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Strong language and strong stories are on 'The Shield'

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  • Strong language and strong stories are on 'The Shield'

    The Leader-Post (Regina, Saskatchewan) Canada
    March 7, 2005 Monday
    Final Edition

    Strong language and strong stories are on 'The Shield'

    by Alex Strachan, Special to The Leader-Post


    The Shield, one of television's most intense, violent and profane
    dramas, returns for a third season, with Michael Chiklis reprising
    his back-to-back Emmy Award-winning role of ethically enabled inner
    city police detective Vic Mackey, last seen liberating millions of
    carefully stacked greenbacks from the Armenian mob while fending off
    yet another internal affairs investigation.

    Mackey is one of the great characters on TV at the moment, a
    personality so unremittingly awful he's compelling to watch.

    It's also a sign of the TV audience's maturity that The Shield can
    run on a mainstream network virtually unedited -- if you're easily
    offended, please, please heed the viewer advisories --without
    prompting a stream of complaints.

    Tonight's season opener features music by Rupert Holmes and Kings of
    Leon, but that's just background. The foreground is Mackey's world
    and the people who inhabit it, and it's unlike any other cop show
    you've seen.

    As for the violence, The Shield's creator Shawn Ryan has this to say:
    "There are far more violent shows on television, but they tend to be
    cartoonish and big and you dismiss the violence. The problem some
    people have with our show is that our violence doesn't feel
    cartoonish. It's real. It's visceral. We don't flinch from it, and
    that makes some people uncomfortable."

    You're supposed to be uncomfortable, in other words. It's one of the
    things that makes The Shield what it is. CH

    n Despite running off the rails in the final 10 minutes with F-words
    and crude, scatological humour, Fat Actress is a promising new
    hour-hour series in the vein of Curb Your Enthusiasm that combines
    inside jabs at the TV industry with a broad overview of
    larger-than-life social issues, such as self-image and the way
    overweight people are perceived in a diet-obsessed society.

    Kirstie Alley plays herself as an overweight, former sitcom star
    hoping to land a prime-time gig in a comeback TV show. She's
    surrounded by sycophants and hangers-on, and when she meets a network
    executive, played by actual NBC/Universal Television president Jeff
    Zucker, she's filled with unrealistic expectations.

    Fat Actress is both funny and true when it riffs on the double
    standard separating actors from actresses -- "Jason Alexander looks
    like a fricking bowling ball, and James Gandolfino is like the size
    of a whale; he's way, way, way fatter than I am," she yells at her
    agent on the phone, while chowing down on a cheeseburger -- and when
    it lampoons celebrity self-obsession.

    Take a good look at Zucker, by the way. His scenes are meant to play
    as comedy, but they're more real than you might imagine. And if
    you're looking for who to blame --for cancelling Boomtown, moving
    Scrubs all over the schedule, "super-sizing" Friends and Will &
    Grace, running some shows long by a couple of minutes and shortening
    others, and subjecting viewers to a slew of reality programs like Dog
    Eat Dog, For Love or Money, Meet My Folks, Who Wants to Marry My
    Dad?, Next Action Star and The Biggest Loser -- that's your man right
    there. Movie Network, Movie Central

    n George Findlay (Ken Finkleman) is invited to talk to a class of
    journalism students in a typically wry outing of The Newsroom. As bad
    ideas go -- for the students, not for you -- that's a doozy.

    The episode is called Lolita, by the way, so you can fill in the
    blanks yourself. When things go wrong -- and they do -- watching
    George try to weasel his way out of yet another jam, oozing a slime
    trail wherever he goes, is a delight.

    The Newsroom is having arguably its strongest, most consistent season
    yet. The rumour is this will be the show's last, but the last few
    weeks have shown there's life in the old saw yet. Provided Finkleman
    stays away from the dream sequences and Fellini allusions, that is.
    CBC
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