Chicago - A message from the station manager

By Scott Buckner

The biggest collection of head cases any American network has ever had the balls to produce in television history returned to FX with a rerun of the fourth season opener of Rescue Me. While the networks serve us reality-show slop and bad sitcoms and then wonders where all the viewers have gone, recovering boozer Tommy Gavin (Denis Leary) and the men of NYFD Station 62 are back elevating into an art from the state of being incredibly fucked in the head by bad childhoods and worse adulthoods. It’s no wonder guys like this don’t mind going into blazing warehouses. For some of them, death would be easier and cheaper than the years of therapy it would take to undo the messes they’ve become.

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Posted on June 19, 2007

TV’s Virtuous Assault

By The Beachwood TV Values Affairs Desk

The Sun-Times published a column on Saturday asking “Does Too Much TV Lead To Decaying Moral Values?” Gosh, we certainly hope so. Especially if that means leading us to a society more tolerant, less hateful, more compassionate, and less repressed than what the author favors. Let’s take a look.
Does too much TV lead to decaying moral values? Heavy TV viewers more permissive about sex, abortion and homosexuality: survey
BY BRIAN FITZPATRICK
Couch potatoes, beware: Someday, you might be saying “the TV made me do it.”
A new special report by the Culture and Media Institute indicates that watching too much television could be hazardous to your moral health.

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Posted on June 18, 2007

What I Watched Last Night

By Scott Buckner

Welcome back to hell, everyone. Chronically pissed-off Scottish chef Gordon Ramsay was back last night to guide us through a third expletive-laden season of failure and humiliation in Fox-TV’s Hell’s Kitchen – a show that might as well be called Get The Fuck Out Of My Fucking Kitchen, You Fucking Worthless Lazy-Arse Pieces Of Fucking Shit.
In last night’s two-hour extravaganza, which repeated last Monday’s premiere episode, we met 12 chef wannabes looking to win a $250,000-a-year salary (plus profit-sharing) as head chef at the Green Valley Ranch Resort in Las Vegas, which we last saw on TV as the home base of the American Casino reality show that got a little too real.
To win the Hell’s Kitchen chef-off, our contestants have to prove to Ramsay that they possess both the backbone to withstand his verbal abuse and the basic cooking skills to actually run a kitchen that serves high-falutin’ cuisine – all while cooking for crowds of real, high-falutin’ people in the Hell’s Kitchen restaurant. To prevent the guests from being food poisoned or notes hurriedly scrawled in pencil saying “Help Me” being stashed under customers’ cuts of Beef Wellington, Ramsay has to approve every appetizer and entree dish that goes out.

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Posted on June 12, 2007

What I Watched Last Night

By Scott Buckner

Back in 1995, Court TV brought everything that was sordid and wrong with the O.J. Simpson and the Menendez brothers trials into the living room of anyone who had cable TV. Since there hasn’t yet been a trial of the century this century to justify the network sucking up space on the dial, owner Time Warner decided it will dump the Court TV name in January 2008 in favor of something that reflects a move to programming about “real people and real situations.”
You know, because real women on trial for poisoning their real husbands aren’t real situations. On top of that, in a drastic move to get trashy America and old people to finally break down and buy computers and high-speed Internet connections, the company announced that actual trial coverage will be aired only on the Web.
If last night’s Speeders and Getting A Ticket In America is any indication of what the new Court TV is to become, I have a suggestion for its new name: Succhiamo!

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Posted on June 8, 2007

What I Watched Last Night

By Scott Buckner

I’m glad the data-entry stoner in charge of my satellite TV program guide at 2 a.m. this morning was promising “super heavyweights arm wrestling” on ESPN2. Otherwise, I wouldn’t have found the taped replay of the previous evening’s NCAA Division I Women’s College World Series softball finals in Oklahoma City between Arizona and Tennessee. It was a do-or-die game for Arizona, which trailed 1-0 in the best-of-three series. I was looking forward to some good heavyweight arm rasslin’, but I stayed with the softball because I’m a guy, and I naturally welcome three-hour events involving a whole bunch of attractive college women. Especially when a TV camera spends practically the entire time trained on their backsides.

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Posted on June 7, 2007

24 Hours With Current TV

By The Beachwood Cutting Edge TV Affairs Desk

Comcast Ch. 125 (Northwest 2 & 3 – Standard)
June 5-6, 2007
Al Gore’s Current TV says they slice their programming into pods of just a few minutes each, but here’s how their schedule looks on the Comcast viewing guide.
5 p.m.: Exciting New Excitement
5:30 p.m.: Trust Me On This One
6 p.m.: Man, What a Surprise

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Posted on June 6, 2007

What I Watched Last Night

By Scott Buckner

Bravo began its Sunday programming day at midnight with a showing of The Terminator a film which has now taken on same slightly washed-out look as movies shown on WLS-TV at 3 a.m.
It’s 1984 in Los Angeles and cyborg Arnold Schwarzenegger has traveled 40 years back in time from a post-apocalyptic Los Angeles to scare the shit out of a garbage truck driver by appearing naked in an alley and stealing clothes from community college-level gangbangers too skinny to have clothes that would actually fit him. Now dressed like Michael Jackson, Arnold begins to lay the foundation for his gubernatorial campaign with a thorough cleansing of the voter rolls, starting by shooting every constituent named Sarah Connor.

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Posted on June 4, 2007

TV Plot Keywords Vol. I

By The Beachwood TV Plot Affairs Desk

According to IMDB.com.
1. M*A*S*H
Army Nurse | Clairvoyant | Ignorance | Alcoholic | Immaturity | Alcoholism | Strait Jacket | Satire | Surgery | 1950s | Anti War | Army Life
2. One Life to Live
Soap | Sex | Multiple Personality | Borderline | Personality Disorder | Human Relationship | Interracial Relationship
3. MacGyver
Science | Spy | Gilligans Island Character Similarity | Improvisation | Espionage | Hero

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Posted on May 30, 2007

What I Watched Last Night

By Scott Buckner

Um, excuse me, but who on God’s Green Earth thought it would be a sterling idea to turn last night’s two-singer showdown finale of American Idol into the goddamn Oscars? The Academy Awards telecast is a boring, drawn-out affair with a lot of extraneous crap the world could do without occupying 99.9999 percent of the show. So how did we end up with the same thing with last night’s Idol?
I’ve never been an Idol fan, or even a casual follower. For people like me, following Idol is like following Chicago’s professional sports teams or the Indy 500: You might tune in a few times in the beginning just to see who’s crashing and burning, but you’re only there for the big season finale for the free beer and food at someone else’s house. And if the commercials interrupting your eating and drinking and socializing don’t suck, that’s even better.
All the Lost fanatics were at home for that show’s season-ender last night, so that left ESPN baseball diehards and Idol fans to duke it out over TV time at the two gin mills I visited last night. Consequently, I didn’t get to see the whole two-hour Idol finale in its entirety, and the sound was off for most of the snippets I did manage to see. But that didn’t stop me from making some observations anyway.

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Posted on May 24, 2007

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