Archive for the ‘Extras’ Category

“Extras” special Christmas.

Ricky Gervais and Stephen MerchantLooks like 2.5 is the magic number for Ricky Gervais as he decides to produce a Christmas Special for his popular HBO and BBC series Extras in lieu of a third season. Extras will then follow the same path as his previous hit, the unquestionably flawless The Office.

This is welcome news in MagneticMedia Land, though does raise an occasional eyebrow. Unlike The Office, whose bleak second season certainly could use an optimistic coda, Extras never really left anything hanging. In fact, in the Extras season two finale Andy Milman seemed to come to terms with what he had made of his life. David Brendt, on the other hand, needed that Christmas Special to completely hit rock bottom before he could see a little sunshine.

Not that I’m going to turn my back on more Extras.

No word yet on when the Christmas Special will air, though something tells me it won’t be in July.

Read via Zap2It.com

Posted by Rick on March 20th, 2007 No Comments

That’s uncomfortable.

Kevin

Friday I was at work and asked the following of my co-workers during some down time: “Hey, did anyone watch The Office last night?” This, I assume, is a pretty standard workplace questions in most of American. It’s the equivalent of “Did you see that Christian devoured by lions?” from Roman times — just a hey-hi-howyadoin’ conversation stater. One of my co-workers, who we call Bonesaw, replied, “I gave up watching that show.” This, I found to be incredibly interesting. Since the middle of season two, I have yet to meet a person who has seen The Office and does not like it (even if they don’t watch it regularly). But the phrase “giving up” suggests that the show had annoyed the viewer for weeks on end before they couldn’t take it anymore (see: me and The Class, Scrubs, early Heroes). Bonesaw and I, while we aren’t BFF, are certainly friendly and all previous evidence would indicate that The Office is the type of show he would love watching.

I inquired further (after the jump…):

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Posted by Rick on January 14th, 2007 1 Comment

Extras Season 2: Are ya havin’ a laugh?!

Extras Season Two
So maybe I should have held off on this post. Maybe I should have waited until mid-February when the second season of Extras, Ricky Gervais’ awesome follow-up to The Office, will come to a close after its six-episode run on HBO. There’s a problem, though. We live in the modern age, and once somethings out there, people are going to find a way to watch it. Extras season two finished its run on BBC 2 (whose site has full episodes that can be viewed for free) in the UK last Thursday. A year ago, Extras ran on HBO weeks, if not a full month, after it ended its BBC run. This year, they’re making us sit around and wait three months. Three months!? To keep reading click below…

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Posted by Rick on October 24th, 2006 1 Comment

Glued.

Scott Wolf from The NineIt seems like last week there there was so much television being watching by yours truly I barely had an opportunity to report back with my thoughts (and without thoughts, we really don’t have much of a website). So here are, more or less, my notes on a week’s worth of programming:

Friday Night Lights (Tuesdays 8pm NBC) - Inexplicably placed on a Tuesday, Friday Night Lights is being put into my regular rotation because its one of the few shows I’ve seen on network television that doesn’t shy away from the racial and economical issues affecting small cities in America. The pilot was a by-the-numbers local-boy-makes-good football story and yet the emphasis was never put on the game itself, but on the characters and how football is really the towns only shared experience. The shows realism seemed startling.

Help Me Help You (Tuesdays 9:30 ABC) - I liked seeing Tim Meadows as the rival therapist. Tim Meadows is the type of SNL alum who was so poorly used on the show it might have tainted an otherwise brilliant career. Otherwise, if it weren’t for the complete lack of comedies on television, I probably would quit watching this show. In classic Hollywood fashion, the series takes place in a New York City that reeks of Los Angeles (the LA subway may on one of the sets didn’t help).

The Nine (Wednesdays 10:00 ABC) - First and foremost, “Egan Foote” might be the greatest character name of the season. As for the character, well, we’ll just have to wait and see. As a whole, The Nine was both good and interesting, but like Studio 60… we won’t be able to get a real look at the show until the second or third week. What is interesting about the setup for The Nine (a group of people are held hostage in a bank for 52 hours, and throughout the shows run we’ll get to see what happened in there) is seeing if audiences will use the hostage-taking as a canvas in which to project their own personal tragedies. Perhaps the bigger question is wondering if people do happen to project themselves into the series, will they like what they see? The Nine asks viewers to dig a little deeper into their own psyche in order to start relating to the characters on screen. I’m curious to see if viewers will be willing to do that.

Freak Show (Wednesdays 10:30 Comedy Central) - The voice-talent alone is a force to be reckoned with. Frankly, I could listen to Jon Benjamin read XML manuals and find it hilarious, though the show still pales in comparison to The Venture Brothers, which might be the pinnacle of six years worth of Adult Swim programming. Aside from South Park, Comedy Central has never really had much authority in animation.

Peep Show (BBC, DVD) - I put down the TV remote for the DVD remote and checkout out the british series, Peep Show, which was recommended to me by a friend. It’s a fairly high concept show about two roommates who are a bit of an odd-couple (one’s a button down office worker, there other is a carefree musician). The twist is that the entire show is shot from the point-of-view of one of the characters. As in we, the audience, are constantly looking through someone’s eyes and are able to hear their thoughts. Its a cool-enough idea, and could certainly propel a series, but it also doesn’t hurt that the characters frequently make the worst decisions you could imagine. I’d basically equate the style of comedy to something of a British It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia. Definitely worth checking out.

Ugly Betty (Thursdays 8:00 ABC) - Nice to see “Dawn” from the British office show up here as the host of “Fashion TV.” That makes two network shows where she’s been spotted in a small role this season. LET’S MAKE IT THREE!

SNL (Saturdays 11:30 NBC) - The only redeeming parts of this episode were the “New York City Stories” shorts that were done with Fred Armisen and Amy Poehler. Specifically the first one where Armisen played Scorsese. That made me laugh.

South Park (Wednesdays 10:00 Comedy Central) - I don’t play “Worlds of Warcraft” but enjoyed this episode nonetheless. I’m curious how much support they had from Blizzard, as their logo was all over the episode.

Extras (Thursdays 9:00 BBC-2) - It’s not out in America yet (January), but let me be the first to tell you that the second season of Ricky Gervais’ Extras is leaps and bounds above the first (which is saying something since the first season was hardly shabby). This week’s episode featured Chris Martin from Coldplay pimping his new record “Coldplay’s Greatest Hits.” I know that doesn’t sound all that funny (”You’re gay because you like Coldplay”), but trust me… it is. There’s video available via the BBC.

Posted by Rick on October 9th, 2006 1 Comment