Television
TV Daily
Tuesday: Go green with the Sundance Channel. Plus: What did you think of "The Bachelor: London Calling" on Monday?
Prime Pick
Left: “Big Ideas for a Small Planet,” right, “The Greening of Southie” / Sundance Channel
In honor of Earth Day, Sundance has some eco-focused viewing in the works, starting with “Big Ideas for a Small Planet: Gen Y” (9 p.m. EDT on Sundance), a look at how the habits of Generation Y indicate how the planet will be cared for over the next century. After that, the documentary “The Greening of Southie” (9:30 p.m. on Sundance) follows the development of the first green residential building in Boston, a condominium complex called the Macallen.
Also…
Coverage of the Pennsylvania presidential primary starts at 6 p.m. EDT on MSNBC, 7 p.m. on CNN and 8 p.m. on Fox News. Then for some crazy reason, Tom and Ray of NPR’s “Car Talk” learn more about future automobiles on tonight’s episode of “Nova” (8 p.m. on PBS, check listings). “The Universe” (9 p.m. on History) explores the power of gravity, while a plan is hatched to mess with the devil on “Reaper” (9 p.m. on the CW).
Last night
What did you think of “The Bachelor: London Calling” on Monday? Go here to discuss.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
On the talk shows
Regis and KellyABC, 9 a.m. EDT |
Amy Poehler, Colin Firth, Kat Deluna |
The ViewABC, 11 a.m. EDT |
Mia Farrow, Deirdre Imus, Dee Dee Myers |
Ellen DeGeneresSyndicated, check local listings |
Randy Jackson, Wayne Dyer |
Oprah WinfreySyndicated, check local listings |
Oprah’s Earth Day event |
Charlie RosePBS, check local listings |
TBA |
Larry KingCNN, 9 p.m. EDT |
TBA |
Jon StewartComedy Central, 11 p.m. EDT |
John Waters |
Stephen ColbertComedy Central, 11:30 p.m. EDT |
Susan Jacoby |
David LettermanCBS, 11:30 p.m. EDT |
Helen Hunt, Chris “Mad Dog” Russo, Kathleen Edwards |
Jay LenoNBC, 11:35 p.m. EDT |
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Jason Segel, Goldfrapp |
Tavis SmileyPBS, check local listings |
E. Benjamin Skinner, Don Siegelman |
Jimmy KimmelABC, 12:05 a.m. EDT |
Brad Garrett, the sixth eliminated celebrity from “Dancing With the Stars,” Paul Thorn |
Conan O’BrienNBC, 12:35 a.m. EDT |
Andy Richter, She & Him |
Craig FergusonCBS, 12:35 a.m. EDT |
Laurence Fishburne, Rashida Jones, Joe DeVito (repeat) |
Contributors: Molly Eichel, Heather Havrilesky, Amy Reiter, Charly Wilder
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“Hatfields & McCoys”: No heroes, no humor
Kevin Costner and the entire three-part mini-series are too self-serious for any post-"Deadwood" Western
Bill Paxton in "Hatfields & McCoys" The Hatfields and McCoys — two rival clans who ruthlessly and needlessly slaughtered each other in the decades following the Civil War — are infamous for being vengeful, wasteful and murderous. The internecine conflict they waged began in earnest with a dispute about a pig and went on to consume dozens of lives for no reason but bullheaded family honor. The sheer scale and meaninglessness of their fight makes it ripe source material for a revisionist Western in which the good guys don’t wear white because there are no good guys. (Though given the stylistic ultra-grime currently en vogue, in which costume designers seem to be trying to make the audience smell something, white is also in short supply these days.)
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Willa Paskin is Salon's staff TV writer. More Willa Paskin.
Ernest Hemingway made silly
HBO's unintentionally hilarious "Hemingway & Gellhorn" gets everything disastrously wrong
Nicole Kidman and Clive Owen in "Hemingway & Gellhorn" Here’s something you should consider doing before watching HBO’s inadvertent comedy “Hemingway & Gellhorn,” a disastrous two-and-a-half-hour CliffsNotes on the passionate, dysfunctional love affair between Ernest Hemingway (Clive Owen) and his third wife, the war correspondent Martha Gellhorn (Nicole Kidman), which airs Monday night. Find some Hemingway — take it off the shelf, download it to a Kindle, load a page of “The Sun Also Rises” onto your computer via Google books — and leave it within arm’s reach. You are going to want to read from it at fairly regular intervals to remind yourself that though he may have been a drunk, a brute and a womanizer, Ernest Hemingway was not a complete and total idiot. And then you can also use it to shield your eyes from the movie’s myriad crimes against sepia, its extensive use of what appear to be Instagram photo effects, the hot pink blood, Metallica’s Lars Ulrich in a beret, and the scene toward the end of the film in which Kidman’s face is superimposed over real footage of emaciated bodies at Auschwitz and Dachau.
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Willa Paskin is Salon's staff TV writer. More Willa Paskin.
“American Idol”: Riveting despite itself
We all knew Phillip Phillips would win. Yes, the judges are nuts. So why did I feel real emotion anyway?
The final episode of any season of “American Idol” is always a smiling show of force, a confetti-laden massacre of time. After a nearly 40-episode season, along comes the gargantuan finale, an enormous spectacle that contains exactly one minute of real content — when the winners are announced — and two-plus hours of filler. Last night’s episode was nominally about who would be declared the winner of the 11thseason of “Idol” — Phillip Phillips, the humorously named yet handsome guitarist with a twang in his voice and shirts cut to display exactly the appropriate sliver of chest hair, or the huge-voiced, personality-less 16-year old Jessica Sanchez. But sleepily good-looking white guys (and Scotty McCreery) have won the last four seasons of “Idol,” and Phillips was pretty much a lock before the night even began. And so it is a commendation to the near-military professionalism of “Idol” that somehow, for the last half-hour or so, I was riveted to the screen.
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Willa Paskin is Salon's staff TV writer. More Willa Paskin.
More sex and disasters, please
TV season finales used to be about crazy couplings and exciting explosions. Where did the fun go?
Gabriel Mann and Emily VanCamp in "Revenge" There are a few times of year when network television can typically be relied upon to be as interesting as cable: The fall, when the networks vomit out dozens of new programs; February, when the networks cough up a dozen or so more; and May, when all the series that have survived the year try to end in spectacular fashion. During this last period, season-finale time, couples couple, get married and have babies; characters quit, get fired and die; disasters occur; buildings explode; guns blaze; hatches are discovered and protagonists are left dangling off cliffs, both actual and metaphorical. It’s the TV equivalent of blockbuster season, and like blockbuster season, it can and should be fun. Though in recent years cable shows have been responsible for a disproportionate number of the “Holy crap, did that just happen?!” finales (hello, Gus Fring and his brand-new face!), network shows are usually good for at least some insanity, some drama, some transcendent event that will get people talking around the storied watercooler. Not this year. Nope, this year, season finale season has been a bust.
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Willa Paskin is Salon's staff TV writer. More Willa Paskin.
As Kristen Wiig departs “SNL,” what’s next for women?
"Saturday Night Live" says goodbye to a star -- and leaves late night without a queen
Mick Jagger and Kristen Wiig during the season finale of "Saturday Night Live" What, you didn’t get to dance with Mick Jagger, hug Jon Hamm and be serenaded by Arcade Fire the last time you left a job? I guess you’re not Kristen Wiig.
After seven years on “SNL,” Wiig said goodbye on Saturday night’s season finale that will go down as one of the sweetest, most choked-up moments on the show since Steve Martin said goodbye to Gilda Radner on the day of her death almost exactly 23 years earlier.
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Mary Elizabeth Williams is a staff writer for Salon and the author of "Gimme Shelter: My Three Years Searching for the American Dream." Follow her on Twitter: @embeedub. More Mary Elizabeth Williams.
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