On 'Law & Order,' the one sending the detectives out is a black woman which also gives you something because a lot of women aren't usually seen in these roles as well.
I agree that she's a blast, ... even if some of the show's longtime fans seem disgruntled that other characters were marginalized during the Vala/Daniel Jackson arc, including new cast member Ben Browder.
Very few of them seem to be breakouts.
Every episode will be an event this season. We're hoping they find a way to give happy endings to everybody.
The Sopranos' will finally win the best drama Emmy it has deserved for so long. This year nothing comes close.
With 'Related' and 'Hot Properties,' these are characters you've seen before. It seems like a formula and in wake of 'Sex and the City,' it seems like they're trying to rip it off.
This does seem to be a convenient way for TV producers to cast a series and to have a person of color in the credits, even though they don't really contribute to the main story most weeks.
His decision is a most precarious one because he has a home base there. Every time you have a flop movie, you can always go back to the show. So he's taking a chance on eroding his popularity.
The guy in charge of the main characters is generally going to be a person of color.
It's a ritual of the fall that you're going to come back and see how your cliffhangers turned out.
They're making strides in becoming more commercially viable. If they can get one signature show, like HBO had with Sopranos, that'll put them on the map and get them the name recognition they need.