Showing posts with label Game of Thrones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Game of Thrones. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

D's Best of 2014

At this point, most of my posts start off with an apology for infrequent updates. And I know no one is coming here for excuses. The fact of the matter is that the summer months come, my television habit dwindles, my writing suffers, and its hard to get back in the swing of things. Next thing I know its December. And December comes with a gimmie: do a Best Of list. So here we go.

As I’ve said in years past, Best Of lists are arbitrary and kind of silly, but I still enjoy creating ones as an exercise in writing and to reflect on what I enjoyed this past year. It’s also interesting to look at my past lists and see how my tastes and affection for certain shows have changed over time. This particular "list" isn't ranked per-say. But it does flow from favorites at the tops to lesser favorites towards the bottom. Whatever that means.

That being said, without much fanfare, I present to you: 

D’S BEST OF 2014



BROAD CITY
Executive Produced by Amy Poehler with awesome guest stars and a killer supporting cast, you better believe Broad City is hilarious and perfect on every level. I rarely rewatch seasons of shows (and if I do I’m more likely to do it years after first seeing it). But I’ve rewatched Broad City’s first season at least four times this year alone. And usually it’s because I feel such an intense need to share it with others, that I’ll force them to watch it and next thing I know we’ve finished the season together. Abbi and Ilana are the new Lucy/Ethel, Mary/Rhoda, Tina/Amy and I can’t wait for them to breakthrough. And while I find Broad City way more relatable than Girls, listen to me when I say this show is absolutely for the boys as well. Come for the 90s R&B, stay for Hannibal Buress.




THE AMERICANS
The Americans is one of the best shows on television and the fact that it gets no awards love just goes to show how useless awards are. The acting, directing, writing, and feel of this show is all so damn engaging and superb. I loved The Americans its first season out, but its sophomore season was easily just as good and at times even better than the first. While the first season was a take on marriage and partnership amidst the Cold War and a world of espionage, the second season was about commitment, parenting, trauma, and coming of age. The season finale was a gut-punch of a twist on top of a harrowing season of intensity and heartbreak. If any show deserves recognition and viewership, it is certainly The Americans. Screw the nonbelievers. Come for the wigs, stay for the 69.




THE KNICK

Let me start off by saying The Knick’s writing is certainly lacking. While many people find it hard to look past the clunky dialogue, I never took much issue with it because everything else about The Knick is so damn good. Stephen Soderberg not only directed every episode (a la True Detective’s Cary Fukunaga), but he is the show's cinematographer, camera operator, and editor. On every single episode. It’s incredible because not only is it such an impressive work load, but because it is all so completely beautiful and subtle. There are dozens of “stealth-oners” (AKA one take tracking shots that are far less obvious than ones on showier programs) that had me writhing in delight. Every episode was lit and blocked to perfection. The camera took its time to focus on characters without cutting away to dozens of other angles. And the Cliff Martinez score pulsed through the season, giving The Knick its beating heart. So yes, while I’m normally the first person to point out shoddy writing, when it comes to The Knick it almost doesn’t even matter. The show could be in Dothraki and it’d still be great. Come for the liquid cocaine, stay for the liquid cocaine.




MAD MEN 
I’m sure at this point people are tired of hearing how good Mad Men is. But fuck them. Mad Men is fantastic. For the first half of its final season, Mad Men definitely hasn’t let up. The 1960s are coming to a close, times are changing, and while some are thriving in the times, others are struggling to keep their heads afloat. While Mad Men is certainly artistic, incredibly well written, and detailed at every stage, what keeps me coming back are the characters and the dynamics they’ve created. My favorite episodes of the series tend to involve Don and Peggy and this past season had plenty more of those little moments. From a dance, to a passing of the torch, to an Edward Hopper-esque pan-out of Don, Peggy, and Pete eating dinner together, I grew even more attached to these characters and their pseudo-family. You come to Mad Men for those moments, but you stay for the severed nipple.




LOUIE
What I love about Louie is the artistic free-form the show takes. From a mini-movie, to a serialized six-part episode, to a one-and-done candid plea from a full-figured gal, Louie has so much to say and so many different ways to say it. When I turn on Louie, I love that I don’t know what I’m going to get, that I don’t know which reality we’re living in, which characters are going to get a poignant or hilarious monologue, or where the episode is going to take me. A look at Louie’s adolescence felt like an episode of Freaks and Geeks in all the right ways. An episode where Louie bags a model is closely followed by an episode where Louie rejects a hilarious/sweet overweight waitress which manages to say tons about society and double-standards. The end of the season had even more to say on the matter as Louie attempted to force himself on a familiar woman. Serialization is more of a suggestion than a reality when it comes to Louie and it may seem like a season isn’t leading anywhere, but by the end of this latest run we explored so much about Louie, Louis CK, and the absurdity of love and humanity. This past season explored Louie’s relationships with all the women in his life (from his daughters to his mother to his Hungarian neighbor) and how those relationships reflect back on him. Which was ultimately a commentary on gender and society. I am continuously amazed at Louis CK’s pathos and diminished ego. Come for the model, stay for the fat lady.




TRANSPARENT 
Somehow Transparent is full of the most selfish characters you will ever encounter, yet you can’t help but engage in their story. What I appreciated about this show was how it portrayed the blatant messiness of families—something creator Jill Soloway picked up from the Six Feet Under writer’s room, no doubt. Inspired by her own father coming out and transitioning to a woman, Soloway wrote this show about a family with fluid sexuality/gender--and oftentimes a destructive relationship to sex--as they reel in the aftermath of their own father becoming a woman. Much of it was hard to watch and characters were hard to root for, yet a yearning for homecoming hung over the season. And I’m curious to see how they all grow together. Come for Jeffrey Tambor’s amazing performance, stay for Maura's outfits.





GAME OF THRONES
I hesitate to keep Game of Thrones on this list simply because of its distasteful use of rape and sexual peril. But then I’d be doing a disservice to a show that only manages to get better and better. Having read the books, I know what to expect from upcoming episodes. But David Benioff and DB Weiss have certainly diverged from the books by tweaking one or two narratives while completely fabricating story lines. It’s not always successful (Craster’s Keep, anyone?), but it keeps this book reader on her toes. From very well-choreographed battle scenes to the transformation of the remaining Stark children, the show knows how to land every moment, big or small. It manages to bring one-dimensional book characters to life on the screen as they crackle with charisma (only to die horrible deaths…valar marghulis). Come for the nudes, stay for the Dinklage.




TRUE DETECTIVE
Something about True Detective almost hasn’t aged well with me since it aired earlier this year. At the time the mystery and craft of the show pulled me in and was incredibly engaging, atmospheric, beautiful in its back-swampy ways, and thoughtful in its emotional and spiritual journey. But months later, after its effects have worn off, I find myself slightly annoyed at is pretentions, its rote philosophical pontificating, its disregard of female characters, and its highly praised yet unnecessary and overworked six-minute long tracking shot. (Look, I love me an impressive tracking shot, and True Detective’s was fantastic. But think about that episode and what anything in that shot had to do with anything whatsoever. Cut those last six minutes out of the show, and it would have no effect on the story or season. Which is certainly a waste in its showy, self-aggrandizing presentation.) That being said, True Detective deserves a place on this list and all/any lists due to its solid direction, solid acting, and what it has to say about life and existence. Come for Rust Cohle, stay for The Yellow King.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

More Like "Game of Rape"

As you may have heard, last week on Game of Thrones twincest took a dark turn: Jamie Lannister raped his sister over the corpse of their dead son in the Sept of Baelor. The weird thing is that the scene plays out almost the exact same way in the A Song of Ice and Fire books with one notable difference: the rape. It was already a disturbing scene and for whatever reason the show's writers chose to add a rape element to the proceedings. While this creative decision did not really bother me, what did bother me is that nearly everyone involved with the scene had no idea that they were portraying a rape (I say "nearly everyone" because we have yet to hear from the one female involved: Lena Headey who plays Cersei Lannister). And regardless of what all these men may believe, regardless of what they intended, what the audience got was a rape scene. If they were trying to evoke the same sense of ambiguity that happens in the book, well then they failed miserably. Because oopsy-daisy, that was a clear cut rape. And it wasn't the first time the writers have interpreted the book with a twist of sexual assault.

The very first episode of Game of Thrones, Daenerys and Khal Drogo consummate their new marriage with Drogo forcing himself on Daenerys. Meanwhile, in the books, Drogo makes a point to wait for Dany to consent. (Yes there was some seductive manipulation of a 13 year old, but at least he waited for a "yes.") The show version of Daenerys fell in love with her brute of a rapist while the book version of Daenerys fell in love with her affectionate husband. That is a huge difference. A difference that could greatly inform how we perceive a character's development. But it has been largely forgotten.

Back to last week's accidental rape. I put off writing about this particular change hoping the show's creative team would realize they at least introduced a complication to the lives of Cersei and Jamie (And according to the team's statements over the past week, they did intend the scene to at least play ambiguously...or so they claim). I thought perhaps they would deal with the fallout in the weeks to come. I waited a week and absolutely nothing was addressed or even seems like it will be. Instead Jamie was portrayed in the best possible light. He was sympathetic, honorable, and showed positive growth. And because this is where Jamie has been headed since last season, I thought that Benioff and Weiss added a darker element to the sept scene to possibly complicate his redemption arc. But that's not the case. (Nor have we seen how Jamie's sexual assault could exacerbate Cersei's downward spiral.) It seems like, to me, it has already been forgotten. They simply chose to punch up a scene with a little harmless rape. But could we have at least acknowledged this hurdle to Jamie's growth? At the very least, could we have not made him the good guy at the end of his latest scene with Cersei?

And as if Cersei/Jamie and Daenerys/Drogo weren't enough, this Sunday's episode also diverged greatly from the books. Most notably the events happening with the Night's Watch and the mutineers at Craster's Keep. And what was happening at Craster's? Some serial rape. Listen, I know that the Night's Watch is largely made up of thieves and rapists. We all know it. My issue with the scene is related to my issues with the Cersei/Jamie scene last week: that these circumstances were disturbing enough without that added explicitness of sexual assault. I didn't need to see a brother of the Night's Watch going to town on some poor girl throughout the entire duration of the scene. Meera witnessing a brother drag a shrieking girl through the snow was plenty. Drinking out of Jeor Mormont's skull was plenty. "Fuck them till their dead" was plenty. We know these poor girls were raped repeatedly by Craster and they are now being raped repeatedly by the Night's Watch. It's an awful thing that was treated cheaply for some background scenery. This was a gratuitous and cavalier use of rape by the show's writers after a whole week of debating whether they can even recognize rape when they see it. It was distasteful, disturbing, and unnecessarily explicit. The show filmed and scripted a gang rape with the same nonchalance they do a brothel scene. But someone should let Benioff and Weiss know the two aren't interchangeable.

Whether it is excessive sex or violence, Game of Thrones thrives in excess period. Audiences have come to expect a certain degree of explicitness from their HBO fair, and from Game of Thrones especially. Ask someone who's never watched the show what they know about Game of Thrones and they'd probably say that it is violent and pornographic (and that there are dragons). But lately the show has been pushing the envelope at the expense of character and story. And the scene at Craster's was exactly that. It was the show trying to outdo itself and it was beyond overindulgent.

Let us not forget the whole mutineer plot and rape scene were made up for the show. In a similar way to how Cersei and Jamie's sept moment was changed for the show. Likewise Dany and Drogo. George RR Martin never shied away from rape in the books, but he never needed to be explicit about it either. We got the point through subtext. GRRM always made it clear that women simply are not safe in the world he created. That Cersei was broken and had turned to alcoholism and bitterness to cope with the regularity at which Robert raped her. Sansa has had more than one near rape experience. As has Brienne. GRRM was never cavalier about any of this. He made it a point to color his world as depraved, chaotic, and dark through the overwhelming presence of violence, death, and loss of innocence. If anything, the threat of sexual assault added weight and consequence to his world. But what we got on Game of Thrones this past Sunday was cheap. It was distasteful. And most disturbing of all, it made a game of rape.

Monday, December 16, 2013

D's Top TV of 2013

Its about that time of year when you will see many Top Ten lists of The Best TV or Films or Books or Whatnot of the year. I am personally ambivalent when it comes to such lists. Maybe blame it on Buzzfeed fatigue but I just find ranking and comparing series that are so different from one another to be slightly arbitrary and meaningless. But I find value in dissecting what I've responded to in the past year, as it helps me to further understand my personal taste. And I like doing these year end recaps as a way to recommend programming to anyone who may trust my judgement or share my preferences.

So I'm not ranking these programs. I'm just spotlighting ones that I found to be the best of the year. But please take all of this with a grain of salt as I have clearly not watched everything on television. I gravitate towards certain types of programming and so it is from those heavenly bodies that I judge the landscape before me.

Enlightened (HBO)
I wrote about Enlightened earlier this year when its fate was still uncertain. Now we know that this excellent program was not picked up for another season. There is nothing else like Enlightened on television. It was earnest, existential, spiritually provocative, and refreshing in ways no other program is. I am beyond disappointed that such a fantastic program has been denied the chance to continue to grow and bloom. But I am grateful for the few beautiful episodes we were afforded this past year. And I hope creator Mike White is given the opportunity to run a similar show in the future.
Season Highlights: Episode 2.5 "The Ghost is Seen" was one of my favorite episodes of any show this past year. It opened with such melancholy and closed so quietly hopeful that you'd have to be heartless not to emotionally respond to such superb storytelling.

The Americans (FX)
I straight up loved the first season of this show. I don't know what I was expecting going into it, but The Americans ended up being the best freshman season of a program since Homeland. I don't understand how it could get overlooked by both the Emmys and the Golden Globes, but good riddance. As much as it deserves recognition, I don't need award pressure and blowback surrounding this program. I mentioned The Americans a couple of times this year but all you need to know is that the performances are great, the writing is great, the directing is great, the spy games are fun, the characters are dimensional and sympathetic, and the costumes/wigs are awesome. And above all, it easily has the best soundtrack on television. Forget Glee. Forget American Horror Story (as much as I love all the Fleetwood Mac this season). The Americans uses pop music like no other. Just ask The AV Club.
Season HighlightsALL OF IT Episodes 1.3 and 1.10 "Gregory" and "Only You" are essentially companion episodes revolving around the introduction and fate of a compelling supporting character.

Top of the Lake (Sundance)
Before I get into Top of the Lake, may I mention how Sundance has been killing it? The Sundance Channel introduced its own scripted programming only this year and every single show has been right up my alley. Top of the Lake happens to be the first of these scripted programs to air and its quite a hard act to follow. Directed by Jane Campion, this miniseries was confident, beautifully shot, deliberately paced, fantastically acted, and reached Twin Peaks level of quirky. Elisabeth Moss led the cast and put in a spot-on performance. Keeping in mind her work on Mad Men along with her work on this miniseries (not to mention her fake New Zealand accent), its easy to recognize the immensity of Elisabeth Moss's talent. The rest of the cast also did top notch work as Top of the Lake delivered in all the ways AMC's The Killing never could. Sundance followed up Top of the Lake with Rectify and then the excellent French series The Returned (which I am currently engrossed in). Each show has the same feel proving that with only three series, Sundance Channel already has its own style of programming and I can't wait to see what else it has in store.
Season Highlights: As it is a miniseries it is hard to pin point one episode over another, but the final two installments are suspenseful, heartbreaking, and revelatory. Which essentially makes the whole series worth watching.

Game of Thrones (HBO)
Listen, I just love me some fantasy/sci-fi. And Game of Thrones is an epic fantasy whose grandiosity increasingly entertains as it continues. But what makes the show so good has nothing to do with its fantasy elements and everything to do with its ballsy, earned, and robust storytelling. This past season was the first time I watched the show after having already read the books and it certainly didn't take any of the enjoyment away. Yes, on some level I robbed myself of a doozy of a television experience, but knowing it was coming didn't diminish the shock in any way. (Just ask anyone who hasn't read the books but has rewatched the season). My only real criticism is probably the very cheesy, kind of racist, over-the-top scene that closed the season finale (but this amazing gif-set, which is cheesy in its own right, made it all better).
Season Highlights: Episode 3.9 "The Rains of Castamere," duh. It was quite possibly one of the most talked about television events in recent history and a huge game changer.

Mad Men (AMC)
When it comes to Mad Men, either you love it or you don't. The latest season definitely wasn't the best of the series, but when it comes to such a rich show, does that really even matter? This past June I wrote an impassioned post about Mad Men's most recent season and I honestly don't have much else to add except that regardless of season, Mad Men is one of the most engrossing and well-crafted series on television. Period.
Season Highlights: As I've said in the past, an entire season of Mad Men is like a good novel and so choosing a favorite episode is sometimes like choosing a favorite chapter of a book (which is kind of an awkward thing to do). It'd be easier to pick out various moments. But Episode 6.6 "For Immediate Release" was absolutely a highlight as it captured a sense of exhilaration reminiscent of the show's classic third season finale.

Orange is the New Black (Netflix)
Basically all summer all anyone talked about was this show, and with good reason. Because holy cow, what a fantastic program. As I mentioned in July, it was incredibly hard for me to shake Orange from my system (not that I wanted to). Something about Orange stuck with me. Beyond its tight structure, great writing, and celebrity directing (Jodie Foster, people!), it was the dimensional characters that made this show what it was. And I admire Orange for its large and diverse female cast, the likes of which we rarely seen on television--especially not in such an enriching format. I'm counting down the days until we get more.
Season Highlights: When you binge-watch a show, episodes tend to bleed together. But episode 1.5 "The Chickening" was a particular stand out in its zaniness. And the end of Episode 1.11 "Tall Men With Feelings" with its fantastic nod to NPR, the montage that it involves, and the circumstances after, is another favorite.

Breaking Bad (AMC)
What is there to say about Breaking Bad? I never wrote a post regarding this series last season as I found it hard to parse out my thoughts on the finale. Months later I find that the final episode doesn't necessarily hold up as well as I would like, but thats fine because everything that came before it was absolutely amazing and expertly executed on every single level. And as for the finale I can't fault it for tying things up so neatly after the explosive episodes we got before it. Walt basically moving like a ghost throughout the final episode, entering and leaving scenes without notice as he calmly tied up lose ends, offered a moment to catch our breaths right before the end. I loved the creepy aspect of Walt prowling about with such ease and confidence as compared to the clumsy fool we met years ago. And how we got there was a crazy wild journey, so far beyond anything else on television. I always said no one does intensity like Breaking Bad, and that was absolutely true from the get-go in this final half of season five. This was one of the best series of television to ever grace our screens. Every season somehow improved on the one before it leaving us with this gem of a final season.
Season Highlights: Forget everything I just said about the finale. Because that was the epilogue. Episode 5.14, the explosive "Ozymandias," was the true ending to this show. Not only was "Ozymandias" arguably the best episode of Breaking Bad, but it was one of the best episodes of television I have ever seen. Everything great about Breaking Bad was expertly exhibited in this one hour of television and everyone watching was left with their jaws on the floor, their hearts pounding, and their minds reeling. The emotion, the performances, the pace, the writing, the directing...every single thing was spot on. And its why Breaking Bad was arguably the best thing on television in 2013.


But wait! That not all....

Monday, April 1, 2013

Game of Thrones: Page Versus Screen

First off, I apologize for neglecting this blog lately. But I assure you it was all for quite a productive reason: this past March I have been reading the third book in the A Song of Ice and Fire series, A Storm of Swords. I have been reading as much as possible before the third season of Game of Thrones premiered on HBO.

I went into Game of Thrones' past two seasons ignorant of the events of the books. I watched the first season knowing absolutely nothing about the series. And I loved that first season. I loved the world and the characters and the intricate yet ballsy storytelling. Later that year I read the first book. By the time I finished and acquired A Clash of Kings, the second season was about to premiere and I thought it useless to read and watch simultaneously. So instead I watched. And later read the book. And honestly, I found reading these two books to be somewhat frustrating. Not because of the story or the writing style or the characters or the way the television series interpreted the written source. But because of how long it took for me to get through them.

Listen, I love to read. I read a lot. And I love to read book SERIES (for the same reasons why I love a quality television series). But having seen Game of Thrones first made reading the books feel more tedious than enjoyable. As I read I really enjoyed the series, but I simply wasn't eager enough to pick up the books. I didn't sit around wondering what was going to happen. I wasn't compelled to stay up late reading. Because I already knew everything that was going to happen (the differences between the second book and second season merely meant a more mild tedium). Instead I would actually put off reading. And in doing so, it literally took me months to get through each book. But I knew WHY this was happening: because I watched the show first.

So as spring approached, I promised myself that this time around things would be different. And I had this crazy notion to actually read the book first. (I was extra motivated to do so because multiple sources informed me that some crazy things happen in the third installment.) And while I'm still not done, I am about half way through. And I've gotta tell you, although it has only been one episode, it's making the show feel an itsy bit tedious...

More after the jump...


Tuesday, December 25, 2012

D's Top Ten Shows of 2012

I usually find the overabundance of year-end lists in December to be excessive, arbitrary, and predictable. While I follow many TV and pop culture blogs--whose opinions I respect and whose taste I trust--and look forward to their year-end rankings, I usually take them with a grain of salt.

However, I find the personal challenge of list-making to be a fun task for myself (nerd alert). I also figured that since this blog is so new, with so little posts, it would be nice to offer a rough outline of my personal tastes and preferences. Lastly, I made a list last year and it would be a shame to break my streak.

Just keep in mind that I find rankings to be slightly arbitrary. It's more of a general list of top shows. The order could be rearranged in various ways (especially when it comes down to comparing dramas to comedies). And it goes without saying that I by no means have seen everything on television in the past year.

That being said, lets get down to business:

10. Honorable Mentions: Boardwalk Empire, American Horror Story: Asylum, Portlandia, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, The Colbert Report, Bob's Burgers, Veep, The Walking Dead
Okay...so maybe not business per say. And I guess I failed my own list making challenge. But honestly I enjoyed all of these shows. Some I've seen every episode of and others, not so much. Some have done complete 180s, and others have maintained a certain level of consistency. But they each have had their moments and I truly think each of them deserves a nod of recognition.


9. Happy Endings
Many people find Happy Endings grating and the characters off-putting. And to be honest, the show is often hit or miss on a week-to-week basis. But when it hits, it hits SO good. The jokes come at a rapid fire pace. I'm constantly rewatching episodes or segments to make sure I caught everything. The performances are each hilarious in their own way and the cast is oozing with so much chemistry, its infectious. I honestly believe these people have been friends forever and have their own zany language, history, and outlook. The second half of the second season (including the lost kickball episode that only aired in the UK) and the first half of the third have had so many moments of pure hilarity and insanity. I love that they turn sitcom tropes on their heads, psyching out viewers in more subtle ways than a more blatant show like Community. Yes, the writing could be better, but it's ambitious and almost always hilarious. It's an underrated show and I just hope viewers, and ABC, continue to give it the chance it deserves.


8. Game of Thrones 
I generally find the translation of fantasy to screen, whether large or small, hard to pull off well. When its a book series that takes place in a completely different universe--with a huge cast of characters, its own history, customs, and religions--that only adds to the difficulty of putting it in your living room every week. Yet somehow HBO's Game of Thrones pulls it off without any confusion or inadequacies. One thing in particular about the second season I enjoyed, was how it strayed from the source material. I know thats a controversial thing to say when it comes to a beloved fandom or series, but I find the show more enjoyable to watch that way (and the book more enjoyable to read). Some things don't translate well to screen and retreading word-for-word can be boring and too predictable. The showrunners keep series writer George RR Martin in the loop so when they take artistic license, I trust them. This season once again exhibited fantastic acting, beautiful scenery and art direction, as well as well placed humor.  The scope of this show is immense and I'm regularly impressed. The story still finds ways to make my jaw drop in the best way possible. Character arcs and plot points that could have been boring or over-the-top are somehow stretched or confined to scale all in an incredibly well balanced season of genre-specific television.


7. Community 
Anyone who knows me knows I've been a huge Community fan since day one. Community is its own brand of hilarious, current, witty, zany, and self-referential humility. Although the Dan Harmon-less fourth season has been pushed back to 2013, this past spring still saw an extremely ambitious, creative, and comedic string of episodes. The Law & Order episode, the two part "Pillows and Blankets," "Digital Estate Planning," and the very emotional finale all immediately jump to mind. But besides the finale (which felt like a pseudo series finale), one episode that I found particularly poignant was "Virtual Systems Analysis": an entire episode that takes place inside the dreamatorium and Abed's head. This episode revealed the potential of the show, scratching away the comedic polish and genre-bending specificity it often hides behind, to reveal much more specific and affecting darker themes. Even the actors' performances in this episode were incredibly impressive and comedic. Actors playing a character playing a different character...it was Freaky Friday-esque but in the service of something much darker and emotional. Without Harmon I've been bracing myself for a drop in quality going forward, but I also find myself looking forward to spending more time with this hilarious community of characters.


6. Louie 
I genuinely think Louis CK is singlehandedly changing the face of the television comedy. Each episode manages to be filled with humility and pathos while remaining hilarious and even zany. Every week is like a new short indie film that somehow doesn't take itself too seriously. Its a comedy that makes me FEEL on a base level. It doesn't just move me (like other comedy's on this list do), but it manages to make me reflect and relate (and laugh) on a level I never knew a half hour comedy was capable of. This past season's guest stars were enormous. The episodes involving Parker Posey were clear standouts to me. But moments with Chloƫ Sevigny, Robin Williams, Melissa Leo and others were some of the best work I've seen any of them do. The episode of Louie in Miami is another that sticks out to me (and which I find being overlooked). But honestly, every single episode is pure gold. Its only when I'm comparing the show to itself that I can find myself criticizing, critiquing, and nitpicking here and there. He deserves all the recognition and praise he has been getting lately. And I can't wait for when he finally gets behind the camera again.



5. Breaking Bad 
I still have no idea whether this summer's installment was its own season or the first half of one long dragged out final season (I personally like to consider them each separate seasons), but that's neither here nor there. Witnessing Walter White further descend into darkness, crime, and isolation, leaving him alone with nothing but a pile of money and his ego, is still one of the most riveting things on television. The deconstruction of this character from the pilot up until this point is genuinely fascinating. Furthermore, no one does tension like Breaking Bad, and this season was full of little moments of nothing but gut-wrenching, breathless intensity. Episodes revolving around the character of Mike were particular standouts to me, but as were the immoral acts of complete depravity we witnessed this season. One episode tied my stomach into knots. Others had me cheering on the people whose lives Walter has essentially destroyed over the course of a year. Although there were only eight episodes, Vince Gilligan managed to introduce new characters and give them moments to shock me in ways that are still sticking with me months later. One other thing that I have always loved about Breaking Bad is its cinematic eye for open skies, desert land, and especially the molecular process. We're five season in and I have yet to be bored by a meth cooking montage. The reveal in the final moments of the season had my eyes bug and forced me to sit up as I slapped my leg and realized, along with the character of Hank, exactly what this means in the months to come. I'm so looking forward to the upcoming final season. If anything, I hope Walter White finally gets whats coming to him.


4. Girls 
One of the most talked about and debated series on television, even before the pilot ever aired, is Lena Dunham's debut series, Girls. I completely understand why many people find this series off-putting and the characters unsympathetic, but I also don't think it deserves all the hate and pretention its been getting. Not by any means. Personally, I love this show. Being the same age as Lena Dunham and her cast of characters, as well as living in New York, I find myself relating to this show more than any other on television. I won't go as far as to say Dunham is the voice of her generation, but she's most definitely a voice for me and the people I know. I have a friend that worked at Cafe Grumpy for years, I've been to huge random parties in the outer boroughs, I've seen friends run into old friends from camp, and I've had almost every conversation and disagreement these characters have. These are my friends and the people I grew up with. Yes many of them are sort of awful, entitled people, but there's just so much potential for character there. I realize this critique of the show is more about how I personally relate, and not so much an actual critique, but I just don't think I would feel right judging this show without being upfront. Aside from how I personally feel, I must mention that I am continually impressed by Lena Dunham as a writer and director. The shots, the music, the character development, the pace, the voice, all of it regularly impresses me. (I know we owe much of that to Judd Apatow as well, but I really do feel it is mostly Dunham's vision). This show has humor and a pathos in the vein of Louie (albiet it's much less zany and "indie"), and that is clearly something I respond to. These characters aren't easy to like, in fact they're easier to hate. But they each have a heart and a story and a journey ahead of them. And I genuinely believe you dont need to be a twenty-something female in New York to relate, laugh, or cringe along with me.


3. Parks and Recreation 
I have to say that this past year of Parks and Recreation may just be the series' strongest. Last spring's campaign and this fall's relationship development have all left me teary-eyed and emotional. And in an election year, Parks and Rec managed to remain unjaded about the state of politics in this country and the process itself. It never pokes fun at any one ideology or person, but finds a way to be all encompassing and relevant. As a politics-nerd I definitely appreciate this aspect of the show. And as a television-nerd, it only gets better. I love a comedy that isn't just jokes. That doesn't just hit the reset button every episode/season, but instead allows its characters to grow and progress. Parks and Rec knows when to end a story line or character arc and, more importantly, when to follow through and make logical, yet ballsy moves. Last season had hilarious guest stars in Paul Rudd and Kathryn Hahn, and stand-out episodes such as "The Debate" (written and directed by Amy Poehler) and the season finale, "Win, Lose, or Draw" (which brought me to tears multiple times; how Poehler didn't receive an Emmy is beyond me). But this current season also has its own run of hilarious and moving episodes, most notably "Halloween Surprise". But above all, Parks and Rec has a huge heart. For all the black-comedy shows on this list, for every example of crappy human behavior, and for all the shows that make jokes out of our darkest emotions (and for which I love them), Parks and Rec manages to be just as funny, poignant, and affecting...but with a smile on its face.


2. Homeland 
I obviously talk a LOT about Homeland on my blog. And I'm going to try not to get too into it right now. For my general thoughts on this past season, please see my previous post. But one thing I have to say is that much of the second season was just as good as anything in its first. Yes, it veered off course with a hit-and-run, (whose purpose appeared to purely serve relation disintegration, but in hindsight also served to give Dana a lesson in death and bring her closer to her father). And yes, there were plausibility issues. But I'm sorry, that season premiere, the reveal at the end of the second episode, the interrogation in "Q&A", the finale (and so many moments in between), is some of the best damn television I've ever seen. Period.


1. Mad Men 
In terms of television, Mad Men is in a whole league of its own. No other program could even begin to match its level of craftsmanship, style, storytelling, performance, or writing/directing. Yes this past season was pretty heavy handed with the death symbolism and its preoccupation with mindless death/murder, but it still pulls it off way better than anything else on TV. Characters made major moves this season, particularly the females (but also, and obviously, one particular Englishman). If I start to list the standout episodes of the season, I'll end up talking about almost every single episode. Instead I'll talk about the moments that I responded to, that ripped my heart out or punched me in the gut or sent chills down my spine or just made me laugh endlessly: Peggy saying goodbye to Don, Don showing up a little too late to Joan's apartment, Lane giving Pete a well deserved whooping, "Tomorrow Never Knows", Sally Draper getting an eye full, fat Betty, Joan standing up to her rapist husband, Roger Sterling's LSD trip, Don looking into the abyss of an empty elevator shaft, Michael Ginsberg's origin tale, Lane fixing his new Jaguar, and probably so much more that I'm forgetting. Actually, to be honest, I'm not forgetting. Because all thats left are vague feelings and images that feel like memories. And beautiful shots of museums and windows and snow and fog and orange sherbet and Alex Mack and hare krishnas and gap-toothed smiles and...not Bobby Draper. There's just something about Mad Men that feels like nostalgia. It deserves all the hype, buzz, awards, and recognition it gets. And the show's fifth season was certainly no exception.