Thursday, November 14, 2019
The 10 Best “Mary Tyler Moore Show” Episodes
Monday, November 11, 2019
Doctor Who: the companions' best and worst performances
Friday, November 1, 2019
Star Trek: Voyager season 4
That was what I knew of Star Trek: it was a great dog sitter.
Sunday, September 29, 2019
Doctor Who: in praise of "The Abominable Snowmen"
Sunday, September 22, 2019
Crime Pays: The Best of 2018
But first, a warning:
Monday, September 16, 2019
My Top-Ten One-Season Wonders (part 4)
Love on a Rooftop (1966-67): After he finished story editing the second season of Bewitched, writer Bernard Slade signed a deal with Screen Gems to churn out three pilots every year. A half-dozen went to series — the longest-running was The Partridge Family; the most controversial, Bridget Loves Bernie; the most preposterous, the Sally Field starrer The Girl With Something Extra (the "something extra" was E.S.P.) — but nothing as charming as his very first effort, Love on a Rooftop, with Judy Carne and Peter Duel (then Deuel) as a pair of opposites who fall in love and marry.
Thursday, August 29, 2019
Doctor Who: in defense of "The Leisure Hive"
The last of my seven “neglected or maligned” Classic Who serials, perhaps “The Leisure Hive” is the least likely entry. When its author David Fisher died in January of 2018, most fans hailed “Androids of Tara” or “Stones of Blood” as their favorite of his Who stories, but I saw quite a few single out “Leisure Hive.” And when the serial’s director Lovett Bickford passed away six months later, there were polls asking folks how they felt about his “Leisure Hive” helming (the serial went wildly overbudget, and Who producer John Nathan-Turner never asked Bickford back), and most thought quite highly of it. So I couldn’t argue that “Leisure Hive” is a maligned serial. But neglected? Yeah, I think so. I suspect if fans were asked to name their favorite Tom Baker stories, “Leisure Hive” wouldn’t make a lot of top-10 lists, but when I did my Classic Who countdown in the summer of 2018, “Leisure Hive” was my sixth favorite Fourth Doctor serial. It’s easily my favorite story of Season 18, and sits comfortably among my top-30 serials in the entire Classic Who canon.
How many fans would say that?