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Captain's Log

The Week in TV, 2/5/26

There are so many shows I wanted to hide from my shadow and see if that gave me six weeks of no new TV

…or is it six weeks of no new TV if I see my shadow? I forget.

Catching up

Went back to Futurama again and ended up finishing the season. This felt like a bit of a step up from last season, in large part because the writers have largely stopped trying to write about real-world stuff that ages poorly (which was kind of a problem even in the original run). The weakest story of the season ends up being one of those riffs— the main plot of “Murderoni” involves a Comet Ping-Pong style fake scandal. Unfortunately, the story doesn’t involve time-traveling back to 2017 when this would’ve been relevant (nor does it comment on the absurdity of juxtaposing QAnon-type conspiracies with what’s actually in the Epstein emails, probably because it was made before any of those were released). It’s a shame, because there were some good lines in that one as well.

Fortunately, the season overall is actually fairly solid otherwise, and I thought the last three episodes were particularly good for where the show is at now. The season finale, as it has every season of this latest revival, is the highest-concept episode of the season, and it works pretty well. Perhaps the funniest exchange of the season was from the penultimate episode, between Bender and his truffle pig: “Thank you, Mr. Bender! You’re the kindest person I’ve ever met!” “Really?! That’s horrible!”

What’s new?

Abbott Elementary, “Picture Day” – It’s a rainy day in Philadelphia and the teachers are a mess… and they, and Ava, forgot the school rescheduled picture day for today (and can’t reschedule again). So, rain-soaked and dressed more for the weather than the annual photo, the teachers try to figure out a way to make themselves look good. This is, of course, not a problem for Ava. What is a problem for Ava is the protestation of the cafeteria staff, who want better treatment (such as a floor mat) and ultimately want to be included in the photos. Solid episode, although nothing was really remarkable here. (The overall logic of the major plot was a bit odd, but at this point, whatever.)

Animal Control, “Lost Dogs and Bar Flies” – One of Frank’s neighbors ratted him out for keeping the rescue dog (Hopper, a Malinois) despite a no-dogs policy in the building, and so he has to find a new home. The precinct pretty quickly proves not to work, and then, much to Frank’s chagrin, Roman Park (and his new French girlfriend) take it in instead. Frank finds himself lonely without Hopper, so he invites (most of) the precinct out for beers… where Victoria learns Emily has been keeping her new relationship with Shred secret from her. Pretty solid episode on the whole; to go further would give away the plot. And maybe the jokes. And also the C-plot I didn’t mention at all.

Going Dutch, “There’s No PX Like Home” – So, if you’re more of a Scotch drinker than an Army student, ‘PX” stands for “post exchange,” not Pedro Ximénez (the grape varietal used to make so much of the sherry whose barrels are used to age Scotch). Liquor lesson aside, I guess this episode is set at the “semi-quincentennial” for America (which would put it at… like, five months from now?). Maggie wants to get turkeys for the base celebration, which Patrick isn’t that keen about… but when Gen. Davidson breaks the news that there’s a supply chain problem with getting the turkeys, Patrick figures Davidson is trying to stick it to him and hatches a plan to liberate the turkeys from the base. Solid episode, fun show, and there’s a side plot with Conway and Papadakis that I really enjoyed. (Papadakis being brutally mean for a few seconds and then telling Conway how easy it is was both very funny and some nice depth for the character, in context.) Also, a post exchange is where you buy stuff from the outside world if you’re a soldier, I think.

Stumble, “Lights Out” – Courteney’s success at getting the AI data center built in Headltston and hoping the money from that will sponsor her team has immediate repercussions (like “no electricity or running water in the town”). Without facilities to practice in, Courteney is stuck at home trying to figure out what she can do— and while Boon is happy to have her around more, she’s too driven to not try to figure out how to fix the problem, whether that’s appealing to Annaleigh Ashford’s returning AI executive or Jeff Hiller’s obviously-descended-from-Nazis candy-button magnate. This wasn’t the greatest episode, but it wasn’t bad or anything; by that I more mean that it just didn’t have as many laugh-out-loud lines as my favorite episodes have had. (And the only cheerleaders who got featured were Steven and Krystal. Peaches and Sally are my favorites both as characters and as the funniest, but DiMarcus can be quite funny too, and whatever weird thing he and Madonna have going on has provided some good comedy in their last couple of appearances. Which doesn’t necessarily make Steven and Krystal the least funny… actually, Krystal probably is, and Steven is funnier when his loser-ness has someone to bounce off of rather than being the primary focus.)

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, “The Squire” – Another quite good episode, as Dunk and Egg spend most of the day waiting and preparing for the chance to enter the tournament. Dunk gets an intriguing offer. Most of the episode, though, is largely given to Dunk and Egg hanging out and bonding (and man, I could really go for that egg sandwich). And for comedy, I wasn’t expecting Egg to have a “Miss Susie Had a Steamboat” song about Westeros.

And we finally learn something significant about Egg that you probably already suspected if you’ve paid much attention at all to the overall ASIOAF series. (I haven’t read anything except the main series, but I still picked this up just from a line of dialogue I remembered in Game of Thrones.) But definitely a good episode that’s starting to introduce more action into the show’s already-humorous tone (including my favorite combination of both, a sports riot).

St. Denis Medical, “Nod and Agree” – Ron’s son (Sam Richardson!) is wrapping up a visit, and it’s gone so well due to Ron’s new policy of [see title] that he doesn’t want to mess anything up… but then a cardiologist at St. Denis (Wayne Knight!1) gets in a dustup with him that threatens to burst that bubble. Val gets back from jury duty, and Alex won’t shut up to Serena about how good she’d be at jury duty (including a Twelve Angry Men fantasy), so Serena tells her Val actually went to Cabo and lied because she’s out of vacation days, which makes Alex annoyed that her employees would lie to her, because she’s the cool boss or whatever the fuck. And Matt brings in a juice recipe (“family secret”) that Bruce becomes so enamored with that he tries to replicate it before offering to buy it. Pretty fun episode on the whole; the focus on Ron was a nice touch.

High Potential, “The Faust and the Furious” – I’m not sure why the episode is called this. Anyway, it’s essentially “what if Bryan Johnson was murdered?” Pretty good plot, albeit with some twists that were obvious (of course Morgan and Karadec aren’t going to die), and at least one valuable lesson about not mixing St. John’s Wort and birth control. There’s also the continued side story of Karadec’s love life, and a plot with Oz trying to get the headstone for his father’s grave after his mother has been messing up / putting it off for reasons you’ll find out if you watch. These weren’t bad or anything, but they do feel like perfunctory attempts to develop side characters more than anything necessary.

Best Medicine, “Hello Darkness, My Port Wenn” – This one felt a little better-pitched than the others so far. The basic plot involves Martin having to visit a recluse in town for his yearly checkup and to make sure he’s taking his meds… because the recluse also manages their power grid, and if he doesn’t reset it once a year, the town goes down. I say this one is better pitched because Martin actually does make a mistake through his stubbornness and not listening to other people, instead of him being right and them getting mad at him anyway. And the townspeople actually help Martin out and admit he’s right that the grid really needs to be updated instead of relying on this jury-rigged system, instead of being mad at him all episode, realizing he was right in the last five minutes, then forgetting it all by next week.

So that’s a definite improvement from where the show had been pitched. And there’s a nice little sideplot where a kid in Louisa’s class gets an apple stuck in his mouth and Martin ends up bonding with him. And there’s some stuff between Mark and Louisa that would be more interesting if I was more invested in their previous relationship, although at least they are the two characters aside from Martin that have most moved beyond caricatures so far. So, this one was good enough to keep me watching, although I’m still considering this a probationary period.

Also, sometimes people don’t take St. John’s Wort but just like the flower. Odd to see that pop up twice on Tuesday night.

Falling behind

Somehow, nothing. I mean, it is eight weekly shows, but they only add up to about five hours, and that still leaves 163 hours for not watching TV. (Some of which I still use to watch TV. We watch too much TV, I think. But if we didn’t, who would write this column?)

Old favorites

We’ve been on a bit of a 30 Rock kick, which started out with some early episodes before moving into “let’s just watch all the Dennis Duffy episodes” territory. What a great character, perfectly written and perfectly played by Dean Winters. Just the right mix of crude, boorish, and stupid, but also extremely firm and fully confident in his convictions. (His excuse for appearing on “To Catch a Predator” doesn’t work at all if he doesn’t 100% believe it.) We haven’t finished those yet, though, so this week we can talk about the tie that douchebag up front made him wear, or the coffee machine, and next week we can also talk about Megan Duffy (maiden name Duffy, hopefully no relation) and Black Dennis.

Hey, in terms of fun, good shows from 2025 that not nearly enough people saw, the CW’s Good Cop / Bad Cop is now on Netflix! Go watch it! Even though I haven’t published my 2025 TV list yet, I assure you it ranks highly enough that it is worth your time. (And read the synopsis over on Wikipedia if you need to know more; I’ve written enough for one week.)

Actually, it’s also on Amazon Prime if you have that instead. And for our Australian readership, it aired there on Stan, so… whatever streaming service shows you their stuff should be where you can find it.

Just ended

No, we’re not there yet, although High Potential is taking a break for a month or so. Some of the other network shows may be doing the same with the Winter Olympics taking up the next few weeks starting tomorrow; I’m pretty sure NBC in particular will be, since they’re covering the Games. Hey, wouldn’t that be great to not have shit to write about for a couple of weeks so I can deal with, like, everything else going on in my life. Maybe I’ll get my TV Groundhog wish after all.

Coming up

A week from today, How to Get to Heaven from Belfast, the latest from Lisa McGee (Derry Girls), drops on Netflix. And by “drops” I mean “premieres,” because I don’t know if they’re releasing the whole season at once or weekly.

And you?

Tell me something good! Tell me that you love me you’re watching the shit I tell you to!

  1. Who’s lost so much weight my first thought was “maybe I don’t exactly remember what Kevin Pollak looks like.” ↩︎