I may have been absent from the Interwebs for a lot of this summer (it's strange how real life will keep you busy sometimes), but don't worry, I haven't been watching and studying any less television than usual. In fact, I've been saving up some of my excitement and analysis for exactly this moment: the proverbial eve of the fall TV season kick-off. These are a few of the shows I'll be watching and reviewing subject, as always, to change (except for Parks and Rec, which I will watch/love till the end of time). And in case you've been sitting on your sofa staring blankly at your television set and awaiting my instructions as to what you should watch, here they are for your perusal:
Mondays:
How I Met Your Mother (CBS, premieres September 24th)
*Where we left off: Barney's future bride was revealed (it's Robin!); Lily and Marshall had a baby (and promptly brought it with them to the bar); Ted and Victoria rode off into the sunset together (sort of).
*What's next: With the writers, at least according to recent interviews with Bays and Thomas, working as though this will be the show's last season, it seems the tying up of some loose ends is on the horizon. We have to figure out how the heck Barney and Robin make it to the alter (remember he's newly engaged to stripper Quinn in the present), as well as how Ted ruins things with Victoria (again) and arrives at the show's titular moment at long last. It should prove to be an interesting season, and hopefully there will be significantly less time wasted with so many plots to unravel in so short a time.
*Wish list: I'd love to see an announcement (sooner rather than later) that HIMYM will in fact wrap up after this season. I think 24 episodes is more than enough time to wrap up the loose ends still dangling if the writers are deliberate about it, and if Thomas and Bays are permitted to stretch this journey out any further the cracks are really going to start to show.
(NEW SHOWS!) Tuesdays:
Go On (NBC, premiered September 9th)
The primary reason this show works well is that the execs at NBC have
stopped fucking around and finally returned Matthew Perry to the role he
belongs: Chandler Bing. Yes, Chandler's aged a decade or so and he's
got a different name and job and blah, blah, blah; but essentially this
character is nearly identical personality-wise. It's as though we're
seeing future Chandler following the death of Monica, whom we all knew
kept him grounded, and though he's surely bereaved, he's also hilarious.
Better
than that, though, this show actually seems to have heart, and not in a
jammed-down-your-throat kind of way. It's ballsy for a primetime
sitcom to deal with something like grief, but the level of accuracy Go
On supplies in the pilot episode alone is definitely encouraging, and a
good sign of things to come. Hopefully NBC doesn't err on the side of
their usual instinct, which is to water down the honesty of some of
their best programs (Community and its new team of writers springs to
mind, not to mention the soon-to-wrap train wreck that The Office has
become), because that would sacrifice a lot of what thus far makes this show
appealing.
The Mindy Project (FOX, premieres September 25th)
This is a show that seems designed to stand up well beside its lineup-mate, FOX's New Girl, which was of course one of last year's runaway hits (not to mention the source of way too much Deschanel Hype in my life). The Mindy Project follows Mindy Kaling, who you'll recognize as Kelly Kapoor from The Office, in the early stages of her career as an OB/GYN, as well as the battle-worn (and hilarious) stage of her romantic life. It's lighthearted, it's laugh-out-loud funny, and it's identifiable, which is really all you can hope for in a pilot episode. I can foresee problems similar to those found in the early run of New Girl, when it became clear that the amount of "isn't-she-quirky" based humor needed to be toned down-- in The Mindy Project, it's easy to lose sight of Mindy's role as (in theory, at least) an everywoman character in the more grating aspects of the character's personality.
This one also has an excellent supporting cast going for it, and I'm hopeful that the writers will gradually shift some of the focus so expended on Mindy in the pilot to some of these already very interesting personalities.
Wednesdays:
Happy Endings (ABC, premieres October 23rd)
*Where we left off: Season 2's finale brought us another wedding, this time between friends of the gang Derrick and Eric. We saw Penny struggle with possible feelings for Dave, who ended the night instead with erstwhile fiance Alex, while Brad and Jane tried to come to a compromise on how to better communicate with each other.
*What's next: It doesn't seem that this Alex/Dave/Penny triangle is going to be too much of an overwrought thing (especially with rumors of Penny getting a new semi-longterm love interest), which is excellent news for a show that's already brilliant without the addition of needless melodrama.
*Wish list: More of Adam Pally's Max and less of Elisha Cuthbert's Alex (mainly just less of the emphasis on her being the dumb blonde of the group); more viewers for what I guarantee is the funniest show you're not watching.
Thursdays:
Parks and Recreation (NBC, premieres September 20th)
*Where we left off: One Leslie Knope is about to take Pawnee City Council by storm after triumphing in the season finale's election. She'll be working on a long-term relationship with Ben, who has taken a job in Washington D.C. and who has somewhat inexplicably recruited April to work as his intern.
*What's next: A Ben/Leslie shake-up, but according to executive producer Mike Schur it's not the kind you'd expect. Also, some long overdue maturity for Tom, who last season appeared to backtrack a bit following his Entertainment 720 venture. But the best news is that by the end of the season premiere, the Tom/Ann debacle will really and truly be a thing of the past.
Fridays:
Community (NBC, premieres October 19th)
*Where we left off: In a season finale that really would've made a great conclusion to the series, we saw everyone going their almost separate ways in relative happiness (yes, even Jeff, who decided to finally seek out his long-estranged father). It was almost enough to make you not want a fourth season. Almost.
*What's next: The show's last-minute salvation last spring means that some tweaks are going to have to take place (this is even without the team of new writers and the firing of Dan Harmon, the show's creator). We'll apparently be meeting Jeff's father, there will be an Inspector Spacetime convention, and the gang will pay homage (sort of?) to The Hunger Games in the season premiere.
*Wish list: I don't have too many particular demands, I just hope that the show will still be recognizable as the delightful, wonderfully weird thing it is after the new writers have gotten their hands on it.
Honorable Mentions:
30 Rock, The Office (Thursdays, NBC): Both are entering their final seasons, hopefully some laughs will be resurrected before the end.
Grey's Anatomy (Thursdays, ABC): Yup, they're still kicking over at Seattle Grace. And this season promises to be every bit as miserable and death-filled as you could possibly hope.
Here's to a wonderful 2012/2013 television season.
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