Tag Archives: Grey’s Anatomy

TGIT – Welcome to Shondaland

On Thursday night if you tune your television to ABC you will take a trip to a place many refer to as Shondaland.  TGIT, or Thank God It is Thursday as the network is branding the night, is the home of Grey’s Anatomy, Scandal and How To Get Away With Murder, 3 scintillating shows with executive producer Shonda Rhimes in common.

Now in it’s eleventh season on the air, Grey’s Anatomy is an anchor for the night.  The relationship between Derek Sheppard and Meredith Grey has long been the central focus of the ensemble show which follows a complex group of characters through their daily lives in a Seattle hospital.  For those who like serial shows with slightly soapy plots, this is your show!  If you want to be able to drop in and out of a show however, nothing in Shondaland is likely to be for you.

The hallmark of a Shondaland show tends to be story arcs and plots that are woven together over the course of weeks, sometimes seasons, with twists and turns that simultaneously feel as though they came out of no where and yet, when you look back there is this nagging feeling that the writers played fair.  Bread crumbs were laid, hints dropped and the gut feeling exists that if only you had been paying a little more attention you just might have seen it coming.  That the shock that had you going “what just happened!” should not have been a shock.

Scandal follows the intrigues of a President in office (Fitz) and his Washington, D.C. fixer (Olivia).  Both Grey’s Anatomy and Scandal are loosely inspired by real people.  That is to say that it has come to light that a real problem solver for a President was spoken to before Scandal went on the air, no such behind the scenes relationships existed etc, but from a kernel of truth, and the knowledge that a real job existed  — a lot of curiosity about all the potential that existed a that whole world of possibilities — intrigue and Scandals was created.

Currently in its fourth season, Scandal was a mid-season replacement when it first hit the air in April of 2012.  A fact that the show used to its advantage to hook early viewers — because it enabled the show to start with a powerful 7 episode arc that contained individually satisfying episodes, but at the end of those 7 episodes it felt as though viewers had reached the end of a novel they could not wait to get their hands on the sequel to… and guess what, the seasons have just kept coming.

How To Get Away With Murder is this years addition to prime-time television from Shonda Rhimes and co.  Another brain-teasing show with trailers that sizzle off the screen, it is about a law professor who is also a practicing lawyer, who chooses several top students to intern in her law firm for some rare hands on experience, and by the looks of it, a year that will change all of their lives.  While the title is officially taken from the lead characters nickname for the class she is teaching, one might suspect it has some more practical applications to at least one subplot… or maybe I have just learned a thing or two from watching other Shondaland land shows over the past decade.

Someone recently told me that they had tried Scandal after hearing praise of the plot twists, but the dialogue did not feel like everyday conversation, the situations did not feel like something they could easily relate to, and as a result, they did not easily slip into the shows universe.  The only response I could give was, ‘go back, marathon those first 7 episodes, and view it not as the real world, but as something set apart, knowing it isn’t meant to be your real world.  Try and anticipate the twists, try and figure out where it is going, embrace the challenge, enjoy the cunning of the writers in Shondaland, and marvel at their skill in plotting and surprising their viewers.’  I for one would not want to live in the realm of Grey’s Anatomy or Scandal.  I have not seen enough of How To Get Away With Murder to make a decision there… but if what I’ve seen of other Shondaland shows holds true, I can already hazard a guess.

These are shows I watch to appreciate the world I live in.  Pay Shondaland a visit, then come back to the real world, take a nice deep breath, relax, and be grateful that is not reality.

“Grey’s Anatomy” stars Ellen Pompeo as Meredith Grey, Patrick Dempsey as Derek Shepherd, Justin Chambers as Alex Karev, Chandra Wilson as Miranda Bailey, James Pickens, Jr. as Richard Webber, Sara Ramirez as Callie Torres, Kevin McKidd as Owen Hunt, Jessica Capshaw as Arizona Robbins, Jesse Williams as Jackson Avery, Sarah Drew as April Kepner, Camilla Luddington as Jo Wilson, Jerrika Hinton as Stephanie Edwards and Caterina Scorsone as Amelia Shepherd.

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“Scandal” stars Kerry Washington as Olivia Pope, Guillermo Diaz as Huck, Darby Stanchfield as Abby Whelan, Katie Lowes as Quinn Perkins, Tony Goldwyn as President Fitzgerald Grant, Jeff Perry as Cyrus Beene, Bellamy Young as Mellie Grant, Joshua Malina as David Rosen and Scott Foley as Jacob “Jake” Ballard.

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“How to Get Away with Murder” stars Academy-Award Nominee Viola Davis as Professor Annalise Keating, Billy Brown as Detective Nate Lahey, Alfred Enoch as Wes Gibbins, Jack Falahee as Connor Walsh, Katie Findlay as Rebecca Sutter, Aja Naomi King as Michaela Pratt, Matt McGorry as Asher Millstone, Karla Souza as Laurel Castillo, Charlie Weber as Frank Delfino and Liza Weil as Bonnie Winterbottom.

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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/

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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

How To Get Away With Murder – ABC


How To Get Away With Murder is one of those shows that has a trailer that makes a person stop and pay attention.  The moment you hear Viola Davis, as Annalise Keating, say “or as I like to call it, How To Get Away With Murder,” something in the air seems to change.  Her delivery of the line is so perfect, so captivating, you want to be student in her classroom, and for a brief moment you want the world being created on that screen to be real, because there is something almost hypnotic going on.

HTGAWM600x800Then you remember this is a Shonda Rhimes show.  As in Scandal and Grey’s Anatomy.  Suddenly, with that realization in mind, it is all too easy to go from wishing this world was real to being grateful it is not!  After all, would you want to live in a world where Fitzgerald Grant (Tony Goldwynwas President of the United States?  Where Sally Langston (Kate Burtonwas Vice-President?  Stop and really think about the Washington goings-on of Scandal and ponder if you want that reality?  Take a deep breath and remind yourself that is just the creative workings of Shondaland, and her amazing team.  Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) and her team are fantastic characters that do not really exist — to our knowledge.

And now, think again about How To Get Away With Murder.   What is the mind that brought us Grey’s Anatomy and Scandal going to do to Law School and the legal system?  I for one can not wait to find out!

The twists and turns of Scandal are so often believable because the show plays fair, leaving bread crumbs, planting clues along the way, and twisting in ways I really do not want them to go and yet, when they do, even as my mind boggles at what comes next, it works.

More than once I have found myself wishing Shonda Rhimes had time to teach a few lessons on plotting twists and turns to the writers of other shows I am watching, shows that are coming close and then falling short of the bar she has set.  Shows that are not bad, but lack that “oh wow” moment that she so often delivers, and credibly at that.

Early in the first season, student Wes will become entangled with his mysterious neighbor, Rebecca (Katie Findlay), after she becomes the main suspect in the murder of a beautiful university coed. Professor Annalise Keating’s involvement with Rebecca’s case will challenge her students’ values, convictions, and dreams, as she teaches them the dark truth about the law and our justice system. It’s worth it though. Working for Annalise is the opportunity of a lifetime, one that can change the course of our students’ lives forever, which is exactly what happens when they find themselves involved in a murder plot that will rock the entire university.

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How To Get Away With Murder premieres Thursday Sept 25, on ABC at 10 PM ET/ 9 PM CT

A two and a half minute first look at the show from ABC:

Legends – TNT

Legends Banner

TNT’s Legends, based on the Robert Littell novel of the same name (and with Robert Littell as a consultant on the show) has taken the conflict and intrigue of the novel and pulled it forward ten years while centering it predominantly in the United States.

WhoIsMartinOdumThe novel is a globe trotting adventure that encompasses several years as Martin Odum recalls several of his previous legends, while trying to figure out what is truly him, what was his true life, and what he drew from and altered to create the legends he used to successfully in his service to country.

Where the novel centers around a CIA agent who has retired after some injuries and become a Private Detective in New York, the television show takes the same basic character, equally well known for his ability to take on Deep Cover assignments, but he is an FBI agent still actively working for he bureau.

It is hard to tell which of the supporting characters on the show directly parallel, or are drawn from characters in the book, in part because some of the first names are kept but many of the surnames changed, but also across the board ages and descriptions are changed.

Len Barlow / Martin Odum

Len Barlow / Martin Odum

On the show Martin is presented in the pilot as an agent who trusts himself, relies on himself, and has typically built his own legends, and is now learning to be more of a team player.  In the book there is a committee that helps create the legends, and some of the conversations there are entertaining as the possibilities are tossed around for how various aspects of the character might have come to be, or how certain things might be explained.

Where the television show Outlander is doing such a great job taking the characters almost exactly as they appear in the book and translating them to the screen, Legends, like Cedar Cove, is taking a great many more liberties.  Lincoln Dittman is in the book as well as the television show, and while there are similarities to the characters, their backgrounds have a host of differences, from occupation to why they are disenchanted with the federal government.

Lincoln Dittman

Lincoln Dittman

While the various Legends / personas were clearly different and identifiable in the book, Sean Bean does an amazing job on the show of slipping between them, one moment sounding like Martin Odum, and the next his accent changes, his mannerism change, his smile has a different lilt, and before the audiences very eyes a new character appears on screen.

The novel Legends kept pulling out new twists, yet through it all I was always confident that Martin Odum was the good guy, and I believed those who knew him and worked with him had every confidence in that as well.  There are times in the television show when I think that could be clearer, or if they are taking a different tack I think it could be better shown / explained.  In the show he is more of a loose cannon who goes so deep under cover that he only makes contact when he needs something, and it has been implied that others find that hard to trust, but I feel like something more is being hinted at.

Dante Auerbach

Dante Auerbach

Either way, the show is shaping up to be more compelling, and more self-contained within each episode than I originally dared to hope for, and the over-all arc for the season looks like it has strong potential, especially if it is in keeping with the main arc of the novel, which I found thought-provoking and interesting.

The first episode was darker and more conspiracy driven than I prefer, and the sense of conspiracy crops up from time to time, but not so much that it overwhelms the show or its characters.  Rather it has come to feel like a puzzle being solved as one man seeks to remember who he was, and what he was like, before he started slipping into these Legends so often and easily.

The novel:

Martin Odum is a one-time CIA field agent turned private detective in Brooklyn, struggling his way through a labyrinth of memories and past identities- “legends” in Agency parlance. But who is Martin Odum? Is he a creation of the Legend Committee at the CIA’s Langley headquarters? Is he suffering from multiple personality disorder, brainwashing, or simply exhaustion?

vs the show:

Sean Bean Stars as an Undercover Agent with One Hell of an Identity Crisis

An undercover agent is plunged into a terrifying mystery over his own identity in TNT‘s intense new drama series Legends, starring Screen Actors Guild Award® winner Sean Bean (Game of Thrones, The Lord of the Rings, Troy). Based on the award-winning book by master spy novelist Robert Littell,

In Legends, Bean plays Martin Odum, an undercover agent working for the FBI’s Deep Cover Operations (DCO) division. Martin has the uncanny ability to transform himself into a completely different person for each job. But he begins to question his own identity when a mysterious stranger suggests that Martin isn’t the man he believes himself to be.

Legends also stars Ali Larter (Heroes) as Crystal McGuire, a fellow operative who has a history with Martin; Morris Chestnut (American Horror Story, Nurse Jackie) as Tony Rice, a smart, quick-witted and charming DCO agent; Tina Majorino (Grey’s Anatomy, Veronica Mars, True Blood) as Maggie Harris, the newest member of the DCO team; Steve Harris (The Practice, Awake) as Nelson Gates, the director of the DCO Task Force; and Amber Valletta (Revenge) as Sonya Odum, Martin’s ex-wife; and Mason Cook (The Lone Ranger) as Martin’s pre-teen son, Aiden.

As Martin tries to find answers to the questions about his identity, he must also continue his primary job as an undercover operative, taking on such roles as a Serbian extremist, a Scottish soccer club executive, a corrupt Chicago police officer, British special forces colonel and a legendary computer hacker. There are many times, however, when he must choose between the demands of his job and his desperate desire to solve the mystery of his own identity. And he doesn’t always make the right choice.

Legends airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. (ET/PT) on TNT

Connect with TNT’s Legends

Website: http://LegendsTNT.com
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