Monday, September 26, 2011
Music on TV - Week of 09.26.11: Pink Floyd week on Fallon
The week lines up with the reissue of Pink Floyd's entire back catalog, remastered -- 14 albums in total, also put together in a 16-disc box set (The Discovery Studio Album Box Set). On Monday, The Shins -- making their first late night appearance in over four years -- will be performing "Breathe (In the Air)" from The Dark Side of the Moon. Then on Tuesday it's Roger Waters joining Foo Fighters for a version of "In the Flesh?" from Waters' opus The Wall. Wednesday has MGMT reaching back to Syd Barrett-era Floyd with "Lucifer Sam," from 1967's The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. Thursday offers a country version of "Wish You Were Here" (1975's classic album of the same name) by Dierks Bentley. Finally, on Friday, Pearl Jam stop by to perform their version of "Mother," another track from 1979's The Wall.
Elsewhere, as previewed in last week's Music on TV calendar, Radiohead get an unprecedented whole hour episode dedicated to them on The Colbert Report, where they'll perform four songs from 2010's King of Limbs -- along with the unreleased song "The Daily Mail."
Picks for the week
Monday, September 26
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Kelly Rowland
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Fleet Foxes
COMEDY CENTRAL: The Colbert Report: Radiohead (Special One Hour Episode)
FUEL: The Daily Habit:
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Arctic Monkeys
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Nick Mason (Pink Floyd)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: The Decemberists (REPEAT)
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Chris Cornell
Tuesday, September 27
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Glen Campbell
CBS: Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson: Trombone Shorty
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Roger Waters (Pink Floyd)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Butch Walker, Wye Oak
Wednesday, September 28
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: The Knux
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Lisa Hannigan
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: MGMT
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Cliff Martinez
TBS: Conan: Kid Cudi, Daryl Hall
Thursday, September 29
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Givers
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Death Cab For Cutie
COMEDY CENTRAL: The Daily Show with Jon Stewart: Tony Bennett
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: TV on the Radio
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Dierks Bentley
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Laura Marling
TBS: Conan: Portugal.the Man
VH1: Behind the Music: Nelly
Friday, September 30
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: The Airborne Toxic Event
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Pearl Jam
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: The Horrors
PBS: Hugh Laurie: Let Them Talk -- A Celebration of New Orleans Blues: Allen Toussaint, Irma Thomas, Tom Jones, Hugh Laurie
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Tony Bennett
Saturday, October 1
COMEDY CENTRAL: "Weird Al" Yankovic Live! -- The Alpocalypse Tour: "Weird Al" Yankovic
NBC: Saturday Night Live: Lady Antebellum
PBS: Austin City Limits: Mumford & Sons, Flogging Molly
Monday, April 27, 2009
Chuck vs the Ring - I'm Kilroy, Kilroy!
Josh Schwartz said in a recent interview that if Chuck wasn't renewed, this episode "will be one of the least satisfying finales of all time." I have to differ with that in one regard, namely that it's hard to find any circumstance where this finale wouldn't be less than satisfying. From the the opening with Millbarge's Buymoria flag all the way to the game-changing Matrix-referencing ending ("Guys, I know Kung-Fu") it was Chuck firing on all cylinders. If it wasn't the best Chuck episode ever (that would stillb e last week's "Vs the Colonel," it was still quite possibly the most entertaining hour of television all year. And while my living room won't be on fire if it's not renewed, there will definitely be at least some gutteral screams at the news. As Casey says after seeing a few Bartkowski leg kicks, "Chuck me."
I'll try to keep it brief (epic FAIL) for now and get more in tomorrow, but here's few things about the music. Jeffster! We knew they were going to be in the finale, and we've heard just about every "Mr. Roboto" joke in the book, but from now on, Chuck owns the song. If you noticed the song changing throughout it's duration, you weren't hearing things, as it moved into different orchestrations/versions as the action changed. Chris Fedak, in an interview with Alan Sepinwall, laid out three versions that changed with the action. After starting with Jeffster's version (and the crowd reaction to them was priceless,) it moved into composer Tim Jones' orchestrated instrumental version as Bryce walked into the room. Then it subtly slides into the original Styx version as Casey and his team enter the action, before finally settling back into the hilarious Jeffster rendition. As funny as it was, the song kind of fits Chuck's secret (secret, I've got a secret) identity, so the joke even works better in that context.Other musical highlights included the opening with Portland's The Thermals' "Now We Can See," which serves as an ideal quit-the-Buy-More soundrack for Chuck and Casey ("Ditto"). Gramercy Arms' "Looking at the Sun" was an OK choice, but I couldn't help being distracted by knowledge that Sarah Silverman supposedly lent her voice for back-up vocals on the song. The rest are below.
One final hits before I pass out:
Mr Awesome (Bruce Boxleitner) complaining to Awesome about Jeffster: "Why are you letting Sam Kinison and an Indian lesbian ruin your wedding?"
So how was your $5 footlong?
Playlist: Chuck - Episode 2.22
1. "Now We Can See" - The Thermals - Chuck & Casey quit the Buy More
2. "Looking at the Sun" - Gramercy Arms w/ Sarah Silverman - Chuck talks to Ellie/talks to Sarah, pre-wedding
3. "Mr. Roboto" - Styx (three different versions montaged/blended) Jeffster helps stall for time / battle in the reception
4. "Christmas TV" - Slow Club - wedding on the beach
5. "Friday I'm in Love" - The Cure - reception
6. "3 Rounds and a Sound" - Blind Pilot - Sarah and Chuck dance at reception
Previously: Chuck vs Your Stomach, Chuck versus the Colonel - Awesome and Awesomer (Episode 2.21)
Ear on TV: Week of 04.27.09 - The Decemberists

It was nearly three years ago that The Colbert Report put the Decemberists on notice for coat-tailing on Colbert's green screen challenge. The resulting mock feud led to one of the more entertaining half-hours in the short history of the show, with a 'ShredDown' duel between Colbert and Decemberist guitarist Chris Funk. With some controversy, Colbert declared himself, and his stand-in Peter Frampton, the victor. As such, when The Decemberists return on Monday to the scene of the (perfect) crime, they might enact some revenge while also promoting their latest album, Hazards of Love.
It's all in good fun, of course, and it's good thing that Colin Meloy and co. don't take themselves too seriously, given that their latest finds their theatrics knee deep in a prog-folk-rock opera. And considering three of the four identifiers in that genre (that I just made up) would/should made The Colbert Report's Threat Down list, is it any wonder that The Decemberists are Stephen Colbert's musical nemesis?
For those that missed, forgotten, or just want to relive "Rock and Awe: The Countdown to Guitarmageddon" from the last Decemberists/Colbert showdown, here's the 'controversial' hand off from Colbert to Frampton, featuring Henry Kissinger and a 5-necked guitar (borrowed from Cheap Trick's NickRick Nielsen:
Meanwhile, I don't much know what to make of this Asher Roth phenomenon, other than it seems like the inevitable step in the suburbanization of hip-hop. He performs his ode to beer pong and weed, "I Love College", on Kimmel Wednesday, which served as a theme for Spring Break '09. Roth's album Asleep in the Bread Aisle is reminiscent of the party rap of the late eighties (Licensed To Ill, Loc-ed After Dark, etc). His willing embodiment of Stuff White People Like and Don Imus references feel a bit dated if we've truly moved into a 'post-race' Obama era, but perhaps the inevitably of Roth proves we really haven't.
Finally, as if there wasn't enough to watch Monday night (Chuck finale, folks!) you really need to see/record Prince on PBS where he begins the first of a two-night appearance/interview with Tavis Smiley. It's rare we get to hear the Purple One talk much at all, and Smiley actually gets him to open up a bit about childhood and his battles with the record industry, both subjects he has shied away from talking about in the past. Here's a preview clip of him talking about his childhood:
Playlist: Picks for the week
Monday, April 27
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Franz Ferdinand (REPEAT)
COMEDY CENTRAL: The Colbert Report: The Decemberists
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Michael Franti
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Morrissey (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: The Pains of Being Pure at Heart (REPEAT)
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Prince
Tuesday, April 28
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Asher Roth
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: The Duke Spirit (REPEAT)
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Prince, Bria Valente
Wednesday, April 29
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Manchester Orchestra
CBS: Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson: Antony and the Johnsons
FUEL: The Daily Habit: The Whip
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Gomez (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Ben Harper And Relentless7 (REPEAT)
SUNDANCE: Spectacle: Elvis Costello With...: Elvis Costello, Renee Fleming (REPEAT)
Thursday, April 30
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Starsailor
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Santigold (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Adele (REPEAT)
Friday, May 1
FUEL: The Daily Habit: The Hold Steady
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Ziggy Marley
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Cold War Kids (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: The Duke Spirit (REPEAT)
SUNDANCE: Monks: Transatlantic Feedback: The Monks
Saturday, May 2
PBS: Austin City Limits: Lyle Lovett, John Hiatt, Joe Ely, Guy Clark (REPEAT)
Monday, April 20, 2009
Ear on TV: Week of 04.20.09: Tinted Windows
When it news broke last month that members of Smashing Pumpkins, Hanson, Fountains of Wayne and Cheap Trick had formed a band, you can count me in as someone who was waiting on a punch line. But Tinted Windows is far from being a joke. Born out of both a mutual appreciation of The Knack and a desire to hear Taylor Hanson's voice with some loud guitars behind it, Fountain of Wayne's Adam Schlesinger brought a couple songs to Hanson to sing and invited friend and guitarist James Iha to the party. After clicking right away, they started looking for a drummer that could sound like Bun E. Carlos of Cheap Trick, and ended up with the real thing.
The band's self-titled debut, out this week, is a sticky, sweet power-pop gem, the kind of record that wouldn't sound out of place in any of the last 35 years (roughly, spanning Carlos' career). Their timing couldn't be better, given that power pop is back on the charts thanks to Disney acts Jonas Brothers and Miley Cyrus, and if the kids are buying weak pop, you'd think they might feast on the real thing. Hanson still looks like he can make the little girls cry, and a sure-fire single like "Kind Of A Girl" should have the kids eating out of their hand. Their initial live show received mixed reviews at SXSW, but they are reportedly still gelling as a band and will put it to the test with their network television debut on Letterman Tuesday night. Then, two nights later on Fallon, where Questlove of The Roots will no doubt be tweeting about fellow drummer Carlos ("dude is old, but that cat CAN PLAY, SON). Speaking of Twitter, one of the more creative uses of the social networking time-waster has been the way UK hitmaker Lily Allen has used it to give fans a chance to win tickets. Allen (or one of her minions) hides the tickets and tweets a riddle as to their location hours before the show. So in honor of that, here are some riddles for Allen's appearances this week:
lilyroseallen I appear in the daytime, on the alphabet netif we discuss politics, voices will be raised you can bet
Allen appears on The View Tuesday.
lilyroseallen I'm a schlubby comedian who's a Man Show vetsince I broke up with Sarah, I'm f*cking Ben Affleck.
Allen appears on Jimmy Kimmel Tuesday night.
lilyroseallen I'm the elder statesman of hosts and can come off as meanbut if you cancel last minute, I'm the best there's ever been.
Allen appears on Letterman on Friday night.
Playlist: Picks for the week
Monday, April 20
CBS: Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson: Madeleine Peyroux
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: The Killers
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Rick Ross
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Nico Stai (REPEAT)
Tuesday, April 21
ABC: The View: Lily Allen
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Lily Allen
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Tinted Windows
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Ida Maria
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Chester French
Wednesday, April 22
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Paul Weller
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Portugal The Man
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Crystal Antlers
SUNDANCE: Spectacle: Elvis Costello With...: Elvis Costello, Kris Kristofferson, Rosanne Cash, Norah Jones, John Mellencamp (REPEAT)
Thursday, April 23
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: The Dead
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Bonnie "Prince" Billy
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Tinted Windows
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Brett Dennon
SYNDICATION: The Ellen Degeneres Show: Prince
Friday, April 24
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Lil Wayne
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Lily Allen
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Amazing Baby
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Reggie Watts
Saturday, April 25
BBCAMERICA: The Graham Norton Show: Sinéad O'Connor
PBS: Austin City Limits: The Raconteurs, Cat Power (REPEAT)
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Lost "Some Like it Hoth" - That Douche is my Dad
Have I mentioned how much I hate not having any ABC on Wednesday night? Watching it either past midnight (via illegal download - the Fisher/Dish dispute has made me a criminal) or in the morning via ABC.com just makes my Thursdays a near total waste. I mean, there's barely any point in writing about a Lost episode 12-18 hours after it's aired.Placeholder above, music below (rest of post, involving attempt to tie use of Albert Hammond to 'daddy issues' theme, to follow).
Lost - Episode 5.13
1. "It Never Rains In Southern California" - Albert Hammond
2. "Love Will Keep Us Together" - Captain & Tennille
Previously: Is That Freedom Rock? (Episode 5.09)
Monday, April 13, 2009
Spectacle Renewal?
Word on the street is that Spectacle: Elvis Costello with... has been renewed for a second season, to begin airing in December. More to come as details unfold, but for now... Shhhh.
OK, confirmed.
Ear on TV: Week of 04.13.09 - Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Last week's headliner, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, continue their network television attack with appearances on Letterman Tuesday and Fallon on Wednesday, as if taking direction from the title of their latest album, It's Blitz. And with the added exposure, lead singer Karen O seems poised to become this generation's Deborah Harry*.*If I'm dating myself by referencing Blondie, than so be it.
Their appearance on SNL this weekend was even better than advertised (scroll down for video) with David Pajo (Slint) sitting in on keyboards and a surprise rendition of their 2003 hit "Maps" as their second song of the night. The song is still a hipster staple, while also garnering new fans through Rock Band 2, so perhaps it isn't such a surprising choice.
Meanwhile, Letterman is host to New Pornographers band mates A.C. Newman and Neko Case on different nights (Monday and Wednesday). Case appears in support of her hit album Middle Cyclone, while Newman is out in support of his second solo release, Get Guilty, and is bringing the great singer/songwriter Nicole Atkins along with him for the appearance. Is Nicole Newman's new Neko? I dunno, but it was fun to put all those Ns together in a sentence.Other highlights of the week are on a channel I don't get, FUEL network, a place for extreme sport and music. Their The Daily Habit always seems to line up great acts week in and week out, and this is "New York Week," highlighted by a special The Hold Steady performance, which I hear was a very loud taping. Before that, though, FUEL airs a recent sold-out Eagles of Death Metal concert in Hollywood, for their Check 1, 2 series on Monday night. Perhaps it's time I call my provider again and ask why I can't get this channel.
Playlist: Picks for the week
Monday, April 13
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Lily Allen (REPEAT)
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: A.C. Newman and Nicole Atkins
FUEL: Check 1, 2: Eagles of Death Metal
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Amazing Baby
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: The Airborne Toxic Event
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Sara Watkins and John Paul Jones
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Cold War Kids (REPEAT)
Tuesday, April 14
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Mims
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Yeah Yeah Yeahs
CBS: Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson: Brett Dennen
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Adele
Wednesday, April 15
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Neko Case
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Busta Rhymes
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Yeah Yeah Yeahs
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: The Duke Spirit (REPEAT)
Thursday, April 16
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Pete Yorn
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Jonny Lang
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Elmo
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Lykke Li (REPEAT)
Friday, April 17
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Franz Ferdinand
FUEL: The Daily Habit: The Hold Steady
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Ben Harper
SUNDANCE: Sigur Ros: Helma: Sigur Ros
Saturday, April 18
PBS: Austin City Limits: Van Morrison
Monday, April 06, 2009
Chuck versus the Dream Job - Daddy's Gone
So the game-changing Chuck has come and gone, and as many problems as there was with the plot, having guest stars Scott Bakula and Chevy Chase helped smooth over most concerns. Read the rest at film.com (music below).
Playlist: Chuck Episode 2.19
1. "Highschool Hoodlums" - The Datsuns
2. "Cool Cat" - Daniel May
3. "Around The Bend" - The Asteroids Galaxy Tour
4. "Luisa's Bones" - Crooked Fingers
5. "Daddy's Gone" - Glasvegas
Previously: Chuck vs. the Renewal Notice
Chuck vs. the Renewal Notice
As fans already know, Chuck is in a losing battle for renewal with NBC, struggling to find enough audience to warrant a third season from the peacock. There's a movement on the internets to create more awareness of its plight, and to pump tonight's big episode ("Chuck versus the Dream Job") which features Chevy Chase and Scott Bakula as guest stars. Give Me My Remote has temporarily changed their name to Give Me My Chuck and have posted a list of all the TV sites singing praise of tonight's episode. Meanwhile, tv critics like NJ.com's Alan Sepinwall, Chicago Tribune's Mo Ryan and HitFix's Daniel Feinberg are all loving the latest episode and asking their readers to watch tonight.
I didn't get a screener, but have heard through the grapevine that there's some Crooked Fingers, and it's worth watching just to see how they incorporate that into the proceedings.
Previously: Chuck: An Unfeeling Machine (Episode 2.08)
Ear on TV: Week of 04.06.09: Yeah Yeah Yeahs
If the schedule below smells like déjà vu, it's because the talkies are on vacation this week and are giving us a full slate of reruns. At least there's another Saturday Night Live this week, which this year has usually meant a quality music choice, thanks to Hal Wilner, who hasn't been this adventurous since his days booking Night Music. After Phoenix's amazing performance the other night (three songs!) Wilner and SNL follow that this week with New York's own Yeah Yeah Yeahs.
Compared to Phoenix, it's a slightly less daring choice, to be sure, but it continues the trend of great and gutzy musical guests chosen for the program (Fleet Foxes, TV on the Radio, Ray Lamontagne). YYY's latest, It's Blitz, saw it's release last week to rave reviews and finds the band incorporating some eighties dancefloor sounds into their punk attack. Singer Karen O's brash attitude should serve as the yang to the yin of this week's host Zac Efron.Elsewhere, you have to dig deep, but Sundance has been broadcasting great music films every Friday night, and this week it's the recent Pixies tour film, loudQUIETloud (2006,) on the docket. The film follows the dysfunctional indie band through their much ballyhooed reunion and tour in 2004. In it we find that despite them sounding great on stage, off stage Kim Deal still has a beef with Black Francis, and the rest of the band has gotten paunch and bald. Some things change, while others remain the same... we're still waiting on that new album, by the way.
Playlist: Picks for the week
Monday, April 6
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Motley Crue (REPEAT)
FUEL: The Daily Habit: The Bronx
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah (REPEAT)
Tuesday, April 7
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: MSTRKRFT (REPEAT)
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Cursive (REPEAT)
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Prince (REPEAT)
Wednesday, April 8
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Bell X1 (REPEAT)
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Millencolin
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Prince (REPEAT)
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: The Virgins (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: N.A.S.A. (REPEAT)
Thursday, April 9
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Les Claypool (REPEAT)
FUEL: The Daily Habit: The Ringers
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Naturally 7 (REPEAT)
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Gabriella Cilmi (REPEAT)
Friday, April 10
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: U2 (REPEAT)
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Less Than Jake
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: PJ Harvey & John Parish (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: M83 (REPEAT)
SUNDANCE: loudQUIETloud a film about the Pixies: Pixies
Saturday, April 11
NBC: Saturday Night Live: Yeah Yeah Yeahs
PBS: Austin City Limits: Femi Kuti (REPEAT)
Friday, April 03, 2009
Friday Night Lights: Deterministic Jitters
It's finally the State Championship, but even before the ball is snapped, we already know underdog series FNL has won another couple seasons reprieve. The underdog Panthers, on the other hand, still have to play the game, and everyone is worried about their prospects.
I can't help but wonder what it was like to experience "Underdogs" when it first aired (on DirecTV) a few months ago, back when the future still looked fairly grim for the series. Considering nearly every storyline dealt with the anxiety of imminent events, it would be hard to separate the underdog series from the characters' plights in "Underdogs" the episode. The fate of the series would feel tied to the outcome of the game, which is why, despite the contrary (and near miraculous) result in the real world, it worked better that the Panthers lost this game. By coming back to take the lead after being blanked in the first half, the Panthers achieved a moral victory, which is similar to the series coming back this season after last year's nearly disastrous story lines. (Of course, my wife disagrees with me -- she wants them to win every game!)
And how about that game? Aside from the staged moment for Landry (to no doubt remind us he's on the team -- and back again next year, Crucifictorious!) the action was pretty riveting. By starting out with the sun, there was optimistic shots of sunglasses (future's bright) and some great reflection-in-the-lens shots. But with every sack and interception that J.D. tallied, the stadium got too dark for Papa Joe to keep the sunglasses on. Coach Taylor was right all along about J.D. -- at only 15, he's just not ready for the big stage yet, and the only thing left do was bring Matt off the bench to turn the tide. Which they did immediately, which set up a big music geek thrill -- hearing Stephen Malkmus sing "If you give it to me Timmy, I'm out here on a limb-y" ("Baby C'mon"). That it anticipated Timmy passing to Matt all alone in the end zone only made it all the more sweet.
After Coach Taylor's inspiring speech, where he included family as well as a nice potential send off primer for all the cast, that left just enough time for a touching montage to Fountains Of Wayne's "Places." Along with the requisite contemplation from the characters, we also see Tim place leave his cleats on the playing field, which could be interpreted one of two ways (or both). It could be he's thinking of hanging up his football career, or, more likely, just giving visualization to the old saying, "leave it all on the field." Either way, it was a touching scene.With the Sword of Damocles still hanging overhead, it probably seemed a good idea to not have the State game in the finale, so they could tie things up in case it turned out to be the series finale, and with the future plans for the outgoing Seniors still in flux, there's plenty to wrap up, that's for sure. Another storyline that's sure to be addressed is the conflict with the McCoys. Calling CPS on one of your biggest boosters is not going to just go away, especially when that booster had his son embarrassed in the biggest game of his life so far. Speaking of calling CPS, couldn't the Taylors have explained their requirement to make the call a little better? And doesn't anyone else remember Tammi giving Julie huge slap last year? It's like season two never even existed for FNL. (Can you blame them?)
One final scene that stuck with most, I'm sure, was Tyra reading her application letter for college to Landry. The scene immediately followed the scene of the Taylors on the balcony, beautifully tying the "anxiety of the future" theme together, along with the song that backed it. We didn't even need to hear a lyric from Adem's "Something's Going To Come" to know what the song was trying to say. As much as the Tyra/Landry relationship has been a minor drag on the series, this was a touching scene that in all likelihood should set up a happy resolution for Tyra's future.
I didn't even get to the scenes at the Riggins house (all backed by the 'no regrets'-themed song The Little Joy's "The Next Time Around"). There were two things worth noting, first was the X-Men comic on Tim's bedside table, which was a nice nod to Taylor Kitsch's role in the new X-Men film (X-Men Origins: Wolverine, as Gambit). Then there's the funny bit of Billy peeing in the sink while priming Tim for his new venture ("This is your future!"). That it pushed Lyla to move back in with Buddy, makes it all the more better.Playlist: Friday Night Lights - Episode 3.12
1. "The Next Time Around" - Little Joy - Morning at Riggins house; Billy's future
2. "Already Down" - Awesome Color - Panthers practice
3. "Overcome" - Amy LaVere - Buddy and Lila reconcile
4. "Take It To The Top" - 5 Alarm Music - Landry whines about Tyra at a party
5. "The Sky Above, The Field Below" - Explosions In The Sky - Panthers are interviewed; Luanne asks Julie about Matt
6. "Something's Going To Come" - Adem - Taylors can't sleep; Tyra reads her essay to Landry
7. "Stylee" - David Garza - State game starts against Titans
8. "Home" - Explosions In The Sky - JD yells at his teammates heading into halftime
9. "Sigh Your Children" - ...And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of The Dead - Halftime, J.D. pulled
10. "Baby C'mon" - Stephen Malkmus - Panthers stage a come back
11. "Places" - Fountains Of Wayne - Tim in contemplation, Panthers head home
*Deterministic Jitter(s) is clock timing jitter or data signal jitter that is predictable and reproducible.
Previously: A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall (Episode 3.11)
Thursday, April 02, 2009
Life on Mars: Ground Control to Major Tom
So in the end, Life on Mars was all just one big gene hunt? Or, better yet, it was an April Fools day joke with an elaborate six-month long setup. (You know the drill, spoilers to follow.)
Figures that the uncreative minds that brought you the horrible October Road would think a literal interpretation of the show's title would be clever. You see, this is all a mental simulation for an astronaut who's part of a search for life on mars, get it? Going on a gene hunt, get it? Groan. All season long, there was back and forth between hokey and inspired work, and I'd almost forgotten about the terrible OR, but with the last Oz reference ("I'm going to miss you most of all, Scarecrow,") the show jumped us to hokey town. Even the last minute literary reference of Gulliver's Travels turned out to be a red herring. I'm still steaming mad that I followed this the whole season, even after cancellation, to come to an ending so moronic. It's slap in the face. Fittingly enough, today comes news that the original series will finally get a region appropriate DVD release here in the US (July 28, available today for pre-order). Silver lining, small favors, blah blah blah.
One saving grace of the finale was the inspired scenes that used Elton John's "Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters." It was pretty much the whole song running along the scenes, like a classic Cameron Crowe montage or something, where our protagonist contemplates and makes a decition, leading to our Sam and Annie moment ("And I thank the Lord for the people I have found"). But that was just the drive up to the scenic cliff, and what followed drove us off it, passing the finales for St. Elsewhere and Dallas on our descent. At least it was unforgettable, I'll give them that much Life on Mars - 1.17
1. "Life is a Rock" - Reunion - intro
2. "Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters" - Elton John
Previously: There's No Place Like Home (Episode 1.16)
Wednesday, April 01, 2009
Life - It's Who You Are
Somebody better save
I do, however, love the fact that they keep coming back to Cat Power, as the ending was far more powerful a scene for having "Maybe Not" playing, but it's getting harder and harder to remain interested. Roman, help us!Life - Episode 2.20
1. "The World" - Earlimart
2. "Maybe Not" - Cat Power
Previously: Envision the Fiery Crash (Episode 2.19)
Previewing Season 2 of True Blood

Put together a little photographic sleuthing piece for Film.com on Season 2 photos from True Blood.
Click to continue on to photos/post.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Chuck: An Unfeeling Machine
If Chuck is on the edge of cancellation, it's certainly not going down without a fight (or without a few 'stunts' to get some ratings). Exhibit A: "Chuck vs The Broken Heart" features Tricia Helfer (Battlestar Galactica, Burn Notice) stripping at Awesome's surprise Buy More bachelor party. It was fun seeing how Jeffster react to the proceedings, but the machines that brought us to that point were loud and clumsy (ditto goes for the Subway footlong product tie-in).
Of course, it was inevitable that the Sarah-has-feelings-for-Chuck liability was going to have to be addressed, but the resolution with General Beckman at the end didn't seem at all earned. At least Tricia Helfer got to show off her... um... skills, and I think we'll see Agent Alex Forrest again, if there's another season, of course. Casey and Forrest make an interesting pair, with the scenes between them cleaning and loading their tranq guns being a highlight of the epiosode. There's a good story arc in there somewhere... one possibly involving some bunny boiling, if her name has any significance (Fatal Attraction). The other name fun was the target here, Rashad Ahmad, who's in the hospital with a bum ticker under the alias Harry Lime (The Third Man,) which an exhibition of the power of positive thinking (many lives).
Most the music tonight was devoted to the bachelor party, but the ending song, Bon Iver's "Blood Bank" was an inspired choice, the kind that gives goose bumps. I'm fairly certain the song's meaning has little to do with what was intended here (the ties of blood between Ellie, Chuck and their father,) but it works nonetheless. Playlist: Chuck - Episode 2.18
1. "Hearts And Minds" - Matt Pond PA [mp3]
2. "Jump Around" - House Of Pain
3. "LoveGame" - Lady Gaga
4. "Bottle Pop" - Pussycat Dolls (with Snoop Dogg)
5. "You're Turnin' Me On" - Keri Hilson (with Lil Wayne)
6. "Bite Hard" - Franz Ferdinand
7. "Blood Bank" - Bon Iver
Previously: The Other Side of the Screen (Episode 2.16)
Monday, March 30, 2009
Ear on TV: Week of 03.30.09: Yo Gabba Gabba

Yo Gabba Gabba, the kids show that's secretly for us adults, gets a special visitor this Friday in the form of Nickelodeon favorite Jack Black, who finds himself stranded in Gabba land when his mini-bike runs out of gas (for the episode "New Friends"). Black plays guitar with Muno, shows the Gabbas his Dancey Dance and even dons DJ Lance's orange jumpsuit for a bit. The appearance hits two of Black's target markets, that being kids and potheads. ”I’m hitting two birds with one stoner, as it were,” quipped Black recently to EW. Also appearing present another knock-knock joke are Jack McBrayer (30 Rock) and Paul Scheer (Human Giant).
Meanwhile, how did the French indie pop act Phoenix end up as this week's music guest on Saturday Night Live? I'm already a big fan of their new album, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, but it doesn't come out until May 26, and the band is a few notches below in name recognition to other recent acts like Fleet Foxes and TV on the Radio. It's a bold and unlikely choice, to say the least. Is this week's host Seth Rogen a big fan, or is Lorne Michaels just making up for the disaster that was Jason Mraz a couple months back?
Finally, This is Spinal Tap celebrates it's 25th anniversary this year, and to honor that achievement, Christopher "Nigel Tufnel" Guest, Michael "David St. Hubbins" McKean and Harry "Derek Smalls" Shearer are embarking on a tour. However, for this tour ("Unwigged and Unplugged" -- a play on KISS's "Unmasked" tour, no doubt,) they're leaving the wigs at home and going simply as themselves. On Wednesday, they'll appear to both perform and be interviewed on Leno, without getting into character -- which is something of a relief for the group. When they last toured, they also opened as The Folksmen (from A Mighty Wind) and "had the really unusual experience of being negatively received by the same crowd that couldn't wait to see us," McKean recently said. "We went off, changed our clothes, came back as Spinal Tap, and the same people were very happy."
Playlist: Picks for the week
Monday, March 30
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: The Pretenders (REPEAT)
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Adele
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Glasvegas, The Roots
Tuesday, March 31
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Marianne Faithfull
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Gomez, The Roots
SYNDICATION: The Ellen Degeneres Show: Flo Rida
Wednesday, April 1
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Ray LaMontagne
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Spinal Tap
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Stevie Nicks, The Roots
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Robin Thicke
Thursday, April 2
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Dr. Dog
Friday, April 3
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Lily Allen
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Cold War Kids, The Roots
NICKELODEON: Yo Gabba Gabba: Jack Black
Saturday, April 4
BBCAMERICA: The Graham Norton Show: The Pet Shop Boys
NBC: Saturday Night Live: Phoenix
PBS: Austin City Limits: Arcade Fire (REPEAT)
Friday, March 27, 2009
Friday Night Lights - A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall
Like the dark clouds over Dillon in this week's episode ("A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall,") NBC's impending renewal notices have had FNL fans reaching for their umbrella for the past couple months. But with the advent of Spring comes the rumors that not only will the series be renewed, but that it will get two 13 episodes seasons, thanks to a continuing deal with DirecTV (EW's Michael Ausiello says it "will be announced any day now"). So there's that.But getting to the action, there's just one more game to win to get to State, and like the first season's penultimate game ("Mud Bowl,") everybody involved needs a shower afterwards. Tim calls the game "one for the ages," and it did seem to provide a lot more drama than any other thus far this season. The axiom goes, when the ground is wet, run the ball, and Joe McCoy expects his blue-eyed son to follow that rule, regardless of whether Coach Taylor calls the plays or not. Coach sticks to his game plan, no matter what, because COACH TAYLOR DON'T PLAY NO GAMES. The Panthers may have won in the end (garnering the win boldly like they went for renewal - going for two!) but it was on a pass, and dadgummit if that didn't fly in the face of Pa McCoy's rule.
That, of course, leads us to one of the storms that's been brewing all season, that of the relationship between QB1 and his control-freak of a father. But even the darkest of clouds could not have prepared us for the rain of paternal punches that fell upon poor J.D. in the Applebees parking lot (hittin' good in the neighborhood). Most of the aftermath is yet to come, but having the McCoys not named Joe seeking shelter at the Taylors fit with both themes raised in the episode, that being shelter and division.Of the other storylines involving division and shelter, Matt and grandma Lorraine's story resonated the most, even as short as it was. Her deterioration has been slow and drawn out, but now that Matt's about to graduate, decisions have to be made. Seeing her cling to her slippers felt all to real, and provided just enough levity to make Matt's quick change of mind more believable. She needs the kind of shelter that he can't provide on his own or with Shelby in tow.
Meanwhile, Lyla is quickly finding out shelter with the Riggins boys is not really shelter at all, but just another storm waiting to happen. As much as Buddy deserves the pain he gets here, I can't help but feel sorry for him hearing Ernest Tubb's pleading "Have You Ever Been Lonely" play on the radio as he talks with a suddenly sage Tim. Lyla finally forgives and returns, but of course, even in victory, karma still comes to Buddy, as she's now likely to follow Tim to San Antonio State thanks to daddy losing her college savings. That's "Karma's a B*tch #2" for Buddy if you count the redistricting (more division theme) that the school faces thanks to his insistence of funds going to a scoreboard instead of solving the school's educational needs. That makes it Karma 2, Buddy 0.
The Tyra/Landry stuff was mostly a retread of the past, as slyly referenced with song "Same Mistake Twice" by The Old Nationals playing in the background. The other music in the episode was dominated by more of Evan Johns (three songs,) all pulling from the same great Austin rocking classic Rollin' Through the Night. Come to think of it, the other FNL episode that featured three Evan Johns songs was another McCoy-centric one ("The Trouble with Being J.D. McCoy,") so perhaps Johns is the chorus for that family's ills. If so, it's not a bad one to have, punching papa or not. Speaking of the McCoys, the episode's title of course refers to the classic song from Bob Dylan, and some lyrics to the song naturally sprang to mind while thinking about their storyline:
Oh, who did you meet my blue-eyed son?Playlist: Friday Night Lights - Episode 3.11
Who did you meet, my darling young one?
...I met a young girl, she gave me a rainbow
I met one man who was wounded in love
I met another man who was wounded in hatred
And it's a hard(x5) rain's a-gonna fall.
1. "If I Had My Way" - Evan Johns & His H-Bombs - Lyla beats Billy at a video game.
2. "Same Mistake Twice" - The Old Nationals - Tyra runs into Landry while shopping for the bridal shower
3. "Have You Ever Been Lonely (Have You Ever Been Blue)?" - Ernest Tubb and Mel Tillis - Buddy asks to talk with Tim
4. "Lay Back Down" Eric Lindell - Landry helps Tyra with the bridal shower preparations
5. "Hark The Herald Angels Sing" - A choir sings as Tim takes Lyla to her church
6. "Best Friend" - Mario Matteoli - Landry & Tyra set up for the bridal shower
7. "Bar-B-Cutie" - Evan Johns & His H-Bombs - The game starts
8. "Rollin' Through The Night" - Evan Johns & His H-Bombs - The Panthers win against the Mustangs
Previously: The Giving Tree (Episode 3.10)

