Tuesdays (El Rey)
From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series
New Series:
Prior to the premiere of From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series last week,
Robert Rodriguez’s El Rey Network (“Spanish TV for Gringos”—not the
official tagline, but I’m willing to sell) mostly showed X-Files and
Dark Angel reruns and obscure kung-fu and horror flicks. In other words,
the perfect cable channel—and then came From Dusk Till Dawn: The
Series, which was instantly darker and weirder than Rodriguez’s 1996
cult movie. Psycho Gecko brothers Seth (D.J. Cotrona, a passable George
Clooney sub) and Richie (Zane Holtz, leagues more intense than Quentin
Tarantino) are fresh out of jail and on a body-stacking crime spree to
the Mexican border; vampires and twisted Aztec mythologies are about to
get in their way. Anyone remotely “good” or “not insane” gets real dead
real quick in FDTD, but the real mystery is how Rodriguez can stretch
this story over 10 (or more) episodes. So far, I’m in—way in.
Review With Forrest MacNeil
Thursdays (Comedy Central)
New Series: Anyone can be a critic (seriously, anyone), but few have the conviction of Forrest MacNeil, the tenacious “life critic” of Comedy Central’s left-field new hit Review. As MacNeil, Andy Daly takes requests from viewers as to which random life experience he should try out; in Episode 1, MacNeil gave addiction a spin and wound up awarding cocaine “a million stars!” out of five (post-rehab, a half star, because no real journalist would hand out zero stars). In the March 20 episode, he takes on the equally dangerous task of consuming 15 pancakes in one sitting—if that sounds easy to you, MacNeil suggests that your life must be “an unendurable hellscape of excruciating sadness” (didn’t I use that line in a review of George Lopez’s new sitcom?). Review review: 1 green button.
Da Vinci’s Demons
Saturday, March 22 (Starz)
Season Premiere: Starz has yet to recapture that Spartacus buzz of a few years ago; the just-completed first season of Black Sails came close, even though the network made the mistake of positioning it as a “serious” period drama when it was really just a CW soap with more blood, nudity, grownups and the bad touch of Michael Bay. Between the hype of those two series, Starz in 2013 quietly launched Da Vinci’s Demons, about the historical-ish Renaissance adventures of a young, sexy Leonardo da Vinci (Tom Riley) as he navigates conspiracies, cults and Catholics, as well as his own genius and bi-curious tendencies. Sure, it sounds ridiculous—ridiculously fun! (See? Anyone can be a critic.) The Only TV Column That Matters™ would usually say “Catch up on Season 1” before recommending jumping into the second, but Da Vinci’s Demons isn’t going to make any more or less sense with the background info.
My Five Wives
Sundays (TLC)
New Series: Maybe this is where I used “unendurable hellscape of excruciating sadness.” My Five Wives premiered weeks ago, and you’ve seen the ads with Utah polygamist Brady Williams, his five “spouses” and their combined 24 kids over and over—and yet you still didn’t reject it as vehemently as you did Chrisley Knows Best (thanks for that, ’Merica, I owe you one). It helps that Williams is more likable than that assclown Kody Brown of TLC’s other polygamy show—yes, we now have to differentiate between polygamy shows—Sister Wives, but, as with 95 percent of all reality-TV series, there’s no reason for My Five Wives to exist. It’s just another contrived, scripted suckfest attempting to make a “real” family seem entertaining. Even multiplied by five, they ain’t.
Twitter: @Bill_Frost | TV Tan Podcast