HBO photo --- "Deadwood"
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Thursday, December 21, 2006 12:12 PM CST
The Top 10 shows of 2006 (and 10 runners up)
By MAUREEN RYAN, Chicago Tribune
Whittling down my TV favorites to a mere 10 shows isn't easy, and the networks --- both broadcast and cable --- aren't making things any easier. Not that I'm complaining.
If there's one thing TV executives realized this year, it's that the same-old, same-old won't cut it any more. If you want to be a hit --- on cable, on the networks, on iTunes or Yahoo TV, on DVD or even on YouTube --- your show has to stand out.
Television is a risky business, but all the more so if risks are gingerly avoided. Kudos to the creative people behind the shows on the list below. They've raised the bar yet again.
(Shows are listed in alphabetical order.)
"Battlestar Galactica," Sci Fi: Like "Deadwood," "Battlestar Galactica" is interested in exploring how a society on the edge decides to govern itself. What rights and actions are sacrosanct, which are outlawed, when most of the human race is eliminated? What's allowable or forbidden when life-threatening emergencies loom? Thank goodness the people muddling through these decisions are the key to this provocative series. If not grounded in the lives of understandably flawed, often noble, decidedly real human beings, none of this highfalutin' metaphorical stuff would fly.
"The Daily Show With Jon Stewart"/"The Colbert Report," Comedy Central: Stephen Colbert, in case you hadn't noticed, is giving one of the most entertaining performances on television, in his "Colbert Report" persona as a conservative cable blowhard. The "Report's" snappy writing and Colbert's improvisational skills have only gotten better over time. What drives "The Daily Show" is the idea that the men and women of both parties entrusted with the job of governing us aren't doing a good enough job.
"Deadwood," HBO: This show's acting ensemble is truly an embarrassment of riches: Ian McShane, William Sanderson, Molly Parker, Gerald McRaney, Timothy Olyphant, Paula Malcolmson --- the performers in this Western, right down to the feisty bar cleaner Jewel and the intense Mr. Wu, are as good as it gets.
"Friday Night Lights," NBC: If you think this show is only about football, think again. The games at Dillon High are thrilling but mostly because they provide arenas for the hopes, fears, loves and rivalries of the richly drawn characters in this small Texas town. As Coach Eric Taylor, Kyle Chandler paints a nuanced picture of man under pressure to achieve victory while trying to be a role model and even a friend to a complicated tribe of high school athletes.
"House," Fox: They haven't done it yet --- can you believe it? Three seasons in, and the "House" writers haven't softened the cranky doctor in the slightest. No puppy or adorable moppet has taken up residence in his bachelor pad. As if that weren't enough, the show's intelligent writers haven't slackened in their storytelling; they restlessly explore everyday ethics and morality with ruthless rigor. "Everybody lies," is House's house rule. This show wants to know why, but it gives no easy answers at the end of the hour.
"The Office," NBC: Thursday is must-see TV night on NBC again, and this sensational series is one big reason for that. Laugh-out-loud comedy is hard to come by, but laughs anchored within a minutely realized character study --- that doesn't exist, except at Scranton's Dunder Mifflin paper company.
"Project Runway," Bravo: The casting gods were smiling on this red-hot fashion-design show this year. There were many memorable characters, but, as it should be, the freaks never outshone the frocks. The level of talent among the most recent batch of candidates was truly impressive, and in the compassionate yet forthright Tim Gunn, the show had a suave secret weapon: a man who could tell nervous fashionistas the truth without causing a meltdown.
"The Shield," FX: Season 5 of "The Shield" will go down in history as one of the best seasons of television ever. Riveting doesn't begin to describe the performances by Forest Whitaker, Michael Chiklis, Walton Goggins and Kenneth Johnson. As an internal-affairs cop obsessed with bringing down rogue cop Vic Mackey and his crew, Whitaker was on fire, and "The Shield" cast gave as good as it got. And the Shakespearean finale of the season was as tragic as filmed drama gets.
"Ugly Betty," ABC: No show had a more difficult mixture to master this year: Newcomer "Betty" is equal parts camp, comedy, melodrama and family saga. The skilled cast brings off this unique mixture with flair to spare, and as the plucky Betty, the earnest girl from the outer boroughs who's swimming with Manhattan's designer-clad sharks, America Ferrera is giving a career-making performance.
"The Wire," HBO: Descriptions of this program sound like eat-your-vegetables TV: One strand of the most recent season of the HBO drama explores how the education system lets down inner-city kids. You might think that's a formula for earnest, boring TV -- until you meet Dukie, Namond, Michael and Randy. Thanks to the cliche-free writing of "The Wire" staff and four phenomenal performances by the young actors playing these 8th graders, this quartet of Baltimore kids became real and their fates came to matter intensely. If Dickens were writing now, he'd be writing for "The Wire."
The 10 runners up:
"24," Fox: I need you to trust me. Jack Bauer will save us --- from being bored ever again on Mondays.
"The Closer," TNT: Kyra Sedgwick's canny portrayal of a female detective with her share of issues, as well as savvy writing and a memorable supporting cast, save this show from being just another cop procedural.
"Dexter," Showtime: A heartbreaking drama about a serial killer --- that's also one of the funniest black comedies in ages? I didn't believe such a concoction was possible.
"Entourage," HBO: Two words: Ari Gold. Jeremy Piven's performance as the eternally scrambling agent of up-and-comer Vince Chase stops just short of being over-the-top.
"How I Met Your Mother," CBS: Swarley. Robin Sparkles. Phone five. Lemon law. Come on, people, tell me you know what these phrases refer to. If you don't, you're missing out on one of the most charming, hilarious comedies on TV.
"The New Adventures of Old Christine," CBS: Traveling mostly under the media radar this year, "Christine" has quietly grown into one of the most consistently satisfying comedies on TV. Not only is Julia Louis-Dreyfus a virtuoso of low self-esteem comedy, the "Seinfeld" veteran generously shares the laughs with a very skilled ensemble.
"Psych," USA Network: This goofball shaggy-dog detective comedy about a fake psychic and his long-suffering best pal is escapist TV at its most diverting.
"Scrubs," NBC: A delightfully daffy medical comedy with a big heart, twisted writing and a cast with drop-dead perfect comic timing.
"Veronica Mars," CW: Some of the best rat-a-tat dialogue on TV comes out of the mouth of this acerbic teen detective, but, in truth, the scenes between Veronica and her dad, as well as the bumpy love affair between Veronica and charismatic rich boy Logan, gives this scrappy drama its beating heart.
"Weeds," Showtime: What does a harried, upper-middle-class widow do to stay solvent in a tony California suburb? Sell pot to the locals, in this devious and delicious comedy. Not only is the central conceit a neat metaphor for a variety of upscale addictions, but the supporting cast on this comedy is ridiculously sharp.
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