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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, December 21, 2007

One critic's pick of TV shows this year

By Robert Lloyd
Los Angeles Times

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Tina Fey, as "30 Rock" pro-tagonist Liz Lemon, consistent-ly provokes lots of laughs.

NBC

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Glenn Close

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Here are some things out of the many I liked on TV this year, with a slight bias toward the new:

Prince at Super Bowl XLI (CBS). "Purple Rain," in the rain.

"30 Rock" (NBC). Nothing on TV makes me laugh harder or fills me with as much admiration. Tina Fey and Co. have rapidly entered their "Revolver" phase, going where they like without fear. And by openly engaging the compromised nature of the business they're in, they've managed to transcend it.

"Mad Men" (AMC). A vision of 1960 as much based on the movies as the reality of the time, ripe with the dreadful thrill of a world on the verge of redefinition. Beautifully designed, with an abundance of fine performances, out of which I am arbitrarily moved to mention Robert Morse as the corporate eminence and Christina Hendricks as a smart woman stuck in an archaic mode.

"Damages" (FX). Glenn Close has scared me ever since she boiled that bunny, but her harsher qualities are put to good use as a manipulative litigator in this dandy legal thriller. Made with a wit, intelligence and restraint reminiscent of the best of Sidney Lumet or Alan J. Pakula.

"Life Support" (HBO). A beautifully modulated, complex performance by Queen Latifah — tamping down her natural sparkle as a prickly, imperfect heroine — is at the heart of Nelson George's quiet portrayal of an HIV-positive life.

Donald Sutherland and Jill Clayburgh in "Dirty Sexy Money" (ABC). A solid enough series, but there is a separate pleasure in the mere fact of these performances — eminent actors in parts that let them use what they have.

"Yo Gabba Gabba!" (Nickelodeon). That a life in pop means never having to quite grow up is borne out in this super-hip, music-filled kids show, not for kids only. Indie stars participate.

"Nimrod Nation" (Sundance). Real people in a real place — a small town on Michigan's Upper Peninsula — required only to be themselves, as a high school basketball team drives toward a championship.

"Pushing Daisies" (ABC). A fairy tale for grown-ups, as dark and as light, as desperate and liberating as fairy tales are meant to be.

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