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wonderwoman

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Posts posted by wonderwoman

  1. "I was worried Cary was scheming against Alicia. I'm still not convince that "day off" business was on the level"

    Me too! I kept waiting for something to happen -- especially after Cary wouldn't let Alicia off the elevator.

    Reminded me of Checkov's observation that a gun shown in the 1st act needed to be fired by the 3rd. Maybe the writers were just trying to fake us out, but just leaving it lying there was frustrating.

    • Love 2
  2. The scenes last night between Jackie and Hillary and Kate and Warren are why I so love this show. Still no news about a 2nd season and I'm getting worried that it will be one more one-season wonder. The new sitcom I loved this season, "The Crazy Ones" looks to be a goner (though not for lack of promotion on the part of CBS).

    ABC promotes the hell out of "The Goldberg's," yet I rarely see any promos for "Trophy Wife." And it would certainly benefit from a stronger time slot, say after "Modern Family."

    • Love 1
  3. Of all the reasons I can only hate watch this so (and it's not for lacking of trying to like it. Hell, given the cast and Kamins as the show runner, I should LOVE it), this episode illustrated the main one: despite its blatant emotional manipulation, Parenthood has never -- ever -- made me cry.

    I may be in the minority here (or maybe not), but sad scenes like Kristina at her dying friend's bedside, or Amber and Ryan, never develop organically; rather, they're announced in all CAPS, italicized, bolded and in quotes, like "laugh" and "applause" signs for live television audiences.

    Part of it is likely the large cast; with so many characters, there's not enough time to let the emotions unfold. I've always suspected that the other side of this is the suits at NBC, because given the shows Jason Katmins has done in the past -- Friday Night Lights -- hard to believe he's forgotten how to write with subtlety and nuance.

    • Love 2
  4. In an odd way, this family reminds me of a straight arrow version of Parenthood's Braverman's. They're never, EVER wrong, there are never any consequences when they are (but, they're not, because they're the Reagan's).

    The worst, of course, is Danny. Over on TWoP, many posters noted that IRL, his flagrant flouting of suspect's constitutional rights (and police procedure in general), would have led to him being fired (and sued) a long time ago. And it wouldn't be so bad if they played the shades of gray and explored the ambiguities of being a cop.

    Early in this episode I had a glimmer of hope that there finally might be some consequences. But alas...

  5. "Makes you wonder what Sarah Ramos did or who she pissed off, b/c The Invisible Braverman actually drove real story back in the day"

    Actually, the actress is in NYC at Columbia. So, it was her choice. That said, they miss so many opportunities to even mention her, particularly during Kristina's breast cancer story.

    Also: I don't seem to be able to have the quote appear in that little box. Am I missing something, or is it because I'm posting from an Ipad?

  6. "I think it would have been a REALLY interesting dynamic if Max had a brother or sister who was normal. Maybe a year or two older,so they could maybe keep an eye on him and smooth the way for him in school when mom and dad aren't there, plus the frustration when mom and dad spend all of their time on Max and his pwecious feews."

    He does -- her name is Haddie. She's a sophmore (I think) at Cornell,

    • Love 3
  7. Word to everything ElectricBoogaloo said above.

    Entitled, insular, no boundaries, zero capacity for self-reflection -- and never, ever any consequences for the Braverman's. I've never gotten through an episode without screaming at the screen. Don't know if I could continue watching without a place to vent.

  8. The three I've saved on my DVR:

    The aformentioned "Our Fifteen Minutes": love when Jamie smacks Paul as he's trying not to watch Lisa's striptease.

    "The Last Scampi": Murray acts out as Jamie and Paul argue about their mothers, then meets his mother

    "Her Houseboy, Coco": while a pregnant Jamie is confined to bedrest and quiet, the heat is off, Ira needs Paul to sign a contract, and the entire cast stops by.

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