I’m not sure how much demand there is for reviews of new shows at Tuned In; they don’t generate many comments compared with other posts, though for all I know maybe there’s some vast silent majority of Tuned Inlanders that read them. All of which is excuse for my having watched two episodes of Welcome to the Captain but …
After my recent conversation with Jim Cuno, the director of the Art Institute of Chicago, I thought I would get in touch with a prominent archaeologist to see what he thought of Cuno’s proposal for a return to partage, the practice whereby source nations used to share some of the finds from archaeological digs with the foreign museums or …
So apparently last night the most-watched TV program in 25 years aired, and I didn’t see it. Well, I did, but mostly in fast-motion. Apparently in the midst of the Super Bowl ads, there was an actual good game last night. But what with hammering out 61[!] ad reviews in four hours, skipping through the game to the next ad block, and …
Other than the Mike Huckabee / Chuck Norris spot and the Hillary Sopranos parody, the two most memorable ads this campaign season are notable for (1) not being TV ads, (2) being for Barack Obama and (3) not coming from the Obama campaign. (I’m not including Obama Girl, if you’re wondering.) The first was the viral Hillary 1984 ad. The …
In honor of Black History Month, TIME critic Richard Corliss surveys nearly a century of cinema, and reflects on 25 defining works that broke down the walls of intolerance on the big screen
…but reports are coming in from justabouteverywhere that the writers and the producers are getting very, very close to a deal.
To anticipate your question: I don’t know. To anticipate the next one: I don’t know that either. We’re all wondering what the end of the strike–if the strike is ending–will mean for our favorite shows; …
… of advertising, that is. My instant Super Bowl ad reviews, all five zillion of ’em, are now posted. Add yours here.
[Update: USA Today, meanwhile, has released its 20th annual Ad Meter results; as usual, we agree on a few things–FedEx, Bridgestone–and disagree on a lot: where’s the love for Garmin GPS?]
It’s become a cliche to say that people now watch the Super Bowl for the ads. In my case it’s literally true, because I have to. I’ll be reviewing the ads again this year for time.com, and in order to file in time, I end up watching the game inside out: I TiVo it, watch the commercials, review them while the game is on, then …
Shara Says requested in the main Lost thread that I spin off a second post to discuss the please-watch-Eli-Stone Oceanic ad that ABC aired later in the evening:
Well, I shouldn’t assume, but this is an English-language blog. Sunday morning at 10, though, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton will each make their case on what could be their most important Sunday-gab-show appearance before Super Tuesday—on Univision’s Al Punto. From the network’s release:
When I was wishing yesterday that we had something in the U.S. that would create a little media excitement about art on a regular basis, this isn’t what I meant.
But hey, if Sarah Jessica Parker is going to do a reality show about art, at least she’s doing it with “Magical Elves”.
Let’s assume for the sake of argument that there was something on TV last night other than Lost. This post is for that. Dissenting opinions on Eli Stone? Thoughts about Smallville or Supernatural? Democratic debate postmortems? We’re here for you, really.