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Captain's Log

The Week in TV, 3/12/26

Excerpt goes here

I hope you enjoyed last week’s format, because I can’t write longer entries when there are so many shows.

New on streaming

Nothing on my radar, yet. I have just learned about this new Hulu series Sunny Nights starring Will Forte and D’Arcy Carden, so I may report back on that at some point.

Weekly releases

Abbott Elementary, “Aide” – Janine’s request for an aide to help her swelling class brings back Ashley, who is as ridiculous as ever but also has learned a thing or two. Gregory and Melissa’s bizarre ideas for gym class thankfully are put to an end by Jacob’s brother Caleb, who both has the requisite experience for gym and remembers he is working with kids. Minor C-plot with Dominic, Jacob, and Barbara, but at least Dominic gets something to do and plays it well. B+

Matlock, “The Greater Good” – Bringing Julian into the fold continues to pay dividends for the plot, as he’s sharp and a quick thinker and proving to be a big asset. Jason Ritter gets a real showcase this episode and delivers. The new associate from the floater pool is an eager and earnest bro, just a human golden retriever, and his presence alone in this episode is hilarious. A

Elsbeth, “All’s Hair” – Jeff Hiller, one of the five high-end wigmakers in New York City with specialized clientele, poaches the client of another, and their confrontation leads to murder. (The other is played by Al Sapienza– Mikey Palmice himself– which really adds to the “Five Families” thing here.) Winnie Crawford returns and tries to pry information about Alec Bloom from Elsbeth. B+

Animal Control, “Donkeys and Weasels” – Frank dealing with his terrible father (no less terrible after a heart attack) drives most of the plot. Victoria and Patel try to cover for one of their screwups. Solid episode but didn’t terribly grab my attention. B

Going Dutch, “Twenty-Year Sitch” – Shah’s 20th anniversary as a military man leads to a celebration and a camping trip. Want to give this one a little space to highlight something I thought was handled nicely: a failed marriage that isn’t acrimonious. Celeste and Shah care about one another and tried to make it work, and she’s a nice person, but she’s kind of selfish without meaning to be and doesn’t really get Shah at all. Hilarious runner of Papadakis moving on from A Song of Ice and Fire to the Bible and similarly reading it as a lore-dense epic fantasy series. “Did you know the Bible is the highest selling book of all time? Sold more copies than Da Vinci Code. Which is also about Jesus, so I guess it’s Extended Bible Universe.” “You mean Christianity?” A-

Stumble, “Making Mat” – 17 cheerleaders. 16 on mat at Daytona. Courteney doesn’t want to cut anyone from appearing, but someone has to go. Surprisingly affecting side of the show, but doesn’t lose any of the comedy. Not sure if next week is the finale, but the season’s ending soon. A-

American Dad!, “Powering Through” – Stan’s insistence he can work through any illness leads Steve to deliberately get him sick, at which point he asks Dr. Weitzman to help him find a cure. Of course, this goes into classic AD! CIA territory, with Stan mutating into some kind of monster, spreading the virus. It’s up to Steve to save the day. Also some good meta-gags with the title sequence. A-

St. Denis Medical, “Happy Birthday, Matty” – Entirely on location at the Laser Lounge for Matt’s birthday, which Joyce thinks is an actual lounge, when it’s closer to a Dave and Buster’s. Ron gets fixated on Space Invaders. Chaplain Steve shows up and is a total dick, which inspires Bruce’s more protective instincts… let alone Serena seeing more clearly what a dick he is. B+

The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins, “Save the Cat” – Reggie convinces himself a missing cat belongs to his old coach, and finding the cat will earn him the redemption he’s looking for; Arthur tries to help him find it / rein him in. The B-story, where Monica finally caves and asks Rusty for dating advice, is much funnier. Rusty somehow finds the two worst ways to break to Carmelo what they’re doing: “We’re trying to find you a new dad.” beat “…or… something casual to bounce on.” A-

DMV, “The Fourth Wheel” – Anna Camp guests as the DMV state chief’s annoying niece who needs a job; her scheming to worm her way into the hearts of the others and oust Colette goes awry pretty quickly, but can Barb bring herself to fire her? Noa also serves as a go-between for Cece and her new short rich terrible boyfriend, which he quickly hates doing. B+

High Potential, “If You Come For the Queen” – Michael Hyatt returns as Sgt. Reynolds, this time the victim of an attempted murder, which gives Daphne a spotlight episode. A second murder seems to be tied into the case in a bit of a Strangers on a Train situation, which really got under my skin that nobody on the show said the words “strangers on a train.” Pretty good case on the whole, though; the Roman plot also progresses, and the story with Ava works well for the family side of things. Borderline grade but I’ll generously tip it over, because it is one of the better episodes of the show as of late. A-

Best Medicine, “Port Wenn-ings and a Funeral” – The Annual Birdwatching Tradition brings in two elderly sisters we’ve never seen before, one of whom, uh, attempts to take flight and leaps off a cliff. Martin tries to figure out what might have caused that, and when the still-alive sister starts acting strange, and Peter starts offering a ludicrously hypochondriac set of suggestions for his own symptoms, Martin starts making connections and ultimately figures out what’s going on— even though it takes some harrowing emergency work to save the day. A much better and sharper case of the week, and the townspeople being far less insufferable. Martin does act pretty foolish at the end there, though. Last notes: off next week for the World Baseball Classic final; officially renewed for season 2. A-

Catching up

Well, How to Get to Heaven From Belfast will have to wait a little longer, but I did make some time to catch Kumail Nanjiani’s latest standup special, Night Thoughts, the first one he’s done in a long time. I always thought he was very funny, so count me among the number who was worried about his turn into Jacked Marvel Guy (although I don’t think I took it so far as to be part of what made him, in his words, “the first ever person to get made fun of for getting buff”). Pretty good, with some sharp segments and jokes, although there are parts of being too successful to be relatable that trickle in. Not so many as to make this a bad special or one that isn’t worth watching, though. I had a pretty good time.

Old favorites

Watched a couple of American Dad! episodes when I had a slow minute. “American Dad Graffito” and “Gold Top Nuts” (season 19 by Wikipedia) were probably the highlights; the former is the flat-out funniest, while the latter is one of the show’s really odd concept episodes.

Coming up

Invincible season 4 premieres on Wednesday. TBD if I’ll have time to write about it before next week.

Programming note

I have finally finished writing the TV List of 2025, which took me way too damn long given how long ago I finalized said list. Since it’s so late, I don’t want to wait to give it any more fanfare, and honestly I’m tired of thinking about it and if I don’t publish it right away I’ll never stop revising it. Look for part 1 this afternoon!

And you?