can’t decide to be the perfect student she had been or strive to escape with her friends as she wants to. She’s afraid that she won’t have out there what she has here although what she has here isn’t all that great and she knows it. When Ian assures her that if nothing else she will have him to be with, she is happy again to follow suit again. Gabe is presented really well in this episode because he shows his allegiance to Ian and his cause but isn’t afraid to put in his two cents about the situation and he’s not the kind of guy that blindly follows his leader. Gabe is not only the comedic relief on this series he is also a driving force in of himself. Mythology questions: Who made the stencil graffiti and why? We find out that there are members of a group known as the broken sprayed it on the school walls in order to send a message to their members. What is Cal doing back and where was he? We don’t know for certain where he was or what he’s doing back but I suspect that he is on a mission involving the Gnomes whom I believe are a group with a separate agenda from the school. I’m thinking involving Coach History perhaps. Something is up with Emily Wright but what? What turns out to be up with Emily Wright is that she definitely doesn’t like how the school is being run and has goals to oppose it and learns about the broken and decides to join them. Who are the broken? The broken are the resistance group that wants to infiltrate the school and we are not sure what for yet. One Button Review PRESS PLAY This episode was high on character conflict and interesting revelations of a resistance force. Some of it didn’t really land as hard as they wanted but for the most part the characters had really interesting dynamics particularly between Ian and Gabe and Ian and CJ.
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“Maybe one of us told.”
Episode info
Season 1 Episode 12 “Snitched”
Original airdate: December 28 2011 Written by Jeff Eckerle & Marilyn Osborn Directed by Thomas Wright Episode synopsis One of the Team members has been feeding information to the Headmaster and Ian suspects everyone on his team. Episode Note Character study:
IAN We see Ian mistrust his friends even though he doesn’t want to. It shows that Ian is not a fool just trusting and even so he is also forgiving. It shows how strong his bonds are when they are tested like this. I feel like this dynamic is really strong in this episode and is really outstanding television. TEAM Everyone on the team is suspect and Ian has to figure who he can trust. It’s done so well in this episode I wasn’t sure if it was going to Suki or CJ and I honestly didn’t want it to be either. Gabe I’ve always felt particularly on board with his character and thought that his conflicts with Ian never stemmed from a place of betrayal. We learn in this episode an important piece of the puzzle of this little group and its revelation will make you want to look back on past episodes to see them under the light of this new information. Mythology questions: Who was in the parachute? It was Connor with Chemica Desin 2.0 who is a part of a different group that wants to bring Tower Prep back to its original purpose. How is there no wall? As it turns out there was no wall for a while because Whisper119 had a glitch that allowed people to go through if they ignored what their eyes were showing them. What happened to the broken? This episode doesn’t answer that question nor addresses it. Who snitched? We find out that Ian had reason to suspect his little sect of friends for one of them was a mole, it was revealed to be CJ which explains why she has no memories of life outside of Tower Prep why she didn’t see the yellow elevator in her dreams or why she had such clout with Headmaster to plan a dance for her class. Also not only was she a mole but she was Headmasters daughter as well. One Button Review PRESS PAUSE This episode was very good at playing up Ian’s suspicions of his friends, where in the last episode they dealt with Ian’s allegiances and conflicting goals by other forces, this tightens the scope of paranoia into his own little circle. It’s just a very well done episode that I give it a pause because I feel like it could be viewed even as a standalone for its strong structure.
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“Three’s the charm.”
Episode info
Season 1 Episode 13 “Fathers” Original airdate: December 28 2011 Written by Glen Morgan Directed by Dwight Little Episode synopsis Ian is close to escape but decides to go back for his team so they could all escape together. But can they? Episode Note Character study:
IAN In this final episode we find our hero Ian discover the means of escape and instead of using it and merely escaping alone he goes back for his friends. It shows how he’s a character who’s will to stick to his word maintain his loyalties otherwise he couldn’t consider it a win. TEAM We get a lot of apologies from CJ who we get to understand is conflicted she genuinely likes her friends and didn’t want to betray them and she herself does want to leave the school. That was true and I’m glad that was established here. Suki finds out that her loyalty was in question and I understand that she’d be pissed to find that out, who wouldn’t? But she quickly understands and I thought that was cool. Gabe always the social butterfly making new allies and is absolutely genuine about it. I really like Gabe’s sensibility because he may come off as annoying and talky but all in all he’s pure of heart and he not only frees his guardian friend, whom he finds out only helped him because he was being paid to do so, and offers him to escape with them. It’s a remarkable moment and I really enjoyed that. Mythology questions: Who is that dude with the greasy hair and rose tux? Not sure, probably would’ve been answered in season two if there had been one. What’s Demetris’s deal and why is he helping Gabe? Well we learn that he was working for the Headmaster in keeping Gabe safe. Headmaster may needed Gabe as a card to play in making Ian comply. Why is it so difficult to have CJ see her mother? Again not sure, but I bet it would’ve been really cool. One Button Review PRESS PLAY A really good episode and season finale in that it sets up what would have been a really interesting second season. We get the team fall apart last episode and then come together in this episode and achieve their goal but only to find out there is something much more complex going on that they will need to be a part of. Not by any means a satisfactory series finale, although they do escape the school. I guess that’ll have to do.
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Final Thoughts FAVORITE EPISODE
Wow, there were so many really good episodes, such as “Buffer” which is a pretty solid episode the more I think about it and of course “Book Report” which I would recommend to watch as a standalone. Then there is really nice group showcased episodes that really had great character moments such as “Trust” and “Field Trip.” I guess if I had to choose one I would say maybe “Election” because it has really interesting mythology introduced into it and it felt like a real game changer that if the series had continued really could’ve mined from, and they did touch on some but you can tell there was way more to reveal that never got the chance to come to light. NOTABLE CHARACTERS
Out of all the characters clearly Gabe is my favorite because he’s a character that is sidekick material but isn’t defined by that status. He’s also the comic relief and there are excellent examples of character highlighted throughout the series run, which I just think are great. I remember recognizing CJ from somewhere and learned she was in “Smallville” as Green Arrows sidekick. She really came into her own here on this show and played off her cast really well. Ian is a really dynamic hero and leader and Suki has dimension that I really think was shown well too. The Headmaster was really well casted really came off as a person that on the surface seemed despicable but may be is doing what he believes is right. The Coaches were also neatly established too. One of the other students which I liked were Emily Wright who I knew had to come back and had more going on, also Ross Anderson who just looked like a mean spirited girl with a heart of doom. Cal had some interesting story elements to play out and I’m still interested to know what his main agenda was. OVERALL
The series all in all was a really well done with great writing great mythology great cast and a good production. There are very few episodes that I would suggest to “SKIP” (I think there was just one and I may have been too harsh on that episode in retrospect). In total the show was really good and I would even suggest just to watch it if it ever comes on DVD.
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Alright, that’s it for this edition of the Watcher’s Guide. For my next series season in review maybe the Star Trek Original series I’ve been planning or something else that I’ve been tossing around my mind that I think would be kind of fun. Well, we’ll see which one I decide to do next time. Stay tuned.
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Watcher’s Guide: RECON EDITION Tower Prep Season One part III
Hello reader,   Welcome to another installment of Show follower’s Watcher’s Guide for Tower Prep Season One. On this post I will be reviewing Episodes 6-9.
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“Dude! Stop trying to be a Hero.” Episode Info Season 1 Episode 6 “Book Report” Original airdate: November 23 2010
Written by Darin Morgan Directed by Peter Deluise Episode Synopsis Ian and his friends are assigned Homer’s “The Odyssey” as a book report assignment and they all neglect to finish it before test day and have to catch up or else they are doomed to repeat the grade, prolonging their stay at the school. Episode Notes Character study: IAN We learn a lot about Ian’s character in this episode, that he, much like his friends can procrastinate to a degree which may put him at a point of failing. Ian doesn’t really care about passing his classes really because he plans to escape but asks his teacher what would happen if he failed to pass the class and discovers that they would keep him at the school against his will until he passed. Ian now motivated at the eleventh hour decides to attempt to read the book but instead discovers a lead that may help him escape. He is then faced with a choice to escape alone or to accept his destiny and figure out the mystery of the school with his friends. He stays to become the Hero he needs to be. THE TEAM The team also procrastinates as their leader HAS and scramble along with him to figure out how to get the assignment done. Their journey is continually to be by his side and face the danger of their possible demise, but Ian doesn’t want to risk that and so they have to accept that Ian has to accept his trials alone. THE NAMES ON THE LIST A list of names sets forth Ian on his journey and he is tempted by seductive sirens, sniffed by a sensitive nose, met with a peppy Minotaur and discovers a Cyclops skull. These characters are really cool and interesting, but I fail to mention a character whose name was not on the list but still very funny was the slow to react yet a speedy reader, who has a pet turtle. All unique characters no doubt from the mind of Darin Morgan. NORMAN We get a sense of Norman from his notes written on the odyssey book, that he was called up his Heroes journey to escape the school to success but failed to rescue his girlfriend to join him. We discover that the reason he was able to write to Ian was because his ability was to know things that would happen. He could see Ian and what he was to become and tested him to rise to challenge. It was also really interesting the parallel of Norman to Ian in heroic physique as we discover in the end that Norman had a rather wimpy body type yet still managed to be a Hero in his own right. Mythology questions: Why would they hold back students until they passed all their classes? This thought came to me while watching this episode and the only rational I could come up with is that the school wants to program them for probably nefarious reasons. Who is Norman and how is he writing to Ian? At one point I thought that Norman was Whisper119 again somehow but later learned (and gladly so) that Norman was a student who previously used the book but filled it with notes to specifically Ian because he had a special ability to see what is to come. Where does the Cyclops grave lead to? I guess we may never know because Ian didn’t go through the tunnel to the other side. It’s appropriately so though because it was a trial. One Button Review PRESS PAUSE This was a great episode and it’s no surprise because it’s written by Darin Morgan. He applies the Heroes journey concept to the characters of this series in a fairly apparent way. This episode cleverly blends the call to adventure with the old text and leads Ian to what his destiny is. The thing about Darin Morgan scripts is they are a lot of fun as well as insightful and encompassing in a way. Ian becomes aware of the journey ahead of him and accepts it not as destiny but as his choice, his goal. This episode is also very assessable I feel because I watched this out of sequence and felt it was still effective. The only you need to be aware of is that Ian is stuck in this Prep school and he wants to escape with his friends and everyone in the school has special abilities and you’re in. That’s why I have given it a rating of PAUSE, which is the highest rating to give any single episode. I recommend strongly in checking it out.
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“Wright is wrong.” Episode Info
Season 1 Episode 7 “Election” Original airdate: November 30 2011 Written by Michael Rohl Directed by Riley Stearns Episode Synopsis When one of the class president candidates falls ill, Gabe decides to run against the current running administration that would stop at nothing to win the election. Episode Notes Character study: IAN The mission for Ian is different from Gabe in this episode. Ian is infected with the Chemica Desin and therefore has to find the cure. I like that he at first opposes Gabe’s plan to run for class president but goes along with it anyway. TEAM This is a Gabe centric episode to me but there is more going on, because Gabe is running an election campaign, if he succeeds it may open some doors for our team that could lead to some cool storyline later. Gabe may have the ability to hypersuade but he doesn’t take advantage. Gabe has some really good moral grounding and that comes off well in this episode.   OTHER In this episode we are introduced to Emily Wright who appears to have an agenda that I hope they explore later. There is some cool character potential here and I like her dynamic with Ian. Also as an antagonistic force Ross Anderson appears to be very wickedly portrayed by the actress playing her and the actions of the character herself. I’m really interested to see the return of this character. Mythology questions: Why does Gabe want to run for class president? His motives are unclear but he claims it would be good in order for them to appear as going along with the grain. I think that Gabe wants to be looked up to. What's up with these buttons? These buttons we learned were contaminated with Chemica Desin which Ross Anderson modified and used against Emily Wrights opponents. Nurse what's with her? She works for the Headmaster and is part of his plans for the school and it is revealed that they both went to Tower Prep prior. What happened in 1971? There was a chemical spread that effected the student population involving in severe illnesses that needed to be cured and then was. What's Chemica Desin? Chemica Desin is that chemical spread that Ross Anderson uncovered from working with Nurse and modified for her own purposes. One Button Review PRESS PAUSE This was a fun episode and it really shows the dynamics of this group of friends very well as well as unlocking past mysteries and unveiling new possible threats. Clearly there is more in development here that is primed for mining. I would recommend this as an episode that really embodies what the show is and can be viewed outside of the series of an example of just fine television.
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“Your enemies today may very well be your allies tomorrow.” Episode Info
Season 1 Episode 8 “Field Trip” Original airdate: December 7 2011 Written by Paul Dini Directed by Dwight Little Episode Synopsis The team is sent on a field trip which they decide to take the opportunity to do reconnaissance but their plans are spoiled when they are separated and assigned separate partners outside of their group. Episode Notes Character study:
IAN We see in this episode how Ian handles himself alone with Cal whom is his bully. We see Ian work side by side with his enemy as well as turn the cheek and try to appeal to Cal’s better nature by trusting him with his secret plan of escaping the school as well as asking him if he wants to join. Cal doesn’t and instead in a way sacrifices himself to save Ian, but not really because he says he wanted this. TEAM The dynamics of our team is spread across the board as they play off secondary characters. For Suki, we have her teamed with Ray an established villain with his association with secret fraternity the rooks and his opposing attitude towards Ian. Ray genuinely likes Suki but knowing his history she’s not into him, but in this episode we see a lighter side to Ray. CJ is lumped with Felton who is pretentious and annoying but learns to appreciate him somewhat. Gabe is joined by Emily Wright who tends to Gabe when he falls wounded. Is it just me or is there something weird going on with their partners because they all seem to cause our team to need some kind of medical aid. I mean, Suki gets poison ivy, CJ gets stung by an insect and Gabe falls and sprains his ankle. It could be coincidence but could it also be something else? Mythology questions: What is Red fang? Red fang is like an urban legend developed by an outside resistance group in order to ward offenders off their trail. Does Cal want to escape too? We learn that Cal has an agenda and it’s not to escape it’s his goal to join the Gnomes and become one of them. Cal’s ability super hearing? We learn that Cal’s ability may be super hearing because he claims to hear people from far away. Is Emily Wright into Gabe?  I think so. I mean it’s clear she has an affinity for him despite her eye rolling. She comes to his aid without being under his Hypersuasion influence. One Button Review PRESS PLAY We get to see our team broken apparent and play with other characters that we have seen before but are getting to know better. It had really good character development for the main cast as well as some really good secondary cast. The world of this series is coming together in really interesting ways.
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“In dreams begin responsibility” Episode Info
Season 1 Episode 9 “Dreams” Original airdate: December 14, 2010 Written by Darin Morgan Directed by Brenton Spencer Episode Synopsis All but one of the team shares a vision of yellow elevator doors in their dreams and they all try to figure out why. Episode Notes Character study:
IAN The interesting thing about this episode to me was the parallel between Ian and Connor, who was introduced in this episode. They both have hero complexes and their own missions and to see how Connor deals with the whole “waking up somewhere where you don’t know how you got there” scenario is fascinating. Ian is our hero for this series and it makes sense for him to be suspicious of Connor. TEAM The team is fairly well utilized in this episode mostly learning exposition in funny ways. Nothing really stands out for me right now other than, obviously, the awesome use of Senor Guapo talking to Gabe dream sequence. It’s just freaking cool. CONNOR What is the deal with Connor? Who does he work for and why? We get to see Connor under different lights, from pretending to be surprised to knowing things that Ian isn’t ready to know about yet. He’s very mysterious and I want to know more. Mythology questions: What does the yellow elevator mean? The yellow elevator was in the groups mind because they all saw the elevators when they arrived at the school and as it turns out there memories were erased at some point and when they regain consciousness that’s why they were so disoriented when they arrived. Who's the old man’s voice? As it turns out the voice was from Cornelius Tower the founder of the school Tower Prep. It was in their dreams because they had subliminal messaged reminders possibly from the school orientation video. Who is the doctor? Not sure but he must be working for Headmaster and the school in erasing people’s memories. How much of the history lesson is true? The reason I ask this is because most of what we learn happens in a dream sequence based on a tape recording and I think that they left this ambiguous in case they want to retrofit back story later. Who is Connor really? Not sure but turns out he’s not really new to the game but an old player with an agenda all his own. What does the young Ian with Cornelius Tower photo mean? From what I can guess is that Ian met Cornelius Tower at a young age. One Button Review PRESS PLAY Another Darin Morgan scripted episode and it’s very funny and wrought with mythology more so than I’ve seen him do before. There are many Darin Morgan-isms in the new characters introduced as well in as in the back story. I only rate this episode PLAY because it’s a great episode but it is so sewn into the mythology of the series I cannot recommend to see it as a standalone, unless of course you’ve already seen every other episode before it.
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Alright, that’s it for this post. Thanks for checking in and come back next time as I close my Season One overview of Tower Prep. Stay tuned.
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Watcher’s Guide: RECON EDITION Tower Prep Season One part II
Hello reader,
Welcome to another installment of Showfollower's Watcher’s Guide for Tower Prep Season One. On this post I will be reviewing Episodes 2-5.
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  “You need to learn to ‘Power-through’ to conquer adversity”
  Episode info
Season 1 Episode 2 “Monitored”
Original airdate: October 26, 2010
Written by Paul Dini
Directed by Thomas Wright
  Episode synopsis
Ian Archer gets framed for stealing student possessions and so is followed by a monitor until he can defend himself in front of the tribunal members. On their journey to clear Ian’s name they stumble upon an underground Laboratory.
Episode Notes
Character study:
IAN
In this episode we have Ian’s character put on trial when he gets framed for stealing items from the student body. We as the audience know he is innocent and need to find out who set him up. The truth comes out and Ian gets what he wanted and that’s to move away from his roommate bullies and in with his pal Gabe.
  THE TEAM
The mission of this episode was to find the real thief and they each go about their ways of investigating using their abilities.
Gabe is somewhat featured in this episode because he realizes that he was being a jerk to his friend Howard treating him like a golfer when he should’ve been a better friend.
  Mythology questions:
What is going on at the West Campus?
Apparently that’s where they send students who misbehave or are unruly as a form of detention, considered to be stricter than Tower Prep.
  Was Coach a student at Tower Prep?
They hint at Coach knowing more than he can say when Ian speaks to him while sparring. Coach is very withholding and touches lightly at Ian’s suggestion that it’s possible he was a student there.
  Who is Gabe’s other Roommate?
A mystery that was not revealed in this episode, but I am sure this will be addressed at some point. They are clearly setting up that character to be of somewhat of importance.
  Who framed Ian Archer for stealing from the students?
We learn that it was Howard, Gabe’s roommate, who framed Ian to get back at Gabe for abusing his friendship.
  Who are the members of tribunal?
We hear that Coach and Headmaster are members, but what is the purpose for this tribunal and how much more will we find out about them.
  Why are there tunnels and where do they go?
The tunnels aren’t explained why they are there but they are secret passageway for our gang to get around and they discover the underground laboratory.
  Do the gnomes have cameras in them?
We get the sense that Headmaster is on to Ian somewhat when he asks to look at the camera footage from one of the Gnomes heads. I’m not sure if this will lead to Headmaster discovery of Ian’s involvement in the vandalism or not.
  Why would they build a school over a laboratory?
They group suggest that it be possible that they built the school over the lab because the experiments they were conducting weren’t yet finished and maybe Tower Prep is an experiment itself.
  What will happen to Howard at the West Campus?
They make it sound like West Campus is the worst place to go yet they send Howard there with very little fanfare and whether we will hear from Howard again it seems very unlikely.
One Button Review
PRESS FAST FORWARD
Not to say this episode was bad, just that it wasn’t as satisfying as the pilot to me. We get some cool monitoring jokes and a really neat dark underground chase but there’s something about this episode that seemed off to me. It just seemed that the writers wanted to get Ian and move him in with Gabe and wrote this episode to do that. Buffy had a fairly similar episode to this in its fourth season. But lastly this episode was fine just disappointing after seeing the pilot.
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  “Maybe there’s a hidden message in this hidden message.”
  Episode info
Season 1 Episode 3 “Whisper”
Original airdate: November 2, 2010
Written by Glen Morgan
Directed by James Wong
  Episode synopsis
During art class the students are asked to create art relating to their special abilities and Suki finds an odd shaped bulb computer part that she draws and features for assignment which the headmaster sees and destroys. The group tries to uncover why he would do that as well as learn who has been sending Ian notes all this time.
Episode Notes
Character study:
IAN
We get to see Ian use his “preflex” ability here against a computer and that was pretty cool. He’s in search for answers and suspects his teacher may be the person who slipped him the note in the pilot episode. Ian also wants to figure out what the Headmaster is up to and tries to get at him by drawing the Whisper119’s avatar in the game he was playing when he first saw her.
THE TEAM
The group sets out to find out who sent the note to Ian and each set off to and investigate. They use their abilities in real cool ways in this episode and I think that they are learning new ways to use them, for instance CJ finds out that she could profile a person based on their handwriting and Suki mimics peoples handwriting by mimicking their movements as they write. It’s really cool.
Suki has a really interesting moment in this episode where she learns that Sato Science is somehow involved with Tower Prep. Can’t wait to see how that develops.
  Mythology questions:
What is that thing that Suki found?
It turns out to be a computer part to a former computer program called Whisper 23.
  Again who is writing these notes to Ian?
It is revealed in this episode that it was Whisper119 who has been sending messages to Ian. What does this mean? Is Whisper119 sentient or serving Tower Prep against her will?
  Who is filling those outboxes to the sneaky sneak?
Not answered in this episode and I’m not sure that it will, but we’ll just have to wait and see.
  What is the deal with Whisper23?
Whisper23 appears to be a computer program that they merged with human brain matter somehow and therefore making it a very dangerous computer and so needed to be destroyed.
  What is going on with Ian and CJ, Romance?
There were a bunch of awkward pauses and lingering stares in this episode, there has to be something going on with these two. It shouldn’t be such a surprise they are lead characters as well as both very attractive young people.
  Sato Scientific involved with Tower Prep?
Another reveal in this episode we find that Suki Sato’s parents company may have been involved in the laboratory experiments underneath Tower Prep as well as the inception of the school itself perhaps.
  Did our gang send the Headmaster the Whisper23 part?
Not certain myself about this, I think that the group had removed the computer part of Whisper23 out but wasn’t sure if they would send it to the headmaster. I guess it makes sense that they would do that, but I’m not sure.
  One Button Review
PRESS PLAY
This was a fairly good episode we got a mess of art humor and back story possibilities to work with. The old timey computer video game sequence was worth the watch alone. It was just some good action fun.
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  “You can be great. Why would anyone not want to be great?”
  Episode info
Season 1 Episode 4 “Buffer”
Original airdate: November 9th 2010
Written by Glen Morgan
Directed by Peter Deluise
  Episode synopsis
Ian Archer is asked to join the red Buffer team by Coach History who needs to win his next game in order to keep his coaching duty at Tower Prep. Although reluctant at first Ian submits in order to face off against his Buffer playing bully. Meanwhile the group discovers that Coach History may have a connection to the security guards known as the Gnomes.
Episode Notes
Character study:
IAN
This episode really showed some color to Ian’s character in how he dealt with the adversity presented in this episode. We found that Ian can be kind of a jerk when it comes to being competitive and he chooses his own path and plans over his friends. It’s actually kind of cool because this was hinted at in the pilot that he sometimes is thick headed and has to do things his own way which makes him a poor team player but this episode shows him growing. A great parallel between him losing the game and actually succeeding in helping his friends.
  THE TEAM
The team mission this week was to figure out what the connection was between Coach History and the Gnomes. They are all putting their all into their duties but are kind left in the cold when Ian doesn’t meet them half way. It’s interesting to see the team’s dynamic without Ian because they kind of don’t know what to do and see Ian as a leader. It’s CJ who actually steps up and takes the leader role.
CJ seems to be the featured team member in this episode because we learn some things about her and her character. There is some tension between Ian and CJ because CJ is a fan of the Buffer game and by extension of one of Ian’s pilot tormentors and she doesn’t see why it’s affected her relationship with Ian. But Ian I suspect would prefer her not to associate with his bully and he can’t tell her that because, well he doesn’t own her.
I feel like this episode showed a lot of character development and interesting ones too that affected the dynamic between all the characters Ian and CJ specifically.
  Mythology questions:
Where did the Buffer game come from?
Not really addressed in this episode but they do establish that CJ is a big fan of the game and that Tower Prep is the only school that plays it.
  What is up with Coach History?
There is surely some shady stuff going on with him involving the Gnomes and also his need of Ian Archer to help him beat the other team.
  Who do the Gnomes work for?
It remains uncertain but there is definitely a connection with Coach History. We did learn though that Gnomes are Tower Prep students, not certain if they are current or former students.
  One Button Review
PRESS PLAY
This episode was really good and it showed a lot of really interesting character dynamics and some really cool mythology questions arise with interesting resolutions. I think this was an especially well written episode and the performances were really upscale and the production values as well. This episode is definitely worth watching more than once.
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  “Live by the Wing, die by the Talon.”
  Episode info
Season 1 Episode 5 “Rooks”
Original airdate: November 16, 2011
Written by Aury Wallington
Directed by Thomas Wright
  Episode synopsis
A secret fraternity called “the Rooks” taps Ian and Gabe for a chance to join their ranks. Meanwhile CJ and Suki try to plan a good old fashion dance but are forced to follow Tower Prep regulations which are a total bummer.
Episode Notes
Character study:
IAN
In this episode we learn that the Rooks have a special interest in Ian and want him in their fraternity. They have a secret power enhancing drug that they all take in order to maintain their stronghold over the school. Ian never had any interest in being a Rook but only wanted to join to find out what they know about Tower Prep and how to escape.
  GABE
He has wanted to join this fraternity since he heard they were around. Gabe has a need to be accepted by the elite club as the exclusivity makes it appealing. Gabe was blinded by his desire to join the group that he didn’t see that he didn’t need their acceptance because he was already had people in his life that he cared about and cared for him. Also Gabe proved himself to be Ian’s equal by standing up to the Rooks leader and succeeding where Ian did not.
  CJ AND SUKI
They are trying to plan a dance and it’s particularly important to CJ because she has no memory of the outside world and never experienced normal things like dances or socials. They plan a dance for the student body but needed to follow the stupid old fashioned book of rules on how to prepare a dance and it was pretty lame. The rooks planned to further ruin the party because CJ and Suki embarrassed the Rooks leader earlier by rejecting his head strong advances of flirtation towards CJ. The party was saved from severe destruction by Gabe when he confronted the leader. Revealed in this episode also is that CJ likes Ian.
  OTHER
We learn in this episode that Headmaster and Coach are part of the Rooks fraternity and have nefarious plans for Ian.
  Mythology questions:
Who are the Rooks?
The Rooks are a fraternity that has existed back to the inception of Tower Prep, possibly predating it. The Rooks have access to a steroid type drug called Corvus H40 that enhances special abilities for a short period.
  Why is the school so strict about not having school dances?
This is a question that is not confirmed exactly but I assume it’s because they do not want the student body to organize in any way shape or form, because they need them to be complacent.
  Why can people have the same ability?
In this episode it was revealed that the Rooks leader had the same ability of Preflex that Ian has. I wonder if people being able to have the same abilities have something to do with the origin of their powers.
  How many people know about Ian hanging the Gnome head?
We find out last episode that Coach History knows about it and in this one that the Rooks know about it.
  Was it the Headmaster who told them about it now knowing that he is involved with the Rooks fraternity as an Exulted One?
I don’t think there is enough information to say whether he did or not but hopefully we’ll get confirmation at some point.
  What is Corvus C40 and what does it do really?
We learn that the drug can enhance special abilities but also that there is more to it that Coach did not reveal to Ian.
  What are Headmasters plans for Ian?
There have been some speculations and some suspiciousness from Ian about Headmaster but it is revealed in this episode that Headmaster has a really special plan for Ian specifically and since there are other people with his abilities I can only assume that it’s not for his powers.
  One Button Review
PRESS PLAY
This episode was pretty cool, we get some really interesting mythology points dropped on us and some interesting non standard character development that don’t seem overtly cheesy. I really felt that Gabe’s story arc was very strong and performed extremely well. The guy who played the Rook leader was pretty interesting and reminded me of a young Bill Pullman. There was some cheesy special FX in this episode that was a little off putting but overall a pretty solid episode.
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    Alright, thanks for tuning into the second installment of my Tower Prep watcher’s guided tour through season one. There are two more parts to go, so until next time.
Stay tuned.
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showfollower · 12 years
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Watcher’s Guide: RECON EDITION Tower Prep Season One part I
Hello reader,
Welcome to yet another new column to this blog called “Watcher’s Guide.”
This column will be an episode by episode tour through a single season of a television series. This is a review column as well as a platform for me to take on a season of television and comment on each episode.  
I’m starting this review series with my first time viewing thoughts on the Cartoon Network live action series called “Tower Prep.”
I chose to begin with this show because I was already catching up with this series for a separate article I was working on about TV screenwriter Darin Morgan and since this show has such an interesting creative team I thought that since it was only a season of thirteen episodes, I figured why not review the series to start up this column that I’ve been trying to develop for a while now.
The reason I wanted to start this column now is so that I could pave the way for a much bigger project that I’m planning to start in 2012. That project being to boldly go where so many fans have gone before.
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  For this project I intend to watch and review all of the 725 episodes of the Star Trek TV series franchise. That is three seasons of the original series, two seasons of the animated series, seven seasons of the next generation, deep space nine and voyager, and lastly four seasons of Enterprise. A really ambitious task I know but I think it’s about time I finally check out that series and I feel that writing about it here would give me some initiative. So, look forward to that.
There are actually so many TV series that I would like to review for this column in the future, to either revisit old favorites or to experience new series for the first time. I think this can be fun and interesting to concentrate commentary on these blog posts.
Now how I will be going about formatting these review posts will be that I am going to break down the season into several parts in order to remain organized and timely. For example, this first post will be labeled as “part I” and will contain a review for the Tower Prep series pilot. The second part will be labeled part II and contain reviews for episodes 2-5 and the next part will be for episodes 6-9 and the final part will contain reviews for episodes 10-13.
The actual reviews will be formatted with a heading of the episode title and general episode info. The body of the review will have a brief synopsis, my episode commentary and conclude with a review grade.
The brief synopsis will be basic episode summary much like you would find in a TV guide blurb or DVD booklet. Episode Notes section will be my notes about the episode. I will be using a simple four point grading system for these reviews that range from a low grade of SKIP, a passive grade of FAST FORWARD, the qualified grade of PLAY to the high grade of PAUSE.
See, pretty simple.
Now it’s time for me to get into my Tower Prep review, let me start off by giving a really brief introduction into the series.
  Season overview
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   The premise of Tower Prep is basically what if the UK TV series “The Prisoner” was set in a high school. “The Prisoner” was about a man who was being held captive on a secret island which he could not escape. Tower Prep is similar in that sense but the protagonist here is a teenage boy who was taken prisoner by a totalitarian private school. All of the students that are brought to the school have special abilities and are being prepped for unknown reasons. None of the students know why they are doing there but are told that they are to learn how to control their special skills. Also there is absolutely no escape from the school.
Tower Prep is somewhat of a mystery series because the show has many unanswered questions that will surely be revealed as the series continues. For my reviewing purposes I will be focusing on how these mysteries play out throughout the series mythology.
Tower Prep was created by Paul Dini who produced and wrote many episodes of Batman and many other DC Animated Series.
The show starred a mainly young cast consisting of Drew Van Ecker, Ryan Pinkston, Elise Gaitin, Dyana Liu.
The show originally aired on Cartoon Network in October 26, 2010 and ended its first season on December 28th. The series went on hiatus while the network decided whether it will return for a second season. It was just recently announced that the series will not return for a second season, sadly because it ended with a cliffhanger.
  Available Media Formats
Currently this series is not available as home video release.
I will be reviewing these episodes from my own DVR recordings of their original airings.
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  “Where you are geographically isn’t as important as where you are mentally.” 
  Episode info
Season 1 Episode 1 “Pilot” (aka The New Kid)
Original airdate: October 16, 2010
Written by Paul Dini
Directed by Terry McDonough
  Episode synopsis
Ian Archer is a young man who despite his good intentions is consistently getting into trouble at school. One day while listening to his headphones he passes out and wakes up in a private school on orientation day. He doesn’t know how he got there but now he has to uncover why he was taken there and more importantly how to escape.
Episode Notes
Character study:
IAN
We have Ian as our main protagonists and he is kind of head strong and we get a profile of him at one point where he has capabilities of a leader but is quick to anger and is sometimes not a team player. His interactions with other characters in the school we get a sense of who he is, he gets hazed by his roommates and it’s clear he doesn’t like them because they are kind of jerks. But Ian is a very social guy and when he likes someone you get a sense that he is willing to put himself out there a little to get them to like him back. He is suspicious of the Headmaster in particularly of his interest in him. Coach looks sympathetic to Ian and maybe sees him as a future ally.
THE TEAM
The other characters we meet are part of the main cast and that’s CJ, Suki and Gabe. They are looking to escape the school same as him and therefore they become allies and decide to follow the rules until they can figure a way out.
These kids all have abilities by the way, unusual skills that make them special. Ian has the ability to react to things just before they happen what is later dubbed “Preflex,” CJ has the ability to read people’s nervous ticks and profile their emotional state, Suki can mimic peoples voices and movements exactly and Gabe has the ability to what they call “Hypersuade” people into his will.
OTHER
I just wanted to make the note here that other characters that run the school are named after their jobs to make things simpler at the school for some reason. So the Headmaster is named Headmaster and the science teacher is simply named Science. It’s actually kind of interesting.
Mythology questions:
Who is whisper119?
Whisper119 turns out to be the computer program that runs the school kind of.
Who brought Ian to the school?
Ian was apparently brought to the school by the school staff or probably his parents, it’s not really confirmed the exact technicalities of how Ian got there, but it is made even more unusual hearing the accounts of the other student’s arrivals.
 What is Tower prep?
It’s a school where they train kids with unique abilities how to control and use their powers. They claim to have the student body best interest at heart but that is still undetermined.
Why did they build a metal wall to keep them from escaping?
That’s really unusual if they have to go through such trouble to prevent the students from leaving. One can only assume that they are severely strict about the no leaving policy.
Who wrote to Ian that note?
Ian asks his group of misfits if it was one of them and they all claim to know nothing about it, so that mystery is left open.
How did these kids obtain special abilities?
Another open ended mystery which they barely address but it’s clear that this has something to do with why they are there.
Where is Tower Prep?
The group in the observatory has deduced that they are not in the US and maybe far from home.
What are they being prepped for?
There is certainly a big brother type of set up for these students and it seems that they are being gathered and processed for a reason that is left unclear.
Who and what are the Gnomes?
They are like a roaming group of robotic enforcers perhaps. One would assume that these robots are part of the security system, but I’m not sure exactly what they are and I look forward to finding out.
  One Button Review
 PRESS PLAY  
This pilot episode was pretty good and really got me interested in this series. The writing by Paul Dini in developing this mythology is pretty awesome and unique. I think the doors are open for a really intriguing series.
The production values were a little low in this episode but that is clearly because the budget wasn’t that high. There is a scene with laser beams that was super cheesy but serviced the plot well. All in all this looks like a series that I’m looking forward to checking out.
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    Alright, that’s all for now thanks for tuning in to the inaugural post for Showfollower’s “Watchers Guide” articles. Expect more to come soon and Star Trek in 2012.
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showfollower · 12 years
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The Television Writers Pantheon: Darin Morgan – Night Stalker
Hello reader,
Welcome to the third review installment of Darin Morgan’s writer retrospective.
For today’s post I will be trying something a little different, because I am reviewing an episode that was never produced. My reason for including it here as part of this retrospective is because this script is a particularly strong example of Morgan’s voice as a TV writer and also there is no better way to appreciate Morgan’s skills as a writer than by reading his unfiltered script directly. I would say that this work is a part of Morgan’s TV bibliography even though it never made it to the screen.
If you are interested in reading Darin Morgan’s script it was made available via the DVD as a readable PDF. If you do not want to go through the trouble of seeking out the DVD, please click on the link below and find the PDF file there.
  <Night stalker “The M Word” written by Darin Morgan>
  ****A minor note about today’s review, I will be reviewing the script with indiscriminate details about the plot (as I have done with aired episodes) so if you have not read the original script you may want to before reading the review. I suggest that you do read the script before reading the review because I will be talking about the themes and characters presented there and for you to appreciate this analytical review I believe it is necessary to have read the script.****
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  NIGHT STALKER 2005-2006
 Developed by X-Files alum Frank Spotnitz this reboot of the Jeffrey Grant Rice original monster of the week series “Kolchack” was developed under the title of “Night Stalker.” Chris Carter had stated in interviews that a lot of the X-Files concept stemmed from the original Kolchak television series and made for TV films.
The series cast Stuart Townsend as the titular character and Gabriella Union as his crime solving partner. The Night stalker reboot had a similar dynamic to the X-Files with the lead characters having different perceptions of beliefs in the unusual phenomenon of the world, one a believer and the other a skeptic except they were newspaper reporters.
The series did not make much of an impression on the viewing audience even with its young stylish cast and its moody Los Angeles setting and therefore was cancelled fairly quickly.
Although the network had produced ten episodes the series only aired six with the remaining episodes made available through its DVD set. Darin Morgan’s writing contribution to the series did not make it into production stage, but he did write a full script that, luckily for Morgan fans, was made available on that same DVD.
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  "The M Word" Season 1 Episode 12
Original airdate: No airdate
Credits:
UNPRODUCED
Written by Darin Morgan
Episode synopsis:
A strange eyewitness testimony leads Carl Kolchack to investigate a humanoid lizard monster in his connection to a series of murders.
Characters Study:
Carl Kolchak
Carl Kolchak is the wide eyed believer of the supernatural phenomenon whose only interest is to find the truth. Here Carl is not only looking for the truth behind who committed the murder but more on the monster himself. His arc goes from that of wanting to find out what the truth is to realizing that there are many things in this world that are not really for us to understand but to wonder. Perri Reed
Perri Reed is the Kolchak’s partner in the series. Her character maintains her skepticism throughout with a strict regard for her place in the system without wanting to step out of her boundaries of just a reporter. But she turns out to be the one to come out on top going beyond her reporting duties to discovering and apprehending the real murderer. Guy Mann
Guy Mann is the were-lizard monster that is a monster in physicality only. Here Darin Morgan is taking the typical trope that since he is a monster then he must be the one preying on human flesh. Not the case here.
Also we assume that the monster became a monster and was originally human. Not the case here again. Guy Man is not a Were-lizard monster at all; he's a Were-Man monster. He was originally the humanoid monster and wasn't until recent events when he got bitten by the Rabid Ranger murderer that he became the were-man with the unusual compulsive need to find a job and watch pornography.
It's funny how he finds these urges so mysterious because these urges are strange to even us Humans although we accept them as norm.
Episode Themes:
Monster
The theme of who is the real monster here is even what the name implies. The Monster Guy Mann never killed anyone and is only monster because of his physical appearance.
Throughout the entire story though Darin Morgan is playing off our expectations of what we are told a monster should be where in we can try and guess what the monster would turn out to be but are pleasantly and humorously surprised to find what the truth actually is.
Again the miscommunication trope is true here as we do not understand why Guy Mann does the things he does, we as humans could try to explain it to him but it's something that he would never fully grasp really.
Also I noticed that Morgan was sort of playing with the idea of what separates man from monster but also what makes man a man. We get a character named Babycat who is a prostitute and we discover to be a cross dresser, comparing the monsters identity crisis to that of a gender crisis. I thought that to be kind of interesting.
Investigation
The investigation is very similar to police investigation with a lot of interviews a lot of stake outs and some chili dog eating. The interviews with the characters and their accounts of Guy Mann are so interesting and bring up really interesting subject matters such as the reptilian brain and mythologizing our actions.
The turns of events on this episodes would have been lots of fun to see play out on screen.
  Notes:
This script really showed me a lot about screen writing and how to lay out pages and how much is actually written that would eventually end up on the screen. I actually found myself visualizing the scenes in my head and I could almost see the performances from all the characters based on the episodes that I’ve seen prior to this.
If you are a writer and looking to see how an episode of television is written then look no further than here in this script, it is fantastic.  
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  Alright, thanks for tuning in to this installment into the Darin Morgan TV writers pantheon retrospective. Next time I’ll be reviewing the two episodes wrote for the season one of the short lived Cartoon network live action series Tower Prep.
Stay tuned.
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showfollower · 12 years
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The Television Writers Pantheon: Darin Morgan – Millennium
Hello reader,
Welcome to the next installment of my Darin Morgan retrospective series.
On today’s post I will be focusing on Darin Morgan’s run on the dark psychological investigation series “Millennium.” During Darin Morgan’s time on the show he served as a consultant producer as well as wrote and directed two episodes of the second season.  
Here’s an overview of the Fox show “Millennium.” 
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MILLENNIUM 1997-1998 
In the wake of the X-Files booming success the Fox network executives requested that series creator Chris Carter develop more television series for them. Millennium was concocted from Carter’s fascination of the doomsday prophecy phenomena (which was prevalent at the time as the zero hour loomed in closer) as well as his interest in general criminal psychology. He formulated this series to expound on the millennium mania cult mentality and varied that with the pursuit of serial killers.
This series would take a page from the X-Files way of formatting a series by having an overarching mythology at its core, this time surrounding around the investigation of a secretive faction known as the millennium group. To streamline the series the protagonist would also be in pursuit of serial killers which would serve as the standalone episodes.
The tone of this new series would be much darker and cynical than even the X-Files had been. The series centered on a serial killer profiler named Frank Black, who had an ability to see into the mind of a serial killer. The series mythology entailed of Frank Blacks investigation on the Millennium Group whom of which he was working for. With its emphasis on gore and gritty realism the show "Millennium" was one of the most gruesome hours to appear on National television.
Upon the shows second season the focus shifted slightly away from serial killers and bulked up more on the mythology of the millennium group investigation. The final season began losing most of its viewer ship which critics attributed the cause to the writing being so confusing. The network finally pulled the plug after the third season, almost a year before the Millennium date that the series seemed to be building up to, leaving the audience without any satisfying closure.
Luckily for fans of the Millennium series the writers were able to close the Frank Black storyline somewhat with help from its still airing older sister series. Frank Black returned to television in a guest spot on a seventh season episode of the X-Files which was titled "Millennium." Lance Henriksen reprised his role as Frank Black, who finds resolution when he is reunited with his daughter on New Year’s Day 2000.
This episode was not only a notable end to the Millennium series but also served as a landmark moment for the X-Files characters Mulder and Scully whom finally share an intimate on screen kiss to ring in the new millennium.
Reoccurring themes running throughout the series consisted of the battle between good and evil, Apocalyptic prophecies and serial killer methodology among others. For this review of the television series “Millennium” I will be addressing only these three themes specifically.
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"Jose Chung's 'Doomsday Defense'" Season 2 Episode 9 
Original airdate: November 21 1997
Credits:
Written by Darin Morgan
Directed by Darin Morgan
  Episode synopsis:
The murder of an ex-communicated member of new age religious cult known as “Selfosophy” directs Frank Black to investigate the sect with the aid of author Jose Chung.
Characters Study:
  Frank Black
The series protagonist Frank Black is a serial killer profiler who works for a secret organization known as the Millennium group. Frank Black is clearly grizzled and has seen many horrors in the world as is presented in this episode. Frank has a special ability to see into the mind of a serial killer which is almost supernatural in nature, but he somehow manages to not let the darkness into his soul.
Franks arc in this episode isn’t much really; it’s the same arc of any buddy cop movie where the hard boiled cop gets paired up with a new wacky partner. At first when he meets Jose Chung he is turned off by his off beat eagerness and unusual boisterous investigating style, but then, as he spends more time with him, he learns to appreciate his skills and genuinely like him until his untimely demise to which then our hero mourns.
Although his arc does follow this archetypical pattern I feel that Darin Morgan’s take on Frank Black varies things up enough to make it feel fresh and fun.
Jose Chung
Jose Chung is a truly unique and fascinating character. Darin Morgan utilizes him to voice his thoughts on writers and the writing process.
In the opening it becomes very apparent that this episode is not about Frank Black but really about Jose Chung. I had mentioned in my last post that I would love to see a series about Jose Chung’s adventures writing books based on his interactions with real life phenomena investigators, and this episode feels like a continuation to that series, but sadly also its series finale.
Jose Chung’s arc begins with a juxtaposition of him and a contemporary of his Juggernaut Oona Goopta. Chung puts down Goopta despite his success in developing a religious cult and shows even less appreciation for his esteem followers. Chung writes a book criticizing against the cult’s beliefs, possibly as a way for him to cope with his own fading fame.
In a series that focuses on end of the world scenarios Jose Chung has seen his own world ending and that comes with being forgotten.
  Ratfinkovich
In Ratfinkovich we find how unforgiving and unfocused the cult of “Selfosophy” can be. Ratfinkovich had read forbidden text and was excommunicated for it which is basically putting him in the absence of his God. This cult in treating his actions so severely has pretty much made him into an enemy because Ratfinkovich seeks out Jose Chung to reveal secrets about the cult, but is so brainwashed that he hadn’t realized that his revelations aren’t particularly all that profound.
Now he is a true betrayer to his cult and has to be punished for it and he is whether it was from being murdered by a selfosophy member or by hand of unseen fate, it is unclear which also it doesn’t matter because whatever the case it held the same results, one dead Ratfinkovich.
  Mr. Smooth (AKA the “Selfosophy psycho”)
In Mr. Smooth we have a different kind of Selfosophy member whom is a true believer in the philosophy of the religion but through him we see the flaws in the belief of the cult. He is a man who is particularly in need of rage control, the saying “don’t be dark” is spoken by and at him. Through this philosophy he is forced to have an upbeat perspective on things especially when things make him feel rage. This kind of philosophy becomes a form of denial in his persona and his rage, although filtered through the philosophy of his religion turn out to manifest in the same way as it would if he did not submit to the philosophy. He offers a gift and it’s becomes an ironic death threat. The extent of his denial through this philosophy leads to his utter demise when he tries to optimistically escape from a rooftop only to meet his death in wishful thinking.  Juggernaut Oona Goopta
We see Oona Goopta through the lens of Jose Chung and find him to be a foolish person who is buffoonish is his beliefs yet equally as cunning in his ways of manipulating people to his will. We find that Oona Goopta is the God of his religion which is clear as he created the thing with his own philosophy and written works.
  The “Nostrodamus Nutball”
It is mentioned by Jose Chung that the Nostradamus Nutball when interpreting the prophecies made by Nostradamus he internalized them and made it about himself and his life and his end of the world scenario where his girlfriend breaks up with him and so he ends up killing his girlfriend her professor and Jose Chung.
  Episode Themes:
Good vs. Evil
The ideas of what is good and evil are tested her by two distinct perspectives. That of Selfosophy who believe in shutting out what they consider dark and eliminating thoughts and anger through therapy and that of what Jose Chung believes in to embrace the pain and indulge in the absurdity of irony.
When Mr. Smooth confronts Jose Chung with his ideology and asks why Jose Chung ridicules those beliefs, Jose Chung explains that he as a person cannot exist in a world with a selfologists philosophy because those beliefs attack his own intricately.
We all live in our own worlds of how we perceive good and evil, in Selfosophy beliefs it’s is important to divorce oneself of their pain. In Chungs beliefs one’s pain is an important part of our essence and one, should not be divorced and second cannot be divorced from us. These two philosophies in direct conflict with each other and will never be reconciled.
I feel that this philosophy of Jose Chung to be in defense of the TV series Millennium itself in a way, because the show is considered to be very dark and often Television critics would criticize it for its overt cynicism and claim that only the depraved could find value in this kind of escapism.
I believe that Darin Morgan is making a justification claim for dark shows like Millennium with Jose Chung speech to Mr. Smooth. I believe that Morgan is saying that these shows that address horrors realistically are as important to have in our entertainment as they are to have in our lives, to dismiss these dark themes and never address them is to live in a type of denial that isn’t healthy. The purpose for storytelling isn’t only to entertain but to also present morality tales with messages to find out how we feel about situations for us to better deal with them when we actually face them we are not completely unprepared to confront those dark themes in our lives.
  Apocalypse
There are a few accounts of self imposed Apocalypse scenarios presented here from the Nostradamus Nutball who saw the end of his world in Nostradumus’s predictions to Jose Chung who actually wrote in his book of his own death at the hands of the selfosophy psycho.
  Murder Methodology
In this episode it is actually unclear about the murder methods; we get interpretations of what could have happened and aftermath scenes but no real confirmation. The only insight into any of the murders we get are when Frank touches Ratfinkovich and sees him expire, and when Jose Chung is murdered by the Nostradamus Nutball.
  Notes:   This episode was Darin Morgan’s first directing venture and it is very successful in a lot of ways, the story flowed fluidly and the performances and tone is very spot on.
One of my favorite lines in this episode is when Mr. Smooth says
“My writing has really improved since I bought this new writing software.”
It’s such a diluted claim to make, especially for a writer, that good writing ability can be manufactured in that way.
This was an exceptional episode and a perfect end to one of the most interesting characters to grace the X-Files universe.
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"Somehow Satan Got behind Me" Season 2 Episode 21 Original airdate: May 1 1998
Credits:
Written by Darin Morgan
Directed by Darin Morgan
  Episode synopsis:
Four demons gather together to share tales of those they’ve damned and discover within each story a human who can see their true form, that human being Frank Black.
  Characters Study:
Frank Black
Not really featured in this episode, but instead Frank Black is utilized to tie things together and quite poignantly as well. Frank Black is able to see these monsters for who they really are and it’s his insight that pulls the characters into a really fascinating arc. Blurk
All of the four demons have damnation tales with their own personal style and for condemning mankind. For Blurk to damn is standard presenting the potential and just let them grab at the bit.
In Blurks tale a motorist picks him up while hitchhiking and all he does to convince him to damn himself by committing murders is suggest that he follow through with it. The motorist’s only goal when he began his murder spree is to surpass the kill count of his serial killing idol. Blurk pronounced that to be dull and decided to make it happen that after he reached his goal that the police catch him and incarcerate him. To ensure his damnation Blurk urges the motorist to kill himself, but he fails only to be murdered by his serial killer idol permitting him his title as reigning kill count champion over the motorist.
For Blurk human damnation is simply exposing the lingering thread of immorality and then pulling it down the path and they will follow as if it was their choice.
Abum
Abums style is more passive yet cruel in its own way. Abum observes human routine until it numbs them to their own desires and drives them by nudging them with nuanced nuisances that remind them that they are suffering in routine until they finally can’t take it anymore and decide to end their own lives.
Abums view of humanity is that they are wasting their lives with trivial nonsense and will eventually end themselves if you just remind them that they’re putting themselves through hell for nothing. Greb
Greb has a much more abrasive damnation style. He merely observes his prey until they are in a state of high stress from maintaining their own sense of morality which they are most susceptible to psychotic suggestion. He makes himself known and clearly directs them to their acts of violence.
Greb allows humanity to drive itself mad then appears to them when they no longer can differentiate what their own morality is anymore.
Toby
Toby has the most interesting arc and revelation about his self as he in some way begins to understand humanity unlike the others in this group have. He feels like he is losing his touch in damnation because he hasn’t damned a human soul in some time and with his mere presence he is scaring humans to the good side. He wallows in self pity cheered up by an aging stripper to whom he appears to as a middle aged man. She consoles him and relates to him and they become a couple.
Toby feels pleasure being with her and none of the trivialities of life seem to matter. The human ability to accept others for who they are and to forgive is a strange human oddity that he has never experienced before and is having difficulty processing his feelings.
Evidently, Toby is a demon after all and condemns her to damnation by pushing her away which was enough to bring her to destroy herself.
What Toby realizes far too late is that by damning her he has damned himself as well, which leads to Frank Blacks observation that he must be so lonely.
Episode Themes:
Good vs. Evil
Basically the division of good and evil is clear in that humanity is constantly on the verge of damnation. Pure evil involves murder, suicide and the understanding that humanity knows what they are doing is wrong but do it anyway because they feel there is no other choice.
This episode showcases evils wins and only their wins, reminding us that this is a very dark series. But there is a light of good here that when presented to the demons flummoxes them so much that they and much like they have done with humanity realize how hollow their lives are more so especially now that one of them has exposed to the light.
  Apocalypse
Damnation is in a way a form of Apocalypse. We have four tales of damnation and in each someone’s world hit the skids and implodes. What these stories have to do with the end of the world millennium theme isn’t as clear. There are moments where the demons proclaim that the world has gone mad for it seemed that more people are seeing their true demon form. But those claims are minor mania and don’t really count.
  Murder Methodology
What we have in this episode is four tales of murder methodology that leads souls to damnation, each demon having their own distinct style of damning which I touched on earlier.
In each of these tales it seems as though these demons are basically trying to understand the human condition and why they do the things they do, it’s strange to consider the absurdity of mankind.
  Notes:
One of televisions finest hours of television, because it’s not very often where a television series would not only minimize the role of the series star but anthologize an episode in such a way that doesn’t predominately connect. It is a thing of pure risk and brilliance to have this aired on primetime national television.
There is so much good in this episode from the monster FX to the score to overall great performances by all the actors involved and such an intensely structured tale that works in so well the humor and the drama.
This is clearly my favorite Darin Morgan episode out of all of them. I truly hope that one day he would return to directing because I truly feel like he did a bang up with this one.
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  Okay, thanks for tuning in to this installment of The TV Writers Pantheon retrospectively reviewing Darin Morgans television work. Tune in again next time where I will review his unproduced script for the short lived Night Stalker series.
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showfollower · 13 years
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The Television Writers Pantheon: Darin Morgan – The X-Files
Hello reader,
Welcome to the first review installment of the TV writers Pantheon retrospective series on Darin Morgan. On this post I will be focusing on Morgan’s earliest TV scribing works which were five episodes for breakout sci-fi series the “X-Files.”
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THE X-FILES 1994-1996 
The series began in 1993 developed by Chris Carter who utilized his interest in paranormal phenomena and government conspiracies to create an investigation procedural show unlike any other of its time. It was Chris Carter’s intent to make a paranormal investigation series that would play off a skeptic scientific view of each phenomenon.
The series centered on main characters Fox Mulder, an FBI agent who believes in the paranormal, and Dana Scully, an FBI medical examiner/agent who skews towards a skeptic opinion. The series relied heavily on these two butting heads on what they both perceived had occurred on each of their investigations, typically with Fox Mulder alluding closer to the truth.
The series had a very interesting approach to storytelling wherein they created an overarching mythology with a consistent continuity, where they could set up things in an early episode that could pay off later in the series or be called back to.
Before the X-Files most television writers were not all that preoccupied with maintaining continuity to their series because their goal was mainly to create interesting stand alone stories with minimal over arching plots. Continuing plotlines were more of soap opera trope or a drama series gimmick. Ideally a television series would be assessable on any given episode without requiring having viewed any previous episodes. That’s why prime time writers would always pay off story elements they set up in an episode by the conclusion of that episode.
For television executives this writing approach seemed to make sense in bringing in new viewers because this approach made their shows available to watch passively. The X-Files approach to create a mythology based series may have isolated new viewers if not for their standalone episodes. The X-Files had developed a format to their season plan by initiating two variations of episodes where one week may involve the ongoing narrative (a mythology episode) and the next week would focus on a single case "Monster of the week" standalone episode. These standalone episodes were purely focused on telling engaging stories with open ended conclusions that would allow the unexplained to remain unexplained. These standalone episodes would invite viewers to sample the show and tease their interest to continue their viewer ship. This formatting proved to be a huge success and by the second season created a fairly hefty fan base.
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When Darin Morgan entered into the X-Files fold the series was dark and gritty with the bulk of the mythology dealing with Alien cover up conspiracies and the monster of the weeks inspired by supernatural horror urban legends and or crazy science experiments. Morgan with his full scripted episodes would introduce a sense of dark humor to the tone of the series that would widen the grim scope the series had been known for. Darin Morgan’s work began in the end of the second season and concluded with the third season. Morgan would then move on to work for the X-Files sister series “Millennium.”
After Darin Morgan’s departure, the X-Files continued to strive for a few years with interesting high concept episodes and satirical lighthearted ventures. When the series began to lose steam was when the writers started treading water on giving conclusive answers to the mythology.
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The show lost more momentum when one of the main leads opted out of the series and had to be written out of the show. It proved difficult to continue a hero’s journey without its main hero and the show was losing a major component of what made the series compelling.
The show attempted to reinvent itself by introducing two new leads to the series but was unable to appease the fan base enough to continue for very long. The X-Files finally closed with a hastily put together final season that tried to tie as many of the loose ends as they could.
The show ran a total of nine seasons with a semblance of a conclusion and two feature films.
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  "Blood" Season 2 Episode 03  
Original airdate: September 30th 1994 
Credits: 
            Written by Glen Morgan & James Wong, Story by Darin Morgan
              Directed by David Nutter 
Episode synopsis: 
 Mulder investigate a small Pennsylvanian town where an epidemic of fear allows an unknown instigator to direct people into violent attacks using technology devices and subliminal messaging.
Characters study:
                                                             Mulder 
Mulder is the very intuitive investigator who is always probing into exactly the right place at the right time to figure out what is going on. It’s almost Sherlock Holmes in how he can just step in a crime scene to figure out what is going on. As Mulder is in the series he is played up in this episode as the viewer’s guide to the paranormal.
At one point Mulder is exposed to the same fear agent that causes its victims into paranoia acts of violence but he is somehow immune from going over the edge. That is certainly a component of the show that is consistent, Mulder is the lead he can’t fall victim to the weekly phenomenon, he must always overcome it and he does, but almost to no dramatic effect.
What is interesting to me about this episode is that Mulder seems to have stumbled upon something he doesn’t have the answer to. Mulder throughout the first season of the series may have know and seen a lot on his ventures into the X-files but he can’t have all the answers, and in this episode for one of the first times the phenomenon seems even beyond his comprehension.  
                                                            Scully 
Not heavily utilized in this episode, I’m assuming because at this point in the series Mulder and Scully were separated because the X-Files were closed at the beginning of the season. This episode was one of the in between episodes that would lead to the reinstating of the X-Files department, also the actress Gillian Anderson was very pregnant at the time and therefore needed less screen time, so there is very little character development here.   
                                                            Woman and the Mechanic 
Darin Morgan is playing with expectation here, he sets up that a fear break out can come from anyone and then presents this scene with a menacing looking mechanic and a demure woman who turns out to be the one to break into violent action.
The mechanics motivations are fairly clear in that he wants to try and extort her for more work that he can do on her car while she, heightened with fear, interprets his persistence as intent to harm her. She is then manipulated by the subliminal messaging to attack him and so she ends up killing the mechanic, where in normally we would assume the opposite would have incurred by the way the scene was set up.
                                                             Subliminal Messenger 
There is a catalyst behind the technology directing these people into violent acts. We never find out who is behind the messages sent to these fear exposed victims or what the motivators are behind the experiment.
Is it a secret government agency of scientists, someone working alone, an alien being or merely the victim’s own hallucinations?
This open ended question leaves a lot to ponder after the episode is over, and it is this idea of unknowable forces that I find to be the most interesting about this episode. It is something that even if it’s a concept that did not originate with Darin Morgan, it is definitely something he would revisit in his own full scripts. 
Episode Themes:
                                                             Unexplained phenomenon
Mulder is the main protagonist of the series and he is typically the guide to our understanding of the strange phenomenon that he encounters because he often has a solid understanding of what he is dealing with no matter what the case may be, if nothing else he offers the closest thing to a conclusion of what may have transpired. In this episode even that is questioned.
I feel as though Mulder, who is always being manipulated and toyed with by instigators that he knows not of who are in control, really is in over his head but in a way that we haven’t seen in the series up until this point.
The experiment ends with Mulder being the last of the affected with the fear gas and he is left to wonder who was behind it all, if anyone. There is no clear resolution because the subliminal messenger signs off to Mulder that the experiment has ended. We are left to wonder if this final message was from an actual person or entity or merely the result of Mulder’s exposure to the fear gas, and that his true fear is of conspiracies that are open ended which can never be resolved.
The lack of resolution is something that is quite relevant when it comes to the X-Files series as a whole because they often leave the endings ambiguous for the viewer to come to their own conclusion, although with Mulder’s theory guiding them like a beacon. The series is very good at that but it’s not something that satisfies a mass audience who prefer solid conclusions.
I think that Darin Morgan with the conceptualizing of this episode pushed the boundaries of the series to another level if nothing else than by putting Mulder in a place of understanding of the phenomenon that is where we, as the viewers, often find ourselves.
                                                             Investigation
The investigation aspects of this episode are pretty basic; there are pockets of expositions that explain things with what plays out as dramatic posturing. Mulder comes to conclusions almost too intuitively that come off as contrived to me.
Notes: 
Not one of my favorite episodes for several reasons. The second season of the X-Files was not my favorite season and that is because they split up the two leads for the beginning of it. The season started out in what felt to me like a tangent. This whole part of the season leading to the Duane Barry abduction of Scully was boring to me when I first watched it when it originally aired and even now it plays that way to me.
This episode is also really clunky with the exposition and the action sequences are not that enthralling, there were no dynamic characters that I felt could retain my focus except perhaps Mulder, but his presence even seemed contrived being that he was not really suppose to be investigating X-File cases during this time.
Watching this episode over again recently I was able to pin point certain areas of interest, but not many. Overall I felt this episode could’ve been better.
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"Humbug" Season 2 Episode 20
 Original airdate: March 31, 1995  
Credits:
            Written by Darin Morgan
            Directed by Kim Manners
Episode synopsis:
Mulder and Scully investigate a murder among a community of Circus "freaks" where one of the suspects in question is the mythological creature called "the Fiji mermaid."
Characters Study:
                                                            Mulder & Scully
The dynamic of Mulder and Scully are in full effect in this episode as they both are where we like them; Mulder using his vast knowledge of the unexplained phenomena and Scully using her understanding of logic and science to solve the oddities of these X-Files cases.
Mulder on this series has been often the voice of reason involving these cases as he is often right. What Darin Morgan does with this episode is he plays off that expectation that Mulder is always on the right track of investigation and turns it around and puts Scully closer to truth. For once Mulder is not exactly right; in fact he thinks what the actual truth is, when presented to him, is preposterous.
Here Mulder suspects "the Fiji mermaid" a mythical creature that is renowned for being false, Mulder believes in the possibility that the culprit could be this creature and is surprised to the point of Scully-like skepticism when it becomes apparent that the culprit is the removable con jointed twin of a town local. This is a side of Mulder we don’t see often because he is usually open to oddest explanation.
We also see a different, yet fitting, side to Scully in this episode as well in a scene where they are interviewing a suspect, Dr. Blockhead, who offers to Scully a jar of bugs that he had been feeding “the Enigma” to indulge in, we the audience are expecting Scully to lose her composure and decline the insect treat, but without missing a beat she takes him up on the offer and she eats a live insect to Mulders and our amazement. Scully didn’t actually eat the bug it is revealed, she only used slight of hand in order to fake out the suspect, but it shows a depth of character that she doesn’t play out that often.
Scully has been often portrayed as the straight man to Mulders crazy theories and antics but in this episode she gets to be a little odd, at least potentially, instead of being the peripheral contrarian.
                                                            The Alligator Man
Darin Morgan always creates such colorful characters that often play with misconception. The Alligator man, although a physical curiosity, is by all means human and not at all monstrous as his appearance would make him out to be. The Alligator man is a father and husband and a highly skilled magician who isn’t bitter about his predicament of being a sideshow.
In the episode we get Scully’s view of him when she says with a sense of tragedy and pity in reference to the Alligator Man “Can you imagine living your entire life looking like that?” voicing the misconception that most people would have about a deformed person, we realize it is misguided being that the Alligator man had a very well adjusted life.
                                                            The Sheriff “James Hamilton”
The sheriff character comes across as someone who is sympathetic to the community but since we don't see him with any physical abnormality we consider him to be a moderator between our FBI agents and the community of freaks.
Darin Morgan establishes the sheriff’s loyalty to the community when the agents attempt to profile the killer as being someone with deformities and the Sheriff contends that they shouldn’t because it’s a type of racial profiling and that the people in the community may be deformed but they are as normal as anyone. The agents counter that if he were to consider the community inhabitants to be “normal” then it stands to reason not to rule them out simply because of their deformities because most serial killers do turn out to be “normal.”
It is important to establish the Sheriff’s devotion to the community because in a fair amount of these “monster of the week” episodes it would turn out that the killer would be the sheriff character with the added revelation that the sheriff was also a circus freak himself. Darin Morgan plays into this expectation when he reveals that the sheriff character was once Jim-Jim the dog faced boy, only to be another red herring in the investigation.
                                                            Mr. Nutt
Mr. Nutt is an interesting and fun subversive character who is always calling people out on their hypocritical nature. When they arrive to the hotel Mulder mistakenly assume that Mr. Nutt, a man of small stature, had been an ex-circus sideshow performer. Mr. Nutt is clearly upset by this misconception and goes on a rant on how one should never allow their assumptions get the better of them because it is never the case.
Mr. Nutt tries to make an example of Mulder who he surmises to be an FBI agent by the way he is stereotypically dressed and is then shamed when his point is deflated when Mulder proves to be exactly who he appears to be because sometimes things are what they appear to be.
                                                            Lanny and Leonard
Lanny is the motel porter and it is established that Lanny is a humbled ex-sideshow performer who has a child like innocence about him. The deformity he has is a con jointed twin brother named Leonard that rests in the side of his stomach.
An interesting use of the Lanny character can be found in a scene where Lanny goes to Scully’s trailer to inform her of the latest death occurrence we find her with her blouse slightly undone and Lanny indulging his curiosity of the female form, meanwhile we find Scully also looking at Lanny’s slightly undone robe revealing his con jointed twin Leonard with the same spellbound curiosity. This plays on an interesting parallel of what people find as unseemly peeks of perversion in a very humorous way.
As for what motivates conjoined twin Leonard, who is mistakenly referred to as the "Fiji mermaid" it turns out to be an act of survival.
This brings up the mistaken belief by Lanny when he laments that Leonard wants to find a new host body to cling on to because he feels that Leonard hates him, but it is not the case because Leonard was only seeking a new body to leech off from because he sensed that Lanny’s body was deteriorating because of his Alcoholism.
Episode Themes:
                                                            Unexplained phenomena
The focus of the episode was not so much as on the creature as much as it was on the idea of misconception and how abnormality is perceived. We perceive that abnormalities are unnatural occurrences and so would do anything to create the illusion of normalcy, even by means of fabrication.
This point is hammered into our noses at the end of the episode with Dr. Blockhead’s rant about what the natural order of things are and what may be coming. People will try to fend off abnormality by fabricating artificiality through surgeries and genetic engineering so much so that there will be a need to counter that movement with self made freaks in order to maintain the balance of nature.
Darin closes the argument with an echoed phrase (a writing technique that he is quite fond of) said earlier with pity and fear about the Alligator man, now made by Dr. Blockhead with disgust and annoyance about Mulder.
"Can you imagine living your entire life looking like that?"
                                                            Investigation
As I stated earlier Mulder is often right with classifying what phenomena they are dealing with, but in this case Mulder is incorrect and Scully, although unable to clarify it herself, gets closer to what actually was occurring. By the end of the episode we as the audience have an idea of what has happened and although there is no concrete evidence (because there never is in the X-Files) the agents only leave with there eyewitness accounts.
Notes:
This episode was noted to be one of the first comedic toned episodes, although within the dark realm of the X-Files. Darin Morgan is a very funny and insightful writer and has a great appreciation of irony and absurdity.
What I noticed even from the opening of this episode was how our expectations are being played with. First, with the introduction of the Alligator man, presenting him as if he was to attack the two boys in the pool but then revealing him as their father and then by having him fall victim to this tiny figure as well as the revelation that the Sheriff was a red herring.
Darin Morgan creates well rounded characters with clearly defined motives that make all the characters accessible even the so called monster. There is a sense of humanity that is ever present in these characters that I personally enjoy.
Back when I first watched this episode back in the early nineties I remember it leaving a lasting impression on me and watching it now I find that it holds up very well.
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"Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose" Season 3 Episode 4
Original airdate: October 13 1995
Credits:
            Written by Darin Morgan
            Directed by David Nutter
Episode synopsis:
A psychic murderer is on the loose so Mulder and Scully enlist the aid of a middle aged man who has a true psychic ability to see into people’s death.
Characters Study:
                                                            Mulder & Scully
The introduction of Mulder into this episode plays humorously into his mythos, when two police officers at the crime scene are heard talking about an unorthodox investigator coming aboard to help in their case. When the term "Spooky" is used every X-Files fan would assume that the person they are referring to could only be special agent Fox "Spooky" Mulder but as Mulder arrives the cops look at him with nuisance and disregard. We find out that the cops were not referring to him after all but to a showboating tabloid psychic known as “the Stupendous Yappi.”
This degradation on Mulder’s character highlights how low his credibility is to the law enforcement that they would prefer to hear what a crackpot has to say over him.
One of the interesting things that Mulder has to deal with in this episode is the foretelling of his death. The killer has a vision of killing Mulder as reported by Clyde Bruckman and Mulder has to come to terms that this is a real possibility because he believes in divination.
Scully goes through an even more interesting arc in this episode where she began first not believing in, or even liking, Clyde or his ability but then she transitions into accepting that he believed in what he could do and was suffering from it which made her genuinely sad for his situation.
                                                            Clyde Bruckman
Darin Morgan created such a unique character along with Peter Boyle's portrayal that is amazingly in depth. The way Peter Boyle flows between entrancement and conscious conversation is incredibly nuanced and are to Boyle's credit as an actor as it is to Darin Morgan script.
The arc for Clyde starts where we discover that he has the seemingly useless ability to see how people will die. This gets to be trying for Clyde as he feels he no longer has control of his own path seeing death all the time without rest. When Mulder and Scully enter into his life it seemed likely that he would fall victim to the puppet serial killer’s murder spree and doesn’t feel he has control to escape it.
As is common with Darin Morgan scripts he goes against what is to be expected and instead follows the appropriate conclusion but by different means. Clyde dies by his own hand, taking control of his own death, which brings on a curiosity being that if he could see how people will die he must have been able to see his own death and did he always know it would be him to bring his own death.
                                                            The Puppet (AKA the Killer!!!)
The puppet character allowed Darin Morgan to play off the psychology of a serial killer. He had the puppet demonstrate some light psychic ability that allowed him to see himself committing heinous acts of murder. This set the puppet on his journey to understand why he would commit these murders if he had no inclination to hurt anyone. The revelation is that those divinations were his inclinations to kill only manifested as visions. He acted out those visions because he wanted to and not because he was being manipulated to do so as he had originally thought. His hand was pulling the strings the whole time.
                                                            The Stupendous Yappi
Here we have one of the quirkier Darin Morgan characters. The Yappi character is utilized to establish a parallel to Mulder and his beliefs in these extra sensory perception wielders. There are those who are phony and those who believe in their ability and are convoluted; Yappi embodies the farce of Mulder’s beliefs that deflate the credibility of them.
Episode Themes:
                                                            Unexplained phenomena
Clyde and his ability to see into peoples deaths is one of the more interesting paranormal phenomenons that had been presented on this show. The idea of divination has been done many times on many different shows but on this one there is a sense of realism to it that is new. On shows like this one it is often explained that the character has visions of their divinations and explain it as being dreamlike and when the vision is verbalized it is perfectly clear what that vision is trying to get across. Here we get that except there is more of an interpretive miscalculation bent in a way makes you wonder if you’re communicating the vision properly or if you are putting importance in the right detail.
For Example, the scene where Mulder is trying to get Clyde to tell him what the puppets divination of killing him was and Clyde is trying to figure out what kind of pie had hit the ground where Mulder is more interested in knowing whether the he gets murdered in the vision or not. It doesn’t matter in the vision that Mulder is killed in it; it’s the visions of a madman, just as irrelevant as what kind of pie hit the ground.
                                                            Investigation
The idea of divination is touched on in a few areas of the investigation all helping in catching the killer.  Mulder’s intuitiveness brings them to ask Clyde Bruckman for aid in the investigation although Scully is ever present to debunk him. Mulder’s intuitivism I’ve discussed before where he can go into a crime scene and profile the paranormal.
Clyde’s ability to see into peoples deaths allows him to lead them to the location of some of the killer’s discarded victims. When Mulder asks Clyde about his ESP he explains it as simple as I just know. This brings up the question of the mechanics of his ability. Everyone has their own skills of understanding things and reaching conclusions that satisfies them to a certainty. Clyde has his certainty that he knows what he knows because his way of achieving a conclusion is his own. How could someone explain their certainty to someone else who doesn't share the same pattern of thought?
It seems that Darin Morgan gave the explanation that Clyde could see the death of people because of an obsession of his that began with his comprehending the components that were set in motion leading to the death of Buddy Holly. The certainty pattern in Clyde’s brain changed and he became able to piece together probability in a way that only works for his brain waves that he himself could not even begin to explain. But it doesn't work for foreseeing the future itself as showcased by Clyde’s inability to win the lotto.
Scully uses her investigation skills to full effect here when not deriding Mulder for his beliefs was able to observe the reoccurrence of the puppet at each crime scene and recognized him to also be the bellhop in the Hotel where they were keeping Clyde. She humorously attributed her astuteness to her women’s intuition.
Notes:
What can I say about this award winning episode that hasn't been said already? Darin Morgan’s second outing as full script writer and acolytes follow already. As you can see this writer is definitely one to watch. It was this episode that really made me aware of Darin Morgan’s unique style and made me investigate him further.
Darin Morgan introduces an interesting character device for Scully in having her adopt the dog of Clyde’s late neighbor. A character that Darin Morgan writes a return for in "War of the Copophrages" but I’ve noticed this dog doesn’t appear in any of the other episodes not written by Morgan.
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"War of the Coprophages" Season 3 Episode 12
Original airdate: January 5 1996
Credits:
            Written by Darin Morgan
            Directed by Kim Manners
Episode synopsis:
Mulder is put on an impromptu investigation of rumored roach attacks that send a small town into mass hysteria.
Characters Study:
                                                            Mulder & Scully
Mulder and Scully are separated at the beginning of this episode with Mulder doing his own thing observing UFOs around a small town when he gets thrown into a police investigation of strange occurrences involving roaches.
Again we find Darin Morgan changing convention of the core story elements but maintaining the structure of a typical monster of the week. A different tact from what he has done in his past scripts even.
Mulder falls into this investigation and is intrigued by the possibility of the paranormal in the case, but each time he relays to Scully the eeriness of the case she quickly debunks it with scientific expertise and turns out to be correct.
How Darin Morgan plays on their relationship in this episode is interesting in that throughout the night Mulder is "bugging" Scully for help and Scully has no interest in going out there in the middle of the night, and it’s not until another female is brought into the mix that Mulder changes priority of interest from getting Scully to come out with him to the salacious Dr. Bambi. Scully doesn't take the loss of attention well and decides to head down there to see what exactly is going on, somewhat subtly playing off her possible jealousy. Sure it's subtle but really funny as it is human and real.
                                                            Dr. Bambi Berenbaum
As seen on the above passage Darin Morgan used the character Dr. Bambi as a kind of vice for Mulder and Scully’s relationship. Also Dr. Bambi was an expository device to explain some of the bug motivations that would lead to the answer why these bugs kept coincidentally showing up at each death site. The answer being that the bugs were attracted to the Methane that was present at each crime scene.
                                                            Dr. Jeff Eckerle
The arc for Jeff Eckerle revealed him to be the antagonist at the end of the episode when he allows hysteria to overcome him to the point of making him fire a gun inside of the methane and stool industrial unit. Luckily Mulder and Scully were able to escape with their lives although they would end up being covered in feces by episodes end.
                                                            Dr. Alexander Ivanov
His purpose in this episode was to serve the robotic roach subplot that Mulder came across. What Darin Morgan does with each of his scripts is present characters who appear would know things that could answer these plot points but where other writers would just allow these characters to be the expository voice of knowledge and have them explain exactly what the writer needs the audience to know instead he makes these characters act like actual people who probably aren’t as concrete in what they know. Darin Morgan allows the unknowable to remain unknowable and that is why he is such a brilliant writer.
Episode Themes:
                                                            Unexplained phenomena
The Unexplained phenomenon for this episode was mass hysteria. People tend to allow two and two equal something scary and quite unlikely; therefore these characters then turn to hysteria in a fumble for survival.
Also what Darin Morgan touches upon is on the idea of a higher intelligence and how we perceive creatures that we consider to be lower intelligence and that possibly we are being looked down in a similar way by some higher being and although we would like to believe that we could change our nature, our nature overcomes us and we can only succumb to it.
                                                            Investigation
The setup monster of the week is a "Magoffin" as they say. A plot device which it's only purpose is to move the story along. It's brilliantly done here as a subterfuge of what the monster of the week episode can be.
Darin Morgan establishes a murder that occurs in the typical crazy paranormal way of amassed bug attack and although we the audience see it happen this way we discover that there is a logical scientific explanation for what we’ve seen.
There has to be something else going on to make it into a true X-File though. On top of this eerie cockroach murder spree phenomenon, Mulder discovers a metal robot bug that we find has nothing to do with the case at all, just a hint of something bigger than us.
Notes:
Just another fine episode from Darin Morgan where he again creates fun characters that are enjoyable with humorous situations and inventive story telling elements with intriguing questions to think about after.
I wanted to highlight a callback that I noticed, when Scully goes into the Mart where people are reaching mass hysteria about all these crazy roach murders that they are in a buying frenzy. At one point the hysteria reaches a pitch that causes the people to knock over a stack of chocolate candy balls that are proclaimed to be "Roaches!" by one patron, Scully reaches down to pick up the chocolate candy ball carton and proceeds to eat one, in resemblance to how she appeared to have eaten a bug in Darin Morgan’s early writing venture "Humbug."
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"Jose Chung's 'From Outer Space'" Season 3 Episode 20
Original airdate: April 12 1996
Credits:
            Written by Darin Morgan
            Directed by Rob Bowman
Episode synopsis:
A military instigated routine alien abduction of a teenage couple goes awry when the faux alien abductors are themselves abducted by true Aliens. After Mulder and Scully investigate the incident they recount their conclusions to author Jose Chung for his book.
Characters Study:
                                                            Mulder & Scully
We get to see Mulder and Scully in several different lights as we partial experience them through other characters view of them.
Odd things like when one of the eyewitnesses describe Scully as cold and man-like as well as implicating her as threatening him, it comes as a surprise to us the audience as well as to Scully who has no explanation why she would be perceived in this way.
Mulders credibility is challenged here when he describes an encounter with one of the faux alien abductors in a diner, a report from one of Jose Chung’s sources shows a contradictory account of what happened. This is funny to me because we, as the audience, trust Mulder to be sane and not a “nutball” like these other people who have warped imaginations influencing their accounts.
                                                            Jose Chung
A delightful character indeed, and a device used by Darin Morgan to create an outside perspective on Mulder and Scully's investigation. Jose Chung is writing a book called "From Outer Space" and is trying to come to some conclusion to the events of what truly happened to the teenagers the night of the abduction.
With the evidence being insurmountable, perception obscuring the reality of the event and with Jose Chung’s flamboyant ability to write spectacle one can wonder of how much of the truth is actually revealed.
I truly sense there is a spin off series in this episode about these Men in black or even about Jose Chung himself. His books seem to be prolific and I personally would enjoy a TV series that follow his exploits of Jose Chung going into his newly created genre of the Non-Fiction Science Fiction. I mean, really, how great would that be?
                                                            Teenagers
Morgan plays with these teenagers accounts of the events because they are the ones who know the least about what was going on. Their accounts are being manipulated several layers over. The girl memories have been altered by the aliens and by the government and even by the hypnosis that is trying to retrieve her memories. The boys account is being influenced by hormones and maybe something else that he has been hiding.
There is a very subtle subtext of something else that happened the night of the abduction to those teenagers. They hint that the teens did have sex and there is a question of whether it was consensual or not. Maybe it’s not as dark as that, maybe the boy just felt that since they had sex it meant more to him than it did to her. The girl says in the end of the episode something very poignant to their situation and that is
“Love, is that all you boys care about?”
This is interesting because it can be taken a couple of ways. I am sometimes susceptible to reading between the lines and am familiar with the cadence of how the girl was making that statement; it was to the effect of how a girl would say
“Sex, is that all you boys care about?”
As I said this can be taken a couple of ways, Darin Morgan could been saying that the girls says “Love” to mean “Sex” and the girl was using this statement to say that the boy just wanted “sex” again from her but she doesn’t want to be with the boy just to be that for him.
He could also be saying instead in this statement that “Love” is “Love” in the way that men and women view Sex. The feminine view of sex would be love in a way, and men would view love as having sex. Teenagers at this age have problems differentiating the two. What I am suggesting here though about Darin’s use of the statement is that if the girl is saying “Love” to mean “Love” in the feminine view, then I believe that she maybe is feminizing him in the derogatory way, much in the way men generally express their dominance over women in that sense. She in this statement is treating him like the lesser sex and upholding that she doesn’t submit to him he submits to her.
This is also highlighted with the staging with her towering over him from her second floor window. I like how the scene is somewhat reminiscent of classic literary teen lovers “Romeo and Juliet.”
                                                            Pilots/faux aliens
The faux alien abductors are part of the second layer of the incident that we have a basic idea of what is going on. Mulder and Scully are on the edge of this layer and are aware that there is something behind a curtain but can’t peek behind it.
These faux alien characters are aware that they are being mind controlled and it plays off the idea of what is reality when you know you are being lied to and anything in your memory can be false. Subjective reality seems unimportant when you’ve peeked behind the curtain and just see that there is nothing there but more curtains.
                                                            Roky
Yet another fascinating “nutball” character that Darin Morgan has created. His account has the least credibility because he is clearly trying to capitalize on what he saw that night. Roky is the only other person who could give another perspective on the third layer of the event, but whatever forces influenced his lunacy, whether it is his own or by alien hypnosis, his account is almost dismissible. He may even have actually seen the true aliens that night and whether the part of his testimony where he interacted with them is true or not is left to speculate.
                                                            Men in Black
There are so many questions I have about the men in black characters. They are clearly not part of the second layer conspiracy and it is possibly that they are part of the third but I feel like there is more to them.
I think Darin Morgan has a grander scope than one could assume a single X-Files episode should have. These characters for instance, could be part of a secret organization even outside of earth that tries to keep people away from looking behind the curtain of the secrets of outer space. They seem to have different mind control technology than the second layer government people and seemed more interested in those investigating the third level rather than the second layer of the incident.
Whatever is going on behind these curtains, I’ve got to say I just love looking at the impressions that are being made that I don’t really care to really know.
Episode Themes:
                                                            Unexplained phenomena
Darin takes on the phenomenon X-Files hangs it hat on with the idea of Alien abduction. His version of alien abduction and government conspiracy cover up is really remarkable and comical.
Not really what I would call Darin Morgan’s take on a mythology episode, because none of the plot points made are actually followed up within the main mythology of the series, but a pretty interesting account of it.
The elements that seem to be part of the conspiracy play more like its own version of the X-Files mythology where things exist such as the men in black and a Ray Harryhausen alien creature.
                                                            Investigation
There is difficulty in finding the truth when perceptions are so different. Again this takes on how in Clyde Bruckman’s inability to vocalize how his power to see how people will die works.
"I just know.”
His understanding of how things works are different from what Mulders understanding is and there is truth there but we can never fully understand all of how it works, only the outcome.
I think Darin Morgan is playing with that idea here that peoples perception of investigation influence how they explain to themselves or to others.
Notes:
This is one of Darin Morgan’s most paramount X-Files episodes; it plays on the established mythology and examines the series with some reflective humor.
On the season three DVD this episode is the only one to have a commentary track with Darin Morgan, where he is joined by episode director Rob Bowman.
On the commentary Darin Morgan is kind of soft spoken but firm in the ideas he wants to get across. He comes off with this really interesting comment about the endings of the X-Files episodes not having closure and he says that he hates that word closure because really what they’re talking about is a satisfying ending. I honestly believe that Darin Morgan never fails to bring on a good ending along with a great story. Darin Morgan’s work truly is the X-Files at its best. It’s only a shame that this episode was his last for the series.
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Alright, thanks for checking out the retrospective series, hope you found the insights somewhat interesting. Please tune in again next time where I will be focusing on Morgan’s “Millennium” episodes, where he gets to direct.
Stay tuned.
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showfollower · 13 years
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The Television Writers Pantheon: Darin Morgan
Hello reader, 
Welcome to this blog’s television writer’s retrospective series column called “The Television Writers Pantheon.” 
For this column I will be inducting a writer into the TV writer’s pantheon by reviewing the episodes of TV series that they had written for with episode by episode analysis of how they handle the shows characters and themes. I will be offering my insights and thoughts on each episode as well.  
The first TV writer that I wanted to include in this series is Darin Morgan, because I’ve been a fan of his since his work on the X-Files where his breakout writing on standalone episodes such as “Humbug” and “Clyde Bruckmans Final repose” made me aware that a writer can have an individual voice in a television series. I hadn’t at the time realized that a television writer could be individualistic; I had thought that TV writer’s job was like a technical procedural process like an assembly line for entertainment. I used to believe that Television was formulaic and if you wanted originality then you would have to go to the movies.  
It was watching these episodes that I became fascinated with Television writing in general and found myself looking for more stand out writer’s work in television.
Since then I’ve discovered many other really great television writers such as Bryan Fuller and Joss Whedon and have became familiar with the show runners role in a television series as well as how a television writers room can allow for a personal voice to shine through at times.   
The writer’s personal voice is now something that I look for whenever I watch Television critically and do believe that there are many notable writers that I would like to look back on and appreciate their work. That is what I intend to do here.
 This series of posts will be broken down into parts that should allow for me to organize my reviews better. The focus for this post will be mostly to overview Darin Morgan’s television bibliography. My next post will feature Darin Morgan’s work on The X-Files, and that will be followed by a post on Millennium and so forth. The way I see it this will allow for me to be concise in my reviewing as I try to include a writer’s continuing work for this series.  
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Brief biography
Darin Morgan began his career in television as an actor and an unpublished screenwriter, who was just doing bit parts on shows such as "21 Jump Street" where his brother Glen was a writer. 
During the 1990's his brother Glen Morgan along with his writing partner James Wong were tapped to contribute to the development of a new SF TV series called "the X-Files" along with series creator Chris Carter. The series was a great success and picked up for a second season wherein Glen Morgan would then ask his brother Darin if he would be interested in contributing to the SF series.
Darin Morgan’s first work on the X-Files was as an actor in the second season episode portraying “a monster of the week” creature called "the fluke man." Darin Morgan next contribution to the series was in aiding Glen and James to conceptualize a story entitled "Blood" which gave Darin Morgan his first published writing credit.
Later Darin Morgan would graduate to writing full scripted episodes for the at the time really moody TV series. His first script introduced a sense of humor to the series that hadn’t been exploited up until then, which opened up a whole new scope of storytelling possibilities for the show. “Humbug” became a favorite episode amongst X-files fans. He followed it up with 3 more episodes for the third season before leaving the series to work on "Millennium" another SF series by Chris Carter.
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While on the show "Millennium" Darin Morgan worked on the series second season only having written two episodes, one of which he had the opportunity to direct.
Darin Morgan then worked on the short lived remake of “Kolchack: the Nightstalker." The series was cancelled so quickly that the episode he had written for never even got produced. Luckily, that script was made available as a special feature on the DVD.
Darin Morgan would later become more of Consultant Producer and served on the seldom viewed reboot of "the Bionic Woman" and later on the SF series "Fringe" continuing his predilection for strange SF storytelling.
Recently Darin Morgan had joined with his brother Glen to work on the Cartoon Network’s live action series “Tower Prep” where he has written two episodes of the first season episodes and hopefully more to come.
Darin Morgan, with his career in television writing although seemingly small, is one of the most unique and interesting writers to contribute to the medium. He has a talent for creating larger than life characters that are portrayed honestly and with incredible depth that isn’t often found in television.
It is for this work that I inaugurate Darin Morgan into the Showfollower’s Pantheon of TV Writers.
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Television bibliography
The X-Files:
Season 2
               Episode 02 “Blood” (story by credit)
               Episode 20 “Humbug”
Season 3
               Episode 04 “Clyde Bruckman’s final repose”
               Episode 12 “War of the Coprophages”
               Episode 20 “Jose Chung’s ‘From outer space’”
Millennium:
Season 2
               Episode 09 “Jose Chung’s ‘Doomsday Defense’”
               Episode 21 “Somehow Satan got behind me” (also directed)
Night stalker:
Season 1
               Episode 12 the M Word (never produced)
Tower Prep:
Season 1
               Episode 06 “Book Report”
               Episode 09 “Dreams”
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Now concludes my overview of Darin Morgan’s work thus far. On my next post I will be continuing my retrospective series on Darin Morgan with his work on the conspiracy riddled paranormal paranoia SF series “The X-Files.” Stay tuned.
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Awesomeness!!!
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"Stay back, psychos! Or I'll slit your throats and bathe in your blood!"
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Stray Observations: Pop music in Sitcom television
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  Hello Reader,   Welcome to a new column that I’ll be posting under the title Stray Observations. In this column I will post my musings on television related subject matters.    For this first post I wanted to present some of the thoughts I’ve been having about the usage of popular music in some of the currently airing sitcoms that I've been watching this fall 2011 season. Okay, so here goes:  
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I was actually inspired to write this post after viewing the latest episode of the NBC sitcom Up All Night starring Christina Applegate and Will Arnett called “Birthing”. At one moment in this episode Christina Applegate’s character, as she was going through the motions of labor, breaks into the song “Lightning Crashes” by mid 1990’s alternative band Live which then caused me to burst out loud laughing at both the absurdity as well as the obscurity of the reference. That song “Lightning Crashes” is about rebirth and reincarnation and the circle of life and death and was oddly appropriate for that moment, as much as it was strange and off putting. It got me thinking whether the average viewer would appreciate that reference. Could that joke be made more accessible by using a more popular song with a clearer point of reference or is that specific music choice significant enough that it reveals character and also how it serves the series as a whole? I want to say that the answer is closer to the latter because they establish Reagan as a person who is music savvy who may have been in tune to that alternative scene of the 90’s and that that may have colored her youth in a way. It seemed to me believable that she would invoke that song at that moment. Yet in a previous episode they reveal that Ava, her boss, was an ex R&B band member, similar to TLC, and on that episode they establish Reagan as a member of her entourage, which confused me a little in how that plays into Reagan’s past.
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It seems to me that there is a clash between the writers whom seem to be writing for two separate sitcoms altogether, the one which is a work place comedy with Maya Rudolph, and the other that is a first time parent’s sitcom. That seems to be the issue that this series has been facing in that it doesn’t know what show it wants to be, does it want to be a show that is telling the story of two ex-party animal parents or does it want to be the show about Reagan and her work place shenanigans. It’s desperately trying to be both and I’m not sure how well that’s working out but I give the writer of this last episode a lot of credit for working in that one bit of music reference. I believe it was the writer of the episode who worked that joke in too because she has worked in music references into her other written episode “Cool Neighbors” and she did good in using the song by the band Train “Hey Soul Sista” into a working gag that was also relevant to the plot.
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Music played an interesting role in my being turned off to the recently cancelled show Free Agents. “Free Agents” was a US remake of a British sitcom of the same name about two recently single co-workers who start up a secret sexual relationship. It wasn’t particularly funny but had a decent cast in Hank Azaria and Katharine Hahn. The issue for me was the music they would use to pepper the background for these middle aged characters; they had music from the independent band Cults playing and although I really like that band the music was not fitting within the episodes setting of an upper class restaurant. They wouldn’t be playing anything that obscure for the older patrons that would frequent that place and therefore I was taken out of the story of that episode. The show had other issues as well but I won’t get into that here.
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One of my most irked uses of pop music in current sitcoms has been in the show “New Girl” in not one but two of its episodes. First in the pilot they make a point of the main character Jess sobbingly playing the movie “Dirty Dancing” over and over again which sets up the atrocity that is the awkward bonding moment between the guys and Jess at the end of the episode. It’s supposed to be a genuinely warm and charming moment but I was horrified by how awful it was executed. You’re supposed to feel that these guys love Jess despite her awkward and goofiness and that they are unashamed to be like her in public by singing “The Time of your life.” But there was really no cause for them doing that, really, nor was there any immediacy or stakes or anything substantial to that moment. It was just so forced, uninspired, stock, and just simply put lame. I sometimes like to read pilot scripts of shows to find out what was changed from script to screen and found that originally the movie referenced was Pretty Woman and the song “My favorite things.” Would this have worked better, I don’t know but I actually preferred the pretty woman references in the original script over the obvious dirty dances references made in the pilot episode. I have to say that the song “favorite things” was appropriately changed though, because I think that would’ve been just as horrible as “time of your life” was, if not worse. Maybe Roy Orbisons song Pretty Woman would have worked better for me. Think about it, imagine the three guys coming in and saying yeah we’re all her boyfriends, the waitress exclaims in disbelief “really?” the guys say “yeah, just look at her it’s clear she’s a pretty woman.” Then they break into the song or something. I don’t know it’s not my job to write for this show. All I’m saying is that better choices could’ve been made.  
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I was hoping this type of misuse of music wouldn’t continue on but then they had that wedding episode where Jess and her crew of dudes end up on the dance floor doing the chicken dance in super slow motion to the Phil Collins song “A groovy kind of love.” In theory this should’ve worked, they set up that Jess has her own version of the chicken dance in the beginning of the episode and that’s cool, but then we also set up that Jess needs to tone herself down because they are going to a wedding and she shouldn’t act like herself and it’s just like in the pilot where these guys are mean to her, and she’s like yeah okay I’ll behave and then they all go to the wedding and end up being the ones who screw themselves up by being themselves and are mean to Jess for it, and it doesn’t make any sense. They resolve their issues with Jess by joining her in doing the chicken dance, the very thing that they asked her not to do, but during a real slow song making them all look rather ridiculous. The moral I’m assuming is that these guys need to be more like Jess and less like themselves apparently. As I said before, it should have worked, but something got lost for me in the end product that frankly I was not amused by at all. Phil Collins has a strange effect on me, some of his music makes me sullen upon hearing it, groovy kind of love, in the air tonight and against the odds always hit my core and affects my sad factor. The juxtaposition of the chicken dance to a slow song also came off weird to me because at first I wasn’t sure what was going on, they just started dancing really slow and only after 8 minutes of them slow dancing did I realize they were doing the chicken dance, the scene ended 18 minutes after my realization, or at least it felt like it. So there are some music choices I noticed that worked for me but I wasn’t sure how it played for general audiences and one from a show that has been cancelled and a couple from a show that is actually doing very well but I have problems with it. Now to close off with a music choice that I think worked for me and I believe the majority of viewers.
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The sitcom Community had an excellent choice of song in its latest episode “Remedial Chaos Theory.” There is so much going right in this last episode but let me just speak on the great pick of song “Roxanne” by the Police. The Community group gathers together to house warm Troy and Abed in their new apartment when the pizza delivery guy rings the buzzer Jeff rolls a dice to decide which of them has to go get it creating as Abed explains as six different timelines. Within many of the timeline Britta plays on the speakers from her ipod the police song “Roxanne” and tries to sing along to it but each time is stopped by Jeff. The song choice is subtle and could’ve been anything really but I think it was very well utilized because it showed depth of the Britta character and where her head was at in this episode. Britta is this character who tries is often trying to go against the system and represents that rebellious side of college life where you’re figuring out about politics and sexual revolution and irony but she often goes about it the wrong way or is misinformed or just ruins the point. It’s subtly the case here where she’s smoking marijuana and listening to “the police”, who I think she believes is the white equivalent of Bob Marley, and singing along to the song with a Rastafarian accent. It’s funny in that sense and it fits with the character of Brita and it really doesn’t say anything about the parallel time lines and it doesn’t have to, because that music choice comes from character and that is what I consider to be smart writing. That’s all for now, thanks for reading. Tune back in next time for more television commentary.
Just a bit of an update on the podcast, New episodes are coming soon, I would say early November at the latest. I have a set of five reviews upcoming to look out for and then another five to come some time after that so keep an ear out for them.
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Kill The Pilot! TV Review Podcast Show Notes : Episode 7
Kill the Pilot! TV Review podcast Episode 7.
TV Pilot Review # 5
To listen to the podcast click on the above link.
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   2 Broke Girls
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   Tags: Alice, Laverne & Shirley, Mr show, 2BG
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   Music Featured:
The Waitresses “girls gotta do” Amazon  Wikipedia 
Blur “Supa Shoppa”  “Lot 105” Amazon  Wikipedia 
Pilot info 
“Pilot”, CBS, original air date: 9/19/2011 
Created by: Michael Patrick King, Whitney Cummings
Written by: Michael Patrick King, Whitney Cummings
Directed by: James Burrow
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  Starring: Kat Denning, Beth Behrs, Garret Morris, Jonathan Kite, and Matthew Moy
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   Brief synopsis
The pilot opens with Max Black (Kat Denning) a muffin making waitress who deals with her ruder customers with a fair amount of sass. She finds her co-worker waitress taking time out of her shift to copulate in the kitchen freezer leading to that waitress’s termination. The restaurant hires a new girl; Caroline Channing (Beth Behrs) to replace her who turns out to be a down and out ex-rich girl who gained money troubles after her dad had been caught stealing funds from his company. Now Caroline is trying to deal with her new poverty stricken status by becoming a waitress. Max is told by the owner to train Caroline and so Max does so grudgingly and discovers that Caroline knows nothing of how to wait on tables, Max takes pity on Caroline and allows her to keep her job.  
Max continues to finds more things to pity about Caroline as she finds her on a subway car having slept there since she has no place to stay. Max takes her in despite the fact that Caroline had been making a profit off of red velvet muffins that Max makes for the restaurant.  
While Caroline is staying at Max’s apartment, Max’s bf Robbie comes on to her. Caroline pushes him away and then tells Max what had happened but Max instead gets angry with Caroline and leaves her to fend for herself in a crowded restaurant. When Max arrives back at her apartment she finds her bf Robbie cheating on her. She breaks up with him and heads back to the restaurant and reconciles with Caroline. 
They celebrate their newfound friendship by housing Caroline’s pet horse and planning their financial endeavors to open a bake shop, wherein the only need $250,000.  
The episode ends summing up their current total towards that goal. 
$387.25
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Three questions
Would I watch the series?
Would I recommend watching the pilot as a standalone?
Will it last?
Show Links
Itunes (not currently available)
Amazon (download unavailable)
Wiki
Coming up next: THE SECRET CIRCLE
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