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Captain's Log

The Week in TV, 11/13/25

We add a couple more new shows to our already-stuffed lineup

I wasn’t sure which show that premiered Friday to use as the header image, but I decided, befitting my contrarian and oppositional-defiant position to the critical mainstream, to use the one that wasn’t the one they would all use (or are using).

Catching up

We finally finished How Are You? It’s Alan (Partridge), which ended in both very funny and very Alan fashion, as he confronts what are in his mind his big recent betrayals, one personal, one professional. Maybe “confront” isn’t the right word, as one thing about Alan as he’s aged is that he’s got a better sense of how you’re supposed to act around other people, even though he doesn’t really want to. That said, I’m also keeping it vague intentionally so you can see what happens for yourself, especially the very funny final sequences. Alan’s return to our TVs was most welcome.

What’s new?

Stumble aired its pilot Friday, and part of the reason I highlighted it is that I was pleasantly surprised and found it quite funny. I thought it might take more time to develop into its own thing, but the jokes are already pretty sharp, and the characterizations have potential. Jenn Lyon and Taran Killam as the married Courteney and Boone get the most work so far, but all the other characters at least get the traits for comedic potential seeded, and while I’m enjoying a cast I’m largely not familiar with, it does have some more notable names, like Kristen Chenoweth as Tammy, Courteney’s former assistant who takes over her old program. (Given the things I’ve seen him in, I was a bit surprised that Killam could plausibly play a football coach, but he’s good and funny in the role.)

One of Courteney’s cheerleaders is played by Ryan Pinkston, a name I had to look up but someone I found instantly recognizable from his two roles in key ’00s comedies: the shoplifting kid in Bad Santa and the College Conservatives wiener who isn’t Josh Gad or Jason Dohring in Party Down. It’s going to be a Ragtag Bunch of Misfits type of show, but a funny, promising pilot is a good start considering how long some comedies can take to find their footing.

Abbott Elementary, “No Phones” – A significant improvement over the last two weeks, not coincidentally in an episode that actually takes place at the titular school. There’s also comedy in the kids being completely fine without their phones while the adults are helpless… but also, nowadays the adults have adult responsibilities they need their phones for, so I’m not sure if there was a message here but it did get distinctly muddied if so. Still, better than the last couple episodes, if not on the level of great.

Matlock, “Mousetrap” – Olympia and Matty continue to have to work together and keep Julian, whose instincts are pretty sharp, from sniffing out that Matty is involved with the Wellbrexa sabotage. Meanwhile, Olympia’s team works on getting a man’s sentence reduced for killing his abusive foster father due to mitigating circumstances… and then discovers he may not have done it after all. “Mitigating circumstances” comes up a lot this episode, as both Matty and Olympia start wondering if the things they’ve done as part of their Wellbrexa investigation are justified. It’s a solid episode; I feel like at this point, if you’re in for the overarching story, you’re in all the way, even if the casework of the week isn’t the most legally rigorous. Also, I want to mention the Sarah plot because it is essentially the exact same as the 30 Rock plot when Kenneth’s mother and her “friend” Ron come to visit him.

Elsbeth, “Poetic Justice” – The arts are under attack! William Jackson Harper guests as the editor of a poetry journal, and his frustrations with an elderly benefactor who wants her terrible poetry published and stubbornly remains alive despite willing her estate to the journal after she dies. When he finds out she’s planning to amend her will to bequeath a different journal that will actually publish her poetry… how far will Harper’s Gary go to secure his journal’s future? Well, this is a murder-procedural show, so how far do you think? It’s also worth noting this episode as Elsbeth encounters old friend Marissa Gold (Eli’s daughter, for you Good Wife fans) and she’s managing the mayoral campaign for Alec Bloom, who is clearly supposed to be Zohran Mamdani But Not Muslim. And maybe he has Elsbeth have a spark? Or is this just a PR relationship? Further developments to come, I assume.

The Chair Company, “I won. Zoom in.” – The show escalates to new heights of madness this episode, as Ron and Mike follow a lead from one of the other unsavory characters they’ve encountered, and then discover the “Ken Tucker” listed as Red Ball CEO is actually an actor, and then track down the actor… and then uncover another scene of madness. I don’t know what’s going to happen next, but it’s pretty interesting to see that Mike seems to really value his relationship with Ron at this point. I will leave you to discover just how nuts this one is– and especially that ending– for yourself.

St. Denis Medical, “Get Me in the Pot, Brother” – Another strong episode, which starts off with Joyce getting a full body scanner for the hospital for the month… and as soon as Ron says those things are a waste of time that just turn people into a bundle of anxieties, you know that’s exactly what’s going to happen to Bruce. In the other plot, Ron and Alex get into an argument about how much is appropriate to share with one’s partner, and in true Ron fashion, he decides to escalate in order to win– a plot that could be tired or annoying with lesser writing, but the way (and speed with which) the situation spirals out of hand is nuts and very funny. I think this might be the best sitcom on network TV right now? I guess there’s not a lot of competition… I only have four shows I could assign that honorific.

DMV, “Stick Shift” – So the description of the episode said “When Ceci accuses Colette of only being kind for the credit…” and I groaned because this seemed like another “trying to prove they’re not what they are” plot. Thankfully it steered away from that quickly and more became about some odd one-upsmanship between the two, as well as poor Noa getting caught in the middle. Ceci’s gotten a couple of good showcases lately, a good sign they’re rounding out the character and cast. The B-plot might have been even funnier, with Gregg pushing Barb to discipline Vic– and that’s not that surprising, because Vic is in most of the funniest plots of the show, and when he isn’t, Gregg is. A good episode that alleviated some of my concerns about the last few.

Smiling Friends, “Pim and Charlie Save Mother Nature” – As soon as I saw the title, I yelled “NATURE!” in Pim’s excited arm-waving and scribbly-eyed-swirling voice, so of course I was delighted when he did just that about fifteen seconds into the episode. The Friends go on vacation; Pim and Charlie encounter Mother Nature while cryptid-hunting, while Mr. Boss tries to get Allan to relax and enjoy himself. This one was pretty fun, possibly my favorite of the season so far.

Bob’s Burgers, “Get Her to the Zeke” – Tina can’t go to the dance with Jimmy Jr. unless she finds Zeke a date, so she sets out to do that. The girl she finds is weird. Meanwhile, Bob and the rest of the family have to set up the restaurant to keep watch on and trap a “super rat” in the alley. Pretty good even if the B-plot does bring Hugo back onto the show.

Falling behind

Okay… the other reason I didn’t use the other show is that I still haven’t had the chance to actually watch Pluribus. I Love LA also got put on the back burner this week. Solar Opposites continues to await us, as does Futurama and possibly Chad Powers.

Old favorites

I popped in my Get a Life DVDs over the weekend, even though I’m sure I’ve seen all of these and the commentaries multiple times by now. It never gets old! As far as commentaries that go off the beaten path, I recommend season 1’s “The One Where Chris and Larry Switch Lives,” because Kevin Nealon shows up for no reason at all and seems to be trying to figure out what the show is as he and David Mirkin watch the episode.

Just ended

No seasons just wrapped. I did receive late-breaking word that FX canceled English Teacher, which kinda makes me wonder why they renewed it in the first place, as they seemed to give it little to no publicity and rushed out the season as quickly as possible. It’s hard not to think this has more to do with the allegation against Alvarez than with any quality or ratings concerns– unless there was a huge ratings drop-off in season two, which, again, they barely promoted and rushed out the door– which, again, makes me wonder why they renewed it in the first place.

Coming up

A Man on the Inside season 2 premieres November 20. We didn’t finish season 1, so it probably won’t get covered here. That’s the only thing I have listed for the rest of the calendar year.

And you?