Tag Archives: CBS

2014 Fall Television Season Podcast

John Mayo, of ComicBookpage, and Kay Kellam, of PopArtsPlace, discuss the 2014 fall television season.

The primary focus is on the new shows of common interest on “major” networks with some returning shows mentioned. The shows are in order they are expected to premiere.

Shows discussions (shows in parenthesis are returning shows, shows in {} are no longer in production but warranted mention/comparison and discussion):

Gotham, Forever, {New Amsterdam}, Scorpion, {Leverage}, (Sleepy Hollow), (The Blacklist), (Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), (Person of Interest), (Resurrection), Mysteries of Laura, How To Get Away With Murder, (Scandal), (Grey’s Anatomy), (Once Upon A Time), {Once Upon A Time in Wonderland}, (Revenge), (Castle), (The Listener), (Saving Hope), (Doctor Who), Legends, (Rizzoli & Isles), (Perception), Stalker, Gracepoint, {Broadchurch}, The Flash, (Arrow), (The 100), Constantine, (White Collar), State of Affairs, Ascension, Transporter, The Librarians, Galavant, iZombie, Agent Carter, (Justified), (Bitten), CSI Cyber, (CSI), {CSI: New York}, {CSI: Miami}, (NCIS), (NCIS: Los Angeles), (NCIS: New Orleans)

Links:
Discount Comic Book Service: http://www.DCBService.com
Comics Podcast Network: http://www.comicspodcast.com
League of Comic Book Podcasts: http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/

Email us at TheGuys@ComicBookPage.com

Join the discussion on our forum at: http://forum.comicbookpage.com

This podcast episode originated on the Comic Book Page feed and website:http://www.ComicBookPage.com

Madam Secretary – Sundays on CBS

Madam_Secretary_CBS

When I tuned in to the first episode of Madam Secretary, starring Téa Leoni as newly-appointed Secretary Of State Elizabeth McCord I am not sure what I was expecting.  Politics in Washington D.C. should be a given.  A President (Keith Carradine) I would wonder if I had voted for or if these writers were crazy to have decided to put in the White House? Possibly.

What I was not expecting was an intriguing home life that would keep Elizabeth McCord grounded and extraordinarily human.  Tim Daly, as her college-professor husband Henry McCord does not press her to violate confidentiality, and yet manages to give her advice and help her think through problems… and in a very true married couple moment realizes he is not finding the right words to tell his wife both what she needs to hear and what he genuinely wants to say so he simply asks her “tell me what to say!”  And the moment works.

Their children, Alison (Kathrine Herzer) and Jason (Evan Roe) are further used to drive home the point that these are real people, well and realistically used to frustrate their parents, try their parents patience and yet not come across as brats but simply as teenagers struggling to grow into adulthood in modern America.

Elizabeth McCord is a qualified candidate for the role of Secretary of State, who knows the role, who knows the players in Washington, who knows what she wants to accomplish, and understands diplomacy and leaders and leadership as her meal with the King of Swaziland so beautifully shows.

If I was expecting a by the numbers Washington D.C. show, that would explain why I found myself watching something else entirely, because this was compelling real world drama that had politics in it, but was not about political parties trying to obstruct one another, rather it was about running our country.

I am unsure where the dynamic between a few characters is going, and there is the potential that a few things I will not like is going to happen — but sometimes that is part of the fun in watching a show like this.  There is a reason for that expression ‘character you love to hate’.  Sometimes it works.  Time will tell if this is one of those cases, or not.

For now, I am glad I tuned in to the first episode, and I will continue watching, eager to see how the events unfold in this variation on our nation’s capitol.

Links:
Madam Secretary @ IMDB
Official CBS Website: http://www.cbs.com/shows/madam-secretary/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/#!/MadamSecretary
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MadamSecretary
Instagram: MADAMSECRETARYCBS
CBS Tweet: https://twitter.com/CBSTweet

Cast on Twitter:

Tim Daly @TimmyDaly
Patina Miller @patinamiller
Erich Bergen @erichbergen
Geoffrey Arend @GeoffreyArend
Kathrine Herzer @KathrineHerzer

Returning Shows – Person of Interest and Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Person-of-Interest-poi-banner
As the new season starts it is time to refresh your memory and recall where favorite characters were last seen.

As Person of Interest starts its 4th season on CBS Finch and Reese are back in the shadows, hiding now from Samaritan a competing machine using the very cameras that their machine had been relying on during the previous three seasons to help them.

Where Finch had set parameters within which his machine worked to protect people, then he closed the system, with hopes that would protect it from corruption, and abuse.  He never intended for his machine to evolve to the point it would choose one person over another, assign greater value to one person vs. another, but rather it was meant to place law and life above terrorism and crime.

At the end of Season 3 we were left with the belief that there was still hope, left in Padora’s Box (Finch’s Machine?) but Samaritan, the competing machine was now online, having targeted all those the machine thought might harm it, or run counter to it’s mission, the one who we hoped would control this great and powerful machine now turned to the machine and asked, “What are your commands for us?”

It served as a rather chilling end to a season that drifted further and further afield from the initial premise of people given nothing but a Social Security number, and based on that trying to figure out if this person they were interested in needed protection from someone, or needed help finding the right path and doing the right thing.

S.H.I.E.L.D.-logo-6Another show returning tonight is Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

S.H.I.E.L.D. is a show that John Mayo, of ComicBookPage.com and I have on our list of shows we plan to do a podcast about, there is truly that much to say about it.  The first season was uneven from one month to the next, but over the course of the season, especially in the second half, an interesting arc unfolded, and gave me hope that the second season of this show will find its feet.

Some fans lost hope early in the first season, before the show started to really understand itself, and that is a shame, as the show does deserve a second chance in that case.  The tie-in with Captain America: Winter Soldier was interesting, and while that movie is not required viewing to understand the season, it does enhance the audience’s understanding of the plot in S.H.I.E.L.D.

Perhaps more to the point, in a great many ways the Captain America movie provided a focus for the television show, and a destination for the first season, and a launch point for the second season.  The show which had a basic concept when it first hit the air has a specific goal and mission as the second season begins, and I believe it can only benefit from this.

As so often happens these days on television, several of the characters ended the first season in peril, and there is a lot to be said for re-watching the season 1 finale (available on the ABC website) before season 2 begins, to refresh your memory about who is healthy as can be, who is suffering in the wake of recent events, who has been dealt with, and who we may still need to deal with — I know I plan to re-watch the Beginning of the End today before prime time starts up.

If you don’t have time to watch Season 1 episodes before Season 2 begins tonight, wikipedia has brief recaps of each of the episodes, and the ABC website has more in-depth recaps available (click the word recap to the right of any episode).

Shield

Scorpion on CBS

Scorpion is, in some ways, an incredibly simple premise, and yet it has wonderful potential, perhaps because of the uncomplicated nature of the premise.  Simply put, it is the story of socially awkward geniuses working with homeland security to solve the security problems facing modern America, and working with this group is one woman, the mother of a genius, who helps them interact with the world.


Scorpion is a show about the ultimate think tank that stands between America, and those who would threaten our country. Billed as a high octane show, the premise is full of potential for action packed scenes, tense moments that come down to the wire, but also drama that will pull at the heart strings and hit the emotional core of the audience as potentially very real characters deal with the kinds of threats the audience does not want to ever imagine could be real.

And in the first episode, watch for Alimi Ballard (Numb3rs) and Ernie Hudson (Ghost Busters and too many other appearances to count).

Tune in to the series premiere of SCORPION, Monday, Sept. 22 (9:00-9:59, ET/PT), on the CBS Television Network.

And keep up with the show on-line:

Official CBS Website: http://www.cbs.com/shows/scorpion
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ScorpionCBS
Twitter: http://twitter.com/ScorpionCBS
Instagram: Scorpion_CBS
CBS Tweet: https://twitter.com/CBSTweet

Cast on Twitter:

Elyes Gabel    @ElyesGabel
Jadyn Wong   @JadynJWong
Ari Stidham    @AriStidham
Robert Patrick    @RobertPatrickT2
Katharine McPhee    @KatharineMcPhee