Close Search Close

 

  • Comics
  • Theatre
  • Site News

Captain's Log

The Week in TV, 1/15/26

It's a short week of television and a busy week outside television, so here is a short article

My time is going to be needed elsewhere for the short term, so these articles may be pretty brief.

Catching up

There isn’t much to catch up on when there isn’t much airing.

What’s new?

Abbott Elementary, “Mall” – As we left for the winter break, Abbott had to move into an abandoned mall while the repairs on the building commenced… and as wacky as this premise sounds, it’s apparently based on some real incidents, like Palisades Charter High School and others having to move to temporary locations after the California wildfires a year ago. And, again, for a wacky-sounding premise, the episode is surprisingly realistic about the challenges that would arise from this, while being pretty funny about it, too. I feel like this is a good indicator for how the show is going to use its new premise.

St. Denis Medical, “This Is From Joyce” – Decent episode, with a couple of solid plots— Matt trying to help Joyce return Sanderson a box of his things, then trying to help Joyce prove she’s doing great after the breakup; Ron’s slow-and-steady financial-planning approach gets introduced to Bruce’s pumping and dumping memecoins— and a third plot that got really cringe at points but was fitting enough for the characters, with Serena asking Alex to fill in as the nurse for one of her “Botox parties,” and Alex turning the whole thing into a living nightmare. Nice surprise guest appearance from Kristen Schaal, who I assume wouldn’t only show up for such a brief scene.

High Potential, “Under the Rug” – A bit of a twisty case that involves what appears to be a hitman having his brake lines cut, which leads to the team’s discovery that the hitman was contracted to hit a wealthy investor… and there are a few more twists along the way, which is always good. Not as much in the overarching “search for Roman” story, although there’s a little grace note of a home story with Elliot and Ludo, and the whole gang gets to get involved in the case of the week, so that’s pretty fun.

Best Medicine, “Bean There Done That” – Martin is immediately frustrated with the Port Wenn residents and their refusal to listen to any of his medical advice, particularly when they all insist that their symptoms of illness are due to a seasonal moth allergy. It also turns out his childhood bully is still in town. But the Baked Bean Supper is coming up, and everyone refuses to miss that as well, even after Martin correctly diagnoses that everyone is sick not with some passing allergy but an infection that’s passed from animal to human. So, this is fine— some good performances so far, most notably from Josh Charles, of course, and Abigail Spencer and in particular their chemistry together. But while the supporting cast has a bunch of good actors, Josh Segarra’s weird mix of earnest and hurt as the bro-y sheriff is probably the most distinctive. Oddly, while over-quirkiness can doom a show by taking its characters out of the realm of plausibility, the individuals might not be quirky enough so far if you want this show to have more of a Northern Exposure feel. The Baked Bean Supper is a nice weird thing as far as a communal weird thing, but I’d like to see more individual wrinkles and foibles that are distinctive in some way. We still enjoy the show well enough, though, so hopefully those come with time.

Falling behind

Haven’t had much time to write lately, but I’ll put out the year-end list eventually.

Old favorites

Still going through Fringe at a pretty fast clip. By the time you read this I’ll be somewhere into season 4. I don’t know how to discuss this show in any possible way that wouldn’t spoil it for anyone who hasn’t seen it, which even though I am watching episodes that are 15 years old I am still reluctant to do, because nobody spoiled it for me. I guess the pace I’m going through the show says all you need to know about how much I’m enjoying it.

Just ended

Expect this section to be dry for a while.

Coming up

Tonight, Animal Control officially kicks off season 4 (although they’re not rerunning the “sneak preview” season premiere, so catch up on that on Hulu if you missed it), and Going Dutch premieres season 2, both on Fox. Tomorrow night, Stumble resumes airing new episodes on NBC. And Sunday night, HBO premieres the latest from the George Robble Robble Martin Adapted For Television Universe, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms.

And you?

Comment below!