Friday, October 30, 2009

Yankees World Series game draws 20m to Fox

Last night's World Series Game 1 performed well for Fox, overnight viewing figures show.

The three-hour coverage of the Yankees game against the Phillies averaged 19.5m for Fox between 8pm and 11pm and ranked as the most-watched and highest-rated Game 1 in five years.

CBS scheduled reruns throughout the evening: The New Adventures Of Old Christine and Gary Unmarried logged 6.61m and 6.44m during the 8pm hour, then 9.72m watched Criminal Minds at 9pm. CSI: New York followed at 10pm, bringing in 9.22m.

Over on NBC, a Monsters vs. Aliens special had 6.93m at 8pm, then an encore at 8.30pm attracted 5.59m. Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and The Jay Leno Show grabbed 8m and 4.98m at 9pm and 10pm respectively.

The 8pm screening of It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown managed 6.32m for ABC, then 6.63m tuned in for The Middle at 8.30pm. Modern Family and Cougar Town made up the 9pm hour, pulling in 9.23m and 7.51m respectively. The 10pm Eastwick was seen by 5.06m.

America's Next Top Model interested 3.5m for The CW at 8pm, then a Vampire Diaries repeat put in 1.44m during the 9pm hour.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

The Jay Leno Show loses to CBS repeats again

Sure, the World Series was on, but the thing is, the CSI: NY repeat aired against the World Series too, and it did better than The Jay Leno Show ( 2.2 adults 18-49 rating vs. 1.5). Leno was also thrashed on Monday Night versus a rerun of CSI: Miami (3.1 vs. 1.3) and tied with a repeat of The Good Wife on Tuesday.

One of the things NBC publicly predicted was that with Leno airing about 46 weeks a year, since scripted shows air only about 22 new episodes a year, Leno would fare better when it was up against repeats. While “fare better” doesn’t necessarily mean “win”, the early data is that Leno isn’t faring better against the reruns. At least not in terms of seeing any ratings increases. The gap between Leno and the CBS dramas may be a smaller when they are in reruns, but so far the ratings the dramas lose in reruns have resulted in any gains for The Jay Leno Show.

First Look Into 'CSI' Mega Crossover Event

The sneak peek to the major crossover that the "CSI" franchise will do in November has been given in the form of promo pics. As reported in August, Laurence Fishburne's Raymond Langston from "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" will visit the other two shows, "CSI: Miami" and" CSI: NY ", during special one-week event.

The crossover begins on the November 9 episode for "Miami" called "Bone Voyage". Horatio Caine calls Langston to come to Miami when a severed leg found in the Everglades is discovered to belong to a girl who went missing in Las Vegas a week earlier.

The second part takes place on November 11 for a " NY" episode called "Hammer Down". Langston rushes to New York when Det. Mac Taylor and his team identify a woman hidden in a big rig following an accident as someone he interviewed in Miami related to his missing person's case. Though the woman disappears after the accident, Langston and Mac discover they're onto an interstate trucking ring that specializes in human cargo and black market organ harvesting.

The third and final part lands as the " Las Vegas" episode called "The Lost Girl". Langston's continued search for the young girl taken hostage as part of the human trafficking operation leads him to investigate a prostitution ring in Las Vegas that may harbor the missing woman.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

'CSI: NY' Langston Week Sneak Peek: The Cross-Country Trip Drops By New York

Remember news that Laurence Fishburne is doing a three-part crossover, with him guest starring on both CSI: Miami and CSI: NY on the same week, apart from his duties on CSI? We're slowly getting some details as to what exactly will transpire on those three episodes next month. And sure, it's too early for this, but we might as well form this little puzzle. What's going to happen?

The folks at CBS have released three photos for the second part of the crossover series-- CSI:NY 's part of the deal, so to speak. Three photos of Langston working with Mac, and with the rest of the NYPD crime lab. And it says quite a lot--well, the descriptions, at least.

As the story goes, there'll be a big rig accident in Miami, and it will lead to the discovery of an interstate trucking ring that involves in human trafficking and organ harvesting for sale in the black market. Heavy stuff, yes. And there's a hostage which they have to save. So I presume it's like the CSI: Miami-CSI: NY crossover, with the suspect (or, in this case, the victim) moving from the Sunshine State to the Big Apple. And surely it means it'll end in Las Vegas.

There's still one big question: what exactly was Langston doing in Miami? The quickest guess would be him visiting for a convention of sort--besides, he was a professor before being a CSI. But the captions CBS provided for these photos suggest that Mac is also in Miami, and they both leave for New York for the second part of the crossover. I wonder.

Anyway, here are the photos. Any ideas as to what's happening? Please help me fill in the puzzle. Oh, and by the way, this batch of episodes will kick off with CSI: Miami on November 9, followed by CSI: NY on November 11, and concluding with CSI on November 12. Just in time for sweeps, which is exactly the point, right?

Monday, October 26, 2009

CSI:NY – Episode 6-5 Review

I loved the point-of-view shot that began this episode. Was I the only one who felt as if I was the girl coming out of the elevator? The blurred vision, the stumbling around, and the bloody hand reaching out to ring the bell in the hotel lobby felt real to me.

Anyway, our mystery girl is Brooke Hollworth . As she collapses and says “Please Help Us,” I’m think one of to things: 1) She is completely delusional and has suffered a concussion, causing her to be unaware of what she is actually saying, or 2) There is a second victim we are unaware of. Turns out number 2 was the correct assumption. Flack and Stella notice blood drops leading out from the elevator so they decide to take the elevator up to each floor until they figure out where the trail originated from. They are lead to a room where they find a man laying dead on the floor covered in blood. Next to him is a bed with a pile of money on it. You know what this means – this was definitely NOT a robbery gone bad! They notice the door was obviously forced open and also find a ski mask that was left in the room and is presumed to belong to our killer.

Back at lab, Hawkes determines that our male victim was a street dancer due to the various injuries on his body – injuries that are inconsistent with his cause of death. He also does not find a bullet in the wound that killed him. Instead, he finds some sort of metallic powder that he sends to the lab for testing. After further investigating Hawkes’ assumption that our victim was a street dancer, we learn that his name was Jesse Lewis and he had recently won $10,000 in a dance competition. That sure explains the load of money on the bed in his hotel room. Flack and Mac decide to go to a competition and talk to the guy who placed second to Jesse in the competition, figuring he had a very good motive for murder. The guy admits that he wasn’t a fan of Jesse, but insists he didn’t kill him. He was merely upset because he claims Jesse stole one his moves that was sure to win him the competition. Flack isn’t really buying the guy’s story and arrests him.

Stella heads to the hospital to check on Brooke. When she gets there, a man named Nick Emerson is there sitting with her. Stella tells Brooke that they have a man in custody that they believe may have been responsible for Jesse’s death and her attack. Because they found the ski mask in the room, they believe that Brooke may have gotten a look at the face of the guy who did it. They bring the man in but Brooke cannot remember at all. She is suffering from a stage 5 concussion, which makes remembering anything nearly impossible at that point. Danny and Flack learn that Jesse had been robbed not too long ago by a man named Al Santiago. They decide to pay Santiago a visit and bring him in for questioning. While interrogating him, we learn that the reason he was never arrested for the burglary was because Jesse couldn’t give a positive identification of Santiago.

The results from the test Hawkes ran on the mysterious metallic powder found in the victim’s wound lead Mac to a weapons facility firing range in Brooklyn. The powder is actually simulated ammunition – ammunition that is used for training law enforcement. Mac heads to this location and learns that Jesse was actually a student in one of the classes that is taught using the same simulated ammunition he was killed with. They decide to question Nick Emerson, the guy who was at the hospital with Brooke, hoping that he will be able to help them trace Jesse’s steps the night he was murdered. Nick tells them of how the three of them (him, Jesse, and Brooke) were so excited about Jesse’s win at the competition that they went to the hotel to celebrate. When Stella takes Brooke back to the crime scene to try to remember more of what happened, Brooke can’t remember much about her attacker but does know for a fact that Nick did not come back to the hotel room with them that night.

Further DNA testing shows that the hair on the ski mask and the fingerprint on a vase in room both matched that of Nick Emerson. It doesn’t take long before Nick admits to killing Jesse. The twist is that he swear Jesse asked him to do it. Turns out that when Jesse was robbed the first time by Santiago, Brooke was with him. Jesse was unable to protect her from being groped by Santiago and felt terrible about it. He asked Nick to stage a second robbery so that he could redeem himself and properly save Brooke. He had stolen some of the simulated ammunition from one of his classes and gave it to Nick. The problem is that Nick held the gun so close to Jesse that the simulated ammunition is what actually ended up killing him. Brook can’t believe Jesse would do something that extreme to protect her. In order to make sure Jesse did not die in vain, she makes a positive identification of Al Santiago as the guy who robbed them the first time and he is put in jail.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

TV Review: CSI: NY - "Battle Scars"

A dead person in a place like New York is hardly a cause for concern. After all, plenty of large cities provide more than a few opportunities for crime to take place. However, there are a few things which make this one a bit more tricky. Stella (Melina Kanakaredes) and Flack (Eddie Cahill) would be content to think a robbery went wrong except for the money still in the victim's apartment. I'm talking about enough bills and coins to fill almost the entire bedspread. No self-respecting thief would leave it merely sitting there.

Mac Taylor (Gary Sinise), the crime lab department head, has another snag on his hands when the only other person at the crime scene is hurt far too badly to be of any help. Still, there is evidence which can be used almost immediately. Between Danny (Carmine Giovinazzo) and Adam (AJ Buckley), fingerprints and DNA are examined with highly capable equipment.

Giovinazzo has always been a strong performer, so watching him hobble around with a cane since his character got shot in the season premiere ("Epilogue") is a powerful image. It's no small deal to stay behind while one's colleagues hit the streets as part of an investigation. Developing the storyline is a credit both to the actor and the writers.

Nice to see Cahill and Giovinazzo together again! The scene where Danny and Flack interrogate a possible prime suspect is classic detective work. These two simply look like cops even in street clothes, which does not work for everyone. Flack, for once, is not hesitant about doing his job. Somehow, Danny is a calming influence so Flack does not get thrown off balance. Losing his girlfriend was hard for Flack ("Pay Up"), and lately he's been not acting like himself. Should Danny ever learn what really happened at the warehouse raid ("Pay Up"), their friendship might be on shaky ground.

Meanwhile, Mac gets frustrated after a paper advertises the Compass Killer is still on the loose. They probably have a lead with the compass left behind at the morgue. Sid (Robert Hammerback) even saw the guy ("Lat 40 47N Long 73 58W"). Assuming there is another episode this season about the case, Skeet Ulrich should return for a fresh guest star appearance.

One small bit of luck. When Mac and crew solve this week's case, they also close the book on another case which is a bit cold.

If the fadeout at the end is to be believed, then next week is either a pre-empt or a repeat airing of a former episode. Since the show runs from September until May, there are several repeats penciled in so the run doesn't end prematurely.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

CSI: NY

CSI:NY , a crime drama inspired by the drama series, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, is about forensic investigators who use high-tech science to follow the evidence and solve crimes in the Big Apple.

Det. Mac Taylor, a dedicated and driven crime-scene investigator who believes that everything is connected and everyone has a story, is a decorated Marine who served in Desert Storm and dabbled in war photography. The job is his life; he focuses on cases until they are solved. He and his partner, Stella Bonasera, a well-traveled, well-educated detective, an orphan who flourished in spite of the system, share a passion for the job. Stella is a jack-of-all-trades and has an unmatched desire to find answers for the victims of violent crimes, due in part to questions about her past.

They lead a team of experts through the gritty and kinetic city that never sleeps. The team includes Danny Messer, an investigator with an unflappable spirit and a troubled family history, which he uses on the job as he blends his own set of hybrid ethics. Messer was personally selected to join the team by Mac, and he attempts daily to live up to that honor and responsibility. Sheldon Hawkes is the crime lab's former coroner, a brilliant Ph.D. who transitioned to the field team. Joining them is Don Flack, an edgy, hardcore homicide detective with a quick wit, impressive forensic insight and a long family history in law enforcement; and Lindsay Monroe, a young, athletic CSI with a Midwestern work ethic who is willing to roll up her sleeves to tackle any job, and rarely hints at the dark and devastating secret that originally motivated her to dedicate her life to being an investigator. Lindsay and Danny were recently married, and have a new baby girl, Lucy. Rounding out the team is lab rat Adam Ross and eccentric coroner Dr. Sid Hammerback.

The New York CSIs may have a different process from those in Las Vegas or Miami, but they are guided by the same steadfast determination. These skilled investigators follow the evidence as they piece together clues and eliminate doubt, to ultimately crack their cases.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Akron native reaches milestone on 'CSI:NY'

When CSI:NY begins its sixth season on CBS at 10 p.m. Wednesday, it will be a milestone for Akron native Melina Kanakaredes.

It's not simply that the CBS police drama will have some big doings for her character, detective Stella Bonasera. The fifth season ended on a turbulent note, with the death of her colleague Jessica Angell (played by Emmanuelle Vaugier) and then an episode-ending spray of bullets into the bar where the main characters were paying tribute to Jessica.

''It was painful that they killed off the beautiful Emmanuelle,'' said the Firestone High School graduate. ''I really loved working with her, and it was sad to see her go.''

As for the season-ending gunplay, she said, ''All the characters have to deal with that near-death experience in a different way.'' For Stella, she said: ''The way she recovers is kind of shocking. She forms a relationship with someone unexpected and complicated. It's a big surprise. Before I saw the script, I thought, it's been six years. What could they do that would surprise me? This did.''

She stopped short of saying with whom Stella will be linked, but did hint that ''if you watch the teaser that's on the air, you'll probably figure it out.''

The show is also going high-definition for its sixth season, which is ''another new experience,'' Kanakaredes said. But when reminded how tough HD can be on actors' skin (with seemingly every line and blemish visible), Kanarakedes said: ''It's one of those things. I have a good makeup artist, and I have a good DP [director of photography].''

And it will have an array of cases, as well as a new and recurring nemesis, a killer played by Skeet Ulrich, beginning in the Oct. 7 telecast.

But here's the biggest thing about Kanakaredes and CSI: NY : ''This is the longest I've ever been in a series,'' she said.

In fact, it has taken up almost half of her prime-time life. That began in 1995 when she ended close to four years on daytime's Guiding Light to focus on prime-time roles and movies. At the time, she had a recurring role on NYPD Blue, and hoped for more opportunities.

September 1995 found her co-starring in New York News with a top-shelf cast including Mary Tyler Moore, Joe Morton and Madeline Kahn. But that series, about a tabloid newspaper, lasted just a few months. She was back in series TV two years later with Leaving L.A., a drama about a coroner's office, which also featured Chrisopher Meloni before Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and Hilary Swank before two Oscars.

Kanakaredes showed up on the big screen with roles in Rounders, The Long Kiss Goodnight and Dangerous Beauty, and guest-starred on some TV series. But she broke through as a star in 1999 with the NBC series Providence, a family drama that was her longest run before CSI:NY. Providence aired across five seasons although both the first (which began at midseason) and the fifth were relatively brief.

And there were efforts off-camera, including two daughters — now 6 and 9 — with businessman husband Peter Constantinides; directing an episode of Providence and writing an episode of CSI:NY.

''It's all about what makes my heart sing,'' she said. And about seeing your life unfold on-screen.
She still credits Guiding Light, which ended its CBS run on Friday, with creating a bond between her and many viewers who have followed her since. That's an especially strong connection to Greek-Americans, since she and GL's Frank Dicopoulos, another former Akron resident, played not only a romantic duo but characters of Greek descent.

''I got to help in developing my character,'' she said of Eleni Andros Cooper, her GL role. ''I fought with the producers about my accent. Usually you start with an accent and after six months it's gone. I said my grandparents lived here for years and they never lost their accents.''
For viewers, she said, ''that became not so much a Greek thing as a thing for the immigrants in the audience. I think people responded to it. And then they liked it when she kind of blossomed on the show.''

Now, even as she looks back, she continues to look ahead. She has very much enjoyed being on CSI:NY. She said that it has established its own identity and audience separate from the CSI: Crime Scene Investigation mothership, and a following in other countries. But she was hesitant when asked about how long she would stay with the series, assuming it goes on.

''You never know,'' she said. ''You never want to be overly confident. . . . And there are so many other opportunities. . . . There used to be only four networks. Now you've got Showtime, you've got TNT. AMC — who'da thunk it?'' she said, referring to the home of Mad Men and Breaking Bad.

At the same time, there's the shadow of The Jay Leno Show spread over five hours of prime time, which used to be the home for dramas.

''He might put us all out of work,'' she said, mentioning estimates that as many as 1,000 acting and production jobs were lost when NBC went with Leno over scripted series. Other shows, including hers, are feeling the pinch of cost-cutting. She mentioned budget as a reason for Vaugier's leaving, and as part of the question of how much time CSI:NY would be spending in New York for location scenes woven into episodes mainly shot in California.

She is excited about a role in The Lightning Thief, a movie due in theaters in 2010. It's based on the first book in the Percy Jackson & The Olympians series by Rick Riordan. In what she hopes is just the first of at least three movies, she plays the goddess Athena. (A Greek goddess, of course.)

''It's a lot of fun,'' she said. ''It's very much a Harry Potter kind of thing.'' Chris Columbus, the director, has also helmed Potter movies — and, Kanakaredes happily noted, is another former Buckeye, who grew up in Warren.

''We just bonded in the whole Ohio way,'' she said. ''He's very down-to-earth and fabulous.''