Sunday, November 27, 2022

THE CALLING - ONE OF THE BEST SHOWS OF 2022 - MUST WATCH TV - PEACOCK ORIGINAL


 I've written in the past that all of the content currently being produced is not sustainable. I stand by that thesis. You cannot have close to 600 series produced per year (that's domestic) and expect to have filmed entertainment survive this way. I'm not even counting what passes for a description of a movie. I repeat - series alone stands at a near 600 per year. 

To find what you may want to watch is difficult and in the "old days" one would rely on word of mouth and promotional trailers/ads/spots. That went out the proverbial window. Try going to lunch with a few people. None of the people you are breaking bread with have ever even heard of what you are watching and you haven't heard of anything they are watching. 

The best series of the year is Dark Winds on AMC and AMC+. Absolutely outstanding series. One of the few times this year or even in recent years where I sat back and thought I am looking forward to a second season. Dark Winds is great television and I write that knowing some of the acting was pretty second rate, but the writing and story were so good you let a few subpar performances go by the wayside. The question becomes - how many people have seen this great series? AMC+ only has eleven million subscribers and they all aren't watching Dark Winds.  

The other series that is so entertaining is the PBS mystery series, Miss Scarlet & The Duke. The first season premiered in 2021, but the second season just finished its run on Masterpiece Mystery and it is delightful. Kate Phillips (Peaky Blinders, The Crown, The Aftermath) and Stuart Martin (Medici, Jamestown) are both terrific actors and in an earlier era they both would have become big stars. With all of the content today, no one becomes a big star. Not enough people view these series to catapult an actor to big stardom. Having written that, Miss Scarlet & The Duke is a big hit based on our current standards of what a big hit is. It managed to get nearly nine million viewers in the U.S alone and that is a near phenom in today's marketplace.

NOW WE GET TO THE CALLING...

The Calling is a Peacock original. Unfortunately, that is bad right out of the gate, since Peacock (Owned by Comcast/NBC Universal) is one of the weakest streaming services. Few covet having it, but Peacock managed to produce one of the best series of the year. 

Season One has eight episodes, but they are split into two separate stories with one of those stories hanging around for the back four. The first four episodes are epic. Superb writing and acting. The series has several executive producers and these aren't lightweights. David E. Kelley (Big Little Lies, The Practice, Boston Legal) is clearly one of the best scriptwriters of the last 30 years. Barry Levinson (Donnie Brasco, Rain Man, The Natural, Avalon, Diner) is one of the most gifted filmmakers of the last 40 years. Jonathan Shapiro, Peter Traugott and Avi Nir round out the EP team and all of them have worthy backgrounds, so it is no surprise they would all gather together to make one of the best series of 2022.

This is a surprisingly intelligent series, since much of what is available today is not in the least bit smart. The cast is terrific with the four leads all doing magnificent work. Jeff Wilbusch plays Avraham Avraham (that is correct, first and last name are the same). Avraham is a detective with the NYPD. He's a distinctively original character. He is a practicing Orthodox Jew who reads from the Torah, prays in Hebrew, mentions Job, Cain and Jesus in his musings. Wilbusch (Keep Breathing, Oslo) is absolutely fantastic in the lead role. Charming without trying and totally believable even in situations that seem out-of-place. Juliana Canfield portrays his partner (he never had one before). The always terrific Michael Mosley plays Detective Earl Malzone and Karen Robinson is Captain Helen Davies. Robinson, as always, just shines in the role of their boss. 

The Calling deserves a shot of airing on the big network in the Comcast/NBC Universal world. Hopefully, NBC (the original Peacock) will give The Calling a broadcast network try. If this show had a wider world opened for them, the audience would grow and this show deserves to grow! Network television isn't dead yet. We see with the wide popularity of ABC's Alaska Daily that network television still thrives if you provide a show people want to watch. 

Must see TV. Watch The Calling

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Saturday, November 5, 2022

AMERICA SAYS - TRIBUTE TO A GREAT AMERICAN GAME SHOW

 


This is my opinion...

America Says premiered on the Game Show Network in the summer of 2018 and the delightful and always entertaining game/quiz show is currently in its fifth season. It has become a huge hit for GSN and its distributor Sony. Fortunately, the show is now a mainstay on GSN. America Says is hosted by John Michael Higgins. Higgins is certainly one of the most talented and downright wittiest of people in all of television and film. Higgins has appeared in dozens of television series in both starring and guest-starring roles, along with many roles in feature films and of course, he is well employed by major advertisers.

By nature, I am not a game show/quiz show watcher, but I thoroughly enjoy watching this series which pits two teams against one another in attempting to figure out the answers to a particular question. Admittedly, some of the questions are far easier than others, so one team at times seems highly disadvantaged, but that is the nature of the proverbial beast. Also, in the final round the questions often seem way too difficult for the average team (well, most of the teams are average) and why after five seasons is the grand prize still sitting at $15,000? Okay, so I've criticized the series, but I actually enjoy the series and set it on the DVR for all new episodes. Oh, one more criticism before I return to applauding the series. If you don't win the $15,000 you get stuck with a $1000 victory for four people. I'm not quite sure it is worth going on for a split of $250 per player.

Back to the merits of the series. I stopped watching Jeopardy after Alex Trebeck passed away. I managed to view a few of the early guest hosts and I gave up completely after the Aaron Rodgers (quarterback of the Green Bay Packers who had at one point won a celebrity Jeopardy) run. I stopped watching because I thought Rodgers was a perfect host and I knew he wasn't coming back. Obviously, he is a future Hall of Fame NFL player who was about to sign one of the largest athlete deals in history, but his talent on the field meant we weren't going to get him as a host of Jeopardy.  

After much fanfare of who would be named the permanent host (quasi scandals included), the powers that be selected the historic Jeopardy champion, Ken Jennings. Jennings clearly has a mind filled with lots of information, but he is as dull as the dirt that surrounds the marigold plants in the garden. He's a knowledge based wunderkind, but he is not a host of any show, let alone the legendary Jeopardy. The current executive producer of the series is Michael Davies. In fairness, I once worked with Michael Davies and Davies is a delightful and smart guy. If I were at Sony, I'd give him a shot at hosting Jeopardy

This takes me back to America Says. America Says is not a mind bending think tank like Jeopardy (even though Jeopardy used to be a much more difficult show to win than it is today); and it is not like you need to be a brainiac, but you have to have a mind stored with lots of information to win and you better be kind of/sort of charming while doing it. 

America Says is one of the more entertaining diversions in a television landscape filled with 560 series per year. Imagine that. All of that television and most of it is awful. I watch some high brow series, some news, some nature shows and a few films here and there, but I DVR America Says and I am thoroughly entertained. 

John Michael Higgins should have been selected to host Jeopardy. He's smart, witty, clever, quick and wildly entertaining.

Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022