Illustration by Jillian Tamaki
There were months in 2004 when I wouldn’t dare watch TV without ammo — a stack of fresh tapes and VCR head cleaner.
There were months in 2004 when I wouldn’t dare watch TV without ammo — a stack of fresh tapes and VCR head cleaner.
Not only were there three wholly intriguing new American shows to disappear into — Desperate Housewives, Lost and Deadwood — but many returning series that, in other seasons, would’ve been a cinch for TV best friend status. For instance: Alias, Arrested Development, Chappelle’s Show, Curb Your Enthusiasm and The Sopranos. The Wire, an HBO cop show I kept hearing about, I taped for a future dry spell.
What a shock to discover those Wire tapes would be needed in 2005, a TV season with more than a few arid patches and disappointments. For during the last 12 months, Alias and Arrested Development were cancelled. Dave Chappelle strolled away from his show. Desperate Housewives and Lost became… well, desperately lost. And Curb Your Enthusiasm stopped being funny.
Neither was 2005 a banner year for Canadian television, especially for sports fans, as the NHL lockout left us with no spring Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time in our TV history. And a late summer CBC lockout meant, among other things, that Saturday evening Canadian Football League contests were silent-era affairs with no commentary.
Indeed, in reconstructing the past TV year, it’s apparent that although there was still much to celebrate, the 2005 season suffered in comparison to its predecessor. Here’s one handicapper’s scorecard for what went right and what went wrong:
Auteur, auteur
Writer and producer Chris Haddock. Courtesy Haddock Entertainment.
Canadian TV artist of the year award goes to Chris Haddock, who in 2005 deftly orchestrated Dominic Da Vinci’s move from coroner to mayor (Da Vinci’s City Hall, CBC), and still found time to knock off a trim, purposeful thriller (Intelligence, CBC).
Working class works
The continued success of Trailer
Park Boys (Showcase), the
best comedy on TV, and the increasingly
popular Corner Gas (CTV),
my favourite sitcom, confirms
a long-standing truth about Canadian
television: we simply love watching
our essential tuqued selves bumble
about the permafrost.
The greatest TV Canadian,
2005
Mike Smith’s Bubbles: Myopic
yet far seeing; the moral centre
of the Trailer Park Boys universe.
Party like it’s 1929
The biggest surprise of the 2005
year was the sudden appearance
of Depression-era style hoofing
contests. The unexpected hit of
the early summer was Dancing
With the Stars (ABC), a competition
that paired professional dancers
with C-grade “stars” like the white-haired
boss who was always yelling at
Elaine on Seinfeld (John
O’Hurley). Fox’s So You Think
You Can Dance? followed. The
series were at first hotter than
July. Dancing With the Stars once
drew 15 million U.S. viewers, despite
memorably bad writing. (Jive, the
show claimed, was “a fast-paced
rock-n-roll extravaganza born in
the 1920s.”) But both series faded
like a summer tan as the season
progressed.
HBObit?
In 2002, HBO attracted an average
of 2.4 million prime-time viewers.
This past year the U.S. pay service
dropped to 1.7 million.
Part of the problem was that there
were no new episodes of The Sopranos,
and Carrie hoisted her last Cosmopolitan
on Sex and the City in
2004. But it’s also clear HBO has
become creatively lazy, glibly
assuming insider Hollywood humour
was everyone’s catnip. Curb
Your Enthusiasm, The Comeback,
and Entourage are all
facetious industry satires. The
Comeback won’t, it’s been
cancelled. And Curb Your Enthusiasm has
become a wearying vehicle for the
self-glorifying neurosis of creator/star
Larry David. Reason to believe: Entourage keeps
getting better; Jeremy Piven’s
elbows-out agent, Ari “The Shark”
Gold is the best Hollywood defective
since Hank Kingsley on The
Larry Sanders Show.
Flight into danger
Marcia Cross plays Bree on Desperate Housewives. Courtesy CTV.
In its rookie season, Desperate Housewives (ABC) was gloriously bold — a surreal comic mystery with four surgically enhanced Nancy Drews. The show was best when the DH were together, dishing. This year it’s been Separate Housewives, with the women on their own. Diagnosis? More surgery required. Someone please stitch Martha Stewart-perfect Bree and the mad housewives back together. As for last year’s breakthrough drama, Lost (ABC), I’d been struggling for months to figure out why everyone’s favourite Rubik’s Cube suddenly felt like homework. Visiting a comic book store recently, I overheard a savvy shopkeeper explain what went wrong: “There’s too much back story,” the pony-tailed plot mechanic advised a gathering of back-packed high-schoolers. “You’ve got 14 main characters telling a story through flashbacks. And it’s trying too hard to be important — all the religion and philosophy. Lost has flown up its own ass.”
No soap
In Warner Bros. prison movies
from the 1930s, clever inmates
broke out of jail with handguns
carved from polished soap. A preposterous
trick that Woody Allen ridiculed
in Take the Money and Run,
when he bolted from the slammer
in the rain, only to have his soap-gun
evaporate into a cloud of bubbles.
That the creators of this TV season’s
big rookie show, Prison Break (Fox)
had to resort to the soap gun trick
(a soap cellphone actually) in
its third episode is all you need
to know about this overwrought
hybrid of 24 and The
Shawshank Redemption.
Primary time hit
The biggest first-year hit of
the 2005 season was Commander
in Chief (ABC), the story
of a female vice president (Geena
Davis) who becomes chief executive
of the United States when the president
suffers a fatal stroke. An expertly
paced middlebrow entertainment, Commander
in Chief, with its 16-million
viewer constituency in the U.S.,
is being hailed by pundits as proof
that America is ready for a woman
president. There is even some buzz
about a Condi vs. Hillary race
in 2008.
A Better Donald
Though human comb-over Donald
Trump continued to fire away on The
Apprentice (NBC), an infinitely
more intriguing Donald commanded
attention in 2005. One of our shrewdest
and most resourceful actors, Donald
Sutherland enjoyed a banner season
as he turned 70. On the large screen,
the pride of Bridgewater, N.S.,
was a wonderfully beleaguered Mr.
Bennet in Pride and Prejudice.
And in TV on Commander in Chief,
he bared his teeth with evident
relish, gleefully inhabiting the
role of Geena Davis’s slyly ferocious
adversary, Nathan Templeton.
A kiss is just
a kiss
Fighting a seven-season dating
slump, gay lawyer Will (Eric McCormack)
finally landed a boyfriend on the
sitcom Will & Grace.
He and his partner (Bobby Cannavale)
even kissed. The studio audience
offered a glad cheer. And there
was no great uproar, no horrified
viewer complaints or angry write-in
campaigns. The series, which is
now in its eighth and final year,
recently received 15 Emmy nominations.
A sigh is just a sigh
Alex gets waxed on Nerve.
The most memorable moment on Canadian TV this past year came on the CBC youth journal, Nerve, when a teenager, Alex, arrived at an esthetician’s clinic to have his testicles depilated. “Relaxed?” one of the show’s off-camera journalists asked as the beauty professional lathered Alex’s privates with hot goop. “He seems to know what he’s doing,” Alex allowed, “and I trust…” At which point the esthetician peeled away the bandage and Alex’s mouth jumped open wide enough to accommodate a loaf of bread.
Who’s laughing now?
At one point in 1975, the top
10 shows on U.S. television were
shot-in-studio, laugh-track sitcoms.
After the
May 2005 final episode of Everybody
Loves Raymond there were
no sitcoms in the top 20 of the
U.S. Nielsen Ratings for the first
time since Lucille Ball and Desi
Arnaz invented the genre in 1951.
Signing off
This past year saw a changing
of the guard in American network
news programming. Veteran CBS
Evening News anchor Dan Rather
signed off, as did Ted Koppel,
the host of ABC’s late-night current
affairs show Nightline.
Peter
Jennings, the
Ottawa-born anchor for ABC News,
succumbed to cancer in August.
And at NBC, viewers were getting
used to Brian Williams on the Nightly
News, after the retirement
of Tom Brokaw in December 2004.
The newsmen came from an era when
America tuned in every night to
one of three “voices of God” for
news of the world. U.S. network
news itself is now largely a relic
of the past. The average age of
network news viewers is almost
60.
The Lost generation
A recent story on CNN confirmed that
a growing number of teenagers and
20-year-olds are turning off television
in favour of Internet and movies.
Except for the ABC series Lost,
which increased its share among the
coveted, 18-34 demographic, the top
10 rated series continued to lose
young viewers. Reports that television
was losing Generation Y first surfaced
in the fall of 2003 when Nielsen
Ratings chronicled a 12-per cent
decline in 18 to 34-year-olds watching
television.
Actor Nicholas Campbell as Canada's most controversial mayor, in Da Vinci's City Hall.
Top 10 reasons to watch
TV in 2005
1. The Daily Show with
Jon Stewart: Laughter and wisdom in equal measure.
2. Deadwood: Beautifully written,
with rare moments of savage grace.
3. Trailer
Park Boys: Hilarious,
thoughtful, with a peerless
fashion sense.
4. Da Vinci’s
City Hall: Nicholas Campbell
should be declared a natural
resource.
5. SpongeBob
SquarePants:
A hoot for all ages.
6. The
Simpsons: Ay carumba, still
funny after 16 years.
7. Rescue
Me: At last, a good
use for Denis Leary. The
Fox firefighter series is
available in Canada on Showcase.
8. Medium: Patricia
Arquette is a psychic mom
who helps police with difficult
crimes — surprisingly casual,
occasionally chilling; best
new show on TV.
9. Hockey
Night in Canada: Better than ever
with new rule changes that encourage
hockey over hooking. The
late games, featuring Calgary,
Edmonton and Vancouver, are invariably
the better matches.
10. 24:
Expertly overripe melodrama.
When will Jack Bauer (Kiefer
Sutherland) save a maiden
strapped to a railroad track
from an oncoming terrorist train?
Stephen Cole writes about the arts for CBC.ca.
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