Category ArchiveTV



Alex Sains on 20 Jan 2007

Racism, Goody? Make that cannibalism…

Jade Goody Alright. I used to like her a bit. She was alright in the Big Brother 3 series where she actually belonged; she seemed like a harmless enough girl with no brains and no agenda. I have even defended the troll against the beautiful Boofter before. Yet I had my head in shame.

I must admit to have avoided Celebrity Big Brother. I tend to watch the initial episode where they enter the house and just say ‘meh’. This year, the publicity has been such that one has grasped the concept without seeing it. Jade Goody has ripped any sympathy she drew before by becoming, or being, an egomaniacal t*at whose only concern was self-promotion (on whatever level).

That someone who was bullied becomes a bully does not make a justifiable end. Goody has left me down, the nation down, and most of all, the nation down (purely for Jenkins benefit).

The stuff she has said to the f*cking fabulously gorgeous Asian hottie that is Shilpa Shetty is beyond provincial. Shilpa, from what I have seen, has handled herself with grace and dignity.

The nastiest thing I can say to Jade is that you’re done now. You’ll no longer have even the sympathy you had before — career over.

Ciao!

Alex Sains on 17 Jan 2007

Jennifer Hudson wins Best Supporting Actress

Jennifer Hudson Congratulations to Jennifer Hudson for winning the ‘Best Supporting Actress’ award at the Golden Globes. She won the award in her debut film performance playing Effie White in the movie version of the hit musical ‘Dream Girls‘ which also stars Beyoncé Knowles.

I am really pleased for her, as she was my favourite on the American Idol season 3. I loved Fantasia too, but Jennifer Hudson was my favourite.

I remember when she sung ‘Heatwave’ it really showed her vocal capabilities. She was kind of an underdog on the show as well, having only been given a chance to get through to the finals of the show because of Randy Jackson selecting her as a wild card. Simon Cowell never seemed to particularly like her; though his view of her seemed to become more approving shortly before she was thrown off the programme when the ‘three divas’ made up the bottom three.

Anyway, I am yet to see Dream Girls, but I am sure I shall love it. Congratulations once again, Jennifer!

Alex Sains on 14 Jan 2007

Leona Lewis on American Idol

Leona Lewis, of whom I am a fan (though was not sad enough to vote for on The X-Factor) is to appear on the premiere showing of the huge American TV show American Idol in the coming week.

How we rejoiced. Now she will be big and successful in America. I guess that’s ok, she’s a very good singer and should be fun to watch become famous.

“American Idol has produced winners such as Kelly Clarkson and Fantasia, and so Leona’s appearing on the premiere of the show on Wednesday is a very significant acheivement.”

Leona Lewis

And some more information on Leona’s performance:

“X Factor winner Leona Lewis is hoping to kickstart her US career by making a guest appearance on American Idol.

Having conquered the UK and topped the Number One spot since Christmas, judge Simon Cowell is reportedly hoping to showcase his latest prodigy in the States.

The singer is hoping to put an appearance in on the show when it kicks off in the US next week with a special two-part premiere.

The new series will feature 170 singers which will eventually be whittled down to the final 24.

Leona held on to the top spot in the revamped official UK chart for the second week in a row with A Moment Like This.

The X Factor winner’s debut single, which is a cover of previous American Idol winner Kelly Clarkson, became the fastest-selling download of 2006.”

ITV News

More soon, loyal readers!

Alex Sains on 11 Jan 2007

This Life + 10

As my sister Jess points out, the 10 year anniversary ‘This Life + 10‘ was rather the anti-climax we had feared it would be.

For one thing, the magnificent cast of ten years ago was rather depleted. The main protagonists were present, but +10 revealed just how important the supporting cast like Luisa Bradshaw-White (Kira), Ramon Tikaram (Ferdy) and Natasha Little (the excellently played Rachel) were. Not only this, the writing by Amy Jenkins left rather a lot to be desired. Despite her creating the original programme, it is not in fact her that is to be thanked for the most fabulous of the episodes (she was always rather obvious and clichéd in comparison.) Furthermore, some of the actors (ahem, Mr. Lincoln.) were slightly hammy were as in the past the acting had seemed authentic.

There were plus points; four of the main characters dancing to the Manic Street Preachers classic A Design For Life while the other seemingly attempted to top himself was of old-school-This-Life-aptness albeit in a more clinical and less natural way.

The character of Milly (Amita Dhiri) was just as I had anticipated she would be. Still a driven bitch, with a different drive. Obsessed with her baby now instead of work, but resentful at the same time. Cliché? Yes. As Milly would be? Probably a yes as well if I’m honest.

This was all reversed with the beloved Anna (Daniela Nardini). Anna now wants babies, and not the law. As if! I am afraid I didn’t really buy this complete transformation of character in the slightest. Another thing that struck me, as my mother said, was that she had lost some of her sexiness and identifiable characteristics. But for those who have yet to see This Life +10, worry not, as her character wasn’t entirely wasted - she was still a bit of a bastard.

Miles (Jack Davenport) was interesting to watch. His presumed divorce to Francesca was unsubstantiated, but he had re-married to Vietnamese model Me-Linh (maybe there’s a more stereotypical name for an east-Asian character, but I doubt it) whose involvement seemed false and contrived. I guess the character of Miles got better as the programme drew its conclusion, but it was still riddled with hypocracy and unexplained sillyness.

Egg (Andrew Lincoln) inexplicably emerged as a successful author despite his endeavors in the kitchen (which he presumably jacked in). The acting for Egg was (by far, far and away) the worst of the five, which was always the case, and let down the character rather substantially. His character hadn’t really developed as one would have invisaged, either.

That brings me to Warren (Jason Hughes). There were moments of the old Warren we all knew and loved, but on the whole Amy Jenkins re-wrote Warren as a parody of an excentric gay man whose only real pre-occupations were therapy and the consumption of his anti-depressant medication, used to help him grieve the death of Ferdy. She lathered on the “irony” rather too thickly — yes, we got that he was screwed up from the original series — cheers, Amy.

I suppose it was worth watching. It could have been worse. It just all seemed a little contrived and over-boiled, when all we wanted was a nice ending to the best TV series ever! Never mind, there’s always This Life + 20

Alex Sains on 11 Jan 2007

Survivor: The Cook Islands

I really enjoyed watching CBS‘ hit Survivor: The Cook Islands on YouTube recently (thanks to TheRoundPeg!). The series was highly controversial (or at least was intended to be highly controversial) as in the first few weeks they seperated the tribes according to their ethnicity. It didn’t really work out that way for long, though, and what seemed like a bizarre and idiotic publicity stunt at first then gained perhaps a slight amount of credibility by virtue of there being less white-Americans than usual. Don’t get me wrong, there a loads of lovely white-Americans, but those which are lovely and appear on Survivor tend to be few and far between. History bares this out.

This is presumably pure coincidence. Perhaps they picked idiots to represent the white-Americans on purpose. I’m sure it’s total chance that the show miraculously goes from having almost no black, hispanic or Asian representitives to suddenly having 15 (with 5 white-American contestents) in the Cook Islands season. It was all a very cynical attempt to get the public off dear Mark Burnett and co’s backs for their collective neglectfulness of minorities in prior seasons.

Ultimately, though, it didn’t really matter. It worked out well, and the best team won, and it was very entertaining to watch.

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