Live-blogging will begin at 9:55 PM Eastern. But somebody goofed and turned on his spotlight and his microphone too early, so Mannion's already out front, delivering what he thinks is a funny opening monologue. Feel free to ignore him and scroll down.
Hello, out there!
Wow!
What an echo.
Good evening, folks and folksettes. Lance Mannion here, blogging to you from the ballroom at the Camp Ho-ki-po-ki Restaurant high atop Mount Killimontarack in the beautiful Catskill Mountain Resort Region. Behind me, Steve Kuusisto and his All-Girl All-Kazoo band are playing the haunting and enchanting overture to Lucia di Lammamoor, so that's that godawful squawking you hear in the background and you don't need to adjust your radio sets. When they're done the girls will go table to table asking you to donate as generously as you can so that they can put some gas in their bus and get the hell out of this one-horse town and on to their next gig in Merrillville, Indiana. That's where they make the big bucks.
I'm your host tonight. No guest blogger. Just me to take you through tonight's very special holiday episode of Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. Emmy-award winner Ken Levine will tell you how much television writers look forward to writing very special holiday episodes.
The nice thing about being the sole host is that I don't have to appear here in italics. You can't rent a good italics like you can a tux---and, by the way, what do you think of mine? I like the line here, but I'm not crazy about the velvet lapels. At any rate, appearing in italics is tiring. You have to spend the whole night leaning thirty degrees to stage right like a novice mime practicing the walking in a windstorm routine. You probably didn't notice, but the last couple of times I leaned too far and lost my balance and fell over on top of a busboy. Same busboy both times. Both times he was carrying a full tray of china. Amazing how fate likes a joke like that. That ironic part is that both times I was aiming at the cigarette girl.
So tonight I get to stand up straight while live-blogging, although if the cigarette girl passes within range during a commercial don't be surprised if italicize myself all over the place.
Quick rundown of some good stuff from last week's episode.
1. There was a story.
2. The subplots had something to do with developing the characters and didn't bother with trying to teach us the economics of running a network or the history of television.
3. I got a good joke I can tell at parties. Jewish guy calls up his mother, says How ya been, ma? His mother says, Not so good, sonny, I haven't eaten in 38 days. Guy says, 38 days? Ma, why haven't you eaten in 38 days? His mother says, I didn't want to have to talk with my mouth full in case you called.
Harriet told it better.
4. Aaron Sorkin finally realized Jordan is not serious about doing her job and wrote her part accordingly. The scene where she self-destructs in an interview with a reporter for TIME was clunky, a bit too obviously staged---the reporter seemed to have come into the room expecting exactly what he got and sat there waiting for it to happen, very much as if he was in an audience watching a play he had seen before and he made no attempt to actually conduct his interview; he just fed her questions that were designed to help Jordan get from Point A.) Pretending to take the interview seriously to Point B.) Aware that she's gone too far. At some points along the way, the reporter seemed to be coaching her on how to go from bad to worse, but he didn't come across as manipulative, just as scripted.---but the follow-up scene with Danny in which she realizes what a gigantic mistake she made was good, right up to the point where she faints and reveals she's pregnant, as if we didn't see that one coming.
Sorkin, though, did a nice job of setting up that moment while keeping in mind that the moment was not going to be a big surprise.
5. I say Sorkin did a nice job and Sorkin realized Jordan's a twit, but Sorkin had a co-writer on the episode and as I said last week one of the things I think Sorkin needs to do is call in outside help to write the show. So the co-writer is a promising development.
The meta-scripting is still at work though in that last week's episode written with the help of a co-writer was about Matt Albie bringing in a co-writer to help him write...that week's episode.
6. The two young writers, Darius and the girl from the British version of The Office got more screen time. Unfortunately for them, most of their screen time was spent playing straight man and straight woman to the hired gun Matt and Danny's brought in to teach them how to write. Fortunately for us, the hired gun is a compelling character, although with Darius and now this guy Aaron Sorkin has created a writing staff for his fictional show that includes two comedy writers who have no sense of humor.
Maybe three.
Brit Girl's sense of humor has yet to be demonstrated.
Apparently their ability to write killer comedy is akin to an infant prodigy's ability to write a symphony without being able to read a note of music. Some part of their brains that they cannot connect to except while writing is tuned into the quantum humor of the universe.
7. Harriet and Matt played several scenes together as if they actually liked each other. The problem is that that's exactly as it came across---they like each other. A couple of pals who haven't spent a lot of time together lately.
Previews suggest that Matt and Harriet smooch under the mistletoe tonight. Let's hope the previews are misleading. As many of you know, I hate mush. The sight of the two of them swooning into each other's arms will just boil my brisket.
Unless I manage to fall on the cigarette girl.
Then I'll feel more kindly towards all young lovers.
It's 8:31 by my watch. I'll just stand here and practice leaning until she wanders by or the show starts.
9:52. Heroes is looking less interesting. "We're going to take you apart, Gabriel. Just like one of your little watches. Sorry. Timepieces. We're going to take you apart and find out exactly what...makes...you..." Tick! Dammit! The word you're working towards is Tick! "Tick." Phew.
9:54. "Tell me, Claire. Can you keep a secret?" Melodrama. I think I like this show better when I watch it with the sound turned down.
9:57. I also like it better when they get all surreal and don't have any dialogue. What's the bike wheel spinning symbolize?
Here come all the heroes!
Oh oh! It's true. A hero will be lost!
10.01. Macao again! Why does Sorkin think we care? Maybe he just likes having Ed Asner say Macao.
10:02. I knew the father would turn out to be nobody interesting. I'm glad.
10:03. Roz Russell and Cary Grant, I'm telling you.
What was the beer Danny was asking if she and the boyfriend got drunk on and forgot there are like 500 types of birth control of which I can think of only 4 off the top of my head?
I think it was gentlemanly of Danny not to ask her why she didn't have an abortion. Or do we know because of the 12 years of Catholic school Jordan suffered...went through?
10:08 Charlie Brown joke coming in the door with Matt.
10:08:10. LINUS?????
Good grief.
Linus did not pick out the tree!
Aaron Sorkin, you blockhead!
10:10 First walk and talk.
I should move to LA.
But I love Christmas.
I can't live in LA if I love Christmas.
10:12. By the way, Sorkin wrote this episode alone. Explains Steven Weber's totally unrealistic swearing just now.
This is why they need to be able to say fuck on network television. Because that's what Jack would be saying.
10:15. Ad for Blood Diamond. What accent does Leonardo di Caprio think he's doing?
10:16. By the way, Matt's being Jewish and loving Christmas reminds me of the novelist Fred Busch. Fred was Jewish and he loved Christmas. Loved it. He wrote a preface to the Signet Classics edition of A Christmas Carol.
10:19. Jesus looks like one of the Bee Gees in the paintings. Good line. But is Simon going to be nothing in this show but Tom's sidekick? Isn't that a complete inversion of the talent ratio?
10:23. We're getting humor out of opening a coconut. About as easy as actually opening a coconut.
Matt and Danny. Boy, they're good together.
I'm not hip enough. I don't know. Would Harriet be right for this part? Sarah Paulson?
10:27. Is Danny going to say it or punch her desk?
They've got chemistry. They may even have body heat. But I still hate mush.
I'm in terrifc shape too. I'm a nut about exercise as well. I'd walk across the street to talk to Amanda Peet and wouldn't have to stop to rest once.
I probably haven't mentioned it, but my high school girlfriend looked just like Amanda Peet only prettier.
Ok, the drill press to open the coconuts? Cute visual bit. But is there really only one place in southern California where all the TV shows and movie theaters get their fake snow?
I knew that about Luke and the shepherds and Jesus being born in the spring. I learned it in Catholic grade school. I won a bar bet on that once. I think that one of Aaron Sorkin's objectives with Studio 60 is helping all of us win lots of bar bets.
The unsmiling writer was more fun last week.
10:41. I thought they fired the Mac guy.
Is it me or is Will Smith looking more and more like Jesse Jackson?
I have to tell you, folks. I've been watching more of this show than usual. I'm attributing it to Matthew Perry and Bradley Whitford because that's all that's going on.
10:45. "Why is it that young people have no sense of the past?" Yes, everybody needs to know when Caruso died relative to the birth of a fictional character played by Ed Asner.
Besides winning us bar bets, Sorkin wants us to have a sense of the past. Generous guy. What middle school does he teach at again?
10:49. THE KISS!!!!!!!!!!!
And no mistletoe.
10:50. If Steven Weber leaves the show this will be the last live blog.
Hooray! Ed Anser's a hero!
Jack's a hero!
He meets the grandkids.
Can't Aaron Sorkin just let the musicians play?????
Jordan's eating a sandwich sloppily. Amanda Peet has no vanity. Good quality in a comedienne.
The full cheek is a nice, cute touch too.
10:56 Show would have been pretty good if Sorkin had just let the musicians play. The slideshow overwhelms them. The moment should have been about the music. Instead it was about how Aaron Sorkin's heart is in the right place.
11:02. Time to call it a night, gang. Steve Kuusisto and his All Girl All Kazoo band snuck out during the first commercial break without paying their bar tab. The cigarette girl went home with the busboy I fell on. Matt has kissed Harriet, Danny's SAID IT! They're making pina coladas with the burnt coconut shavings. It's Christmastime in LA and did I mention how the novelist Cynthia Ozick, who is Jewish, used to call Fred Busch up at Christmastime and ask him if he had a Christmas tree and when he said he did she'd yell at him for being a bad Jew?
It's not just Aaron Sorkin who can teach you things.
Clear the room, people. We've got another party coming in from the West Coast. What they're going to dance to now that there are no kazoos, I have no idea. Art the Bartender can play Lady of Spain on wine glasses. Art? You want to get out the crystal?
I'm done, folks. Wrap up in the morning.
Goodnight!
Misleading preview? It said something about "soul mates", right? I figured it meant something about Danny and Jordan, since they keep saying the same words at the same time. I mean, why else have them do that?
Posted by: Victoria | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 09:10 PM
The bike wheel represents the circle within the spiral within the wheel *within* the wheel!
Posted by: Jim C. | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:01 PM
I can't spell amnio....
She grew 20 lbs in a week.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:02 PM
Jordan isn't enough of a bigshot to afford a private
consultation, without having to wait in the
airport lounge^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^ doctors' waiting room????
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:04 PM
"fraction of a man" -- Jackass
Well, that was a sad, weak, opening
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:05 PM
Have we wondered into Days of Our Lives??
Posted by: M.A. Peel | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:06 PM
A shame. I thought that Danny might rise to the
occasion, be a real mensch. Instead, he resorts to
cheap shots...
Josh, we miss you.
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:08 PM
By the way the butterfly reference is A Sound of Thunder by Ray Bradbury for those who somehow missed that story.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:08 PM
A Charlie Brown Christmas!
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:09 PM
That bradbury story is a great one too!
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:09 PM
He's Jewish! Oh that went well.
Earthquake...more real news? Why???
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:11 PM
I think the thought is:
Linus = Funny
Charlie Brown /= funny.
Posted by: Jim C. | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:12 PM
Nice Studio Sixty t-shirt. How retro, oh, and Jordan is pregnant.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:12 PM
More explanation about how our airwaves work.
No, no. No. Cuse word coming F!!!!
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:14 PM
I must admit that I am not sure this is interesting
enough to post to tonight. I almost recorded it
so I could get an early night --- and now i'm wishing
I had.
I *do* so want to like this show....
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:15 PM
She is having the baby during sweeps?
They will not end the network. Boogy man alert.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:15 PM
You can too love Christmas and live in LA!
I do both.
Can you tell I'm waiting for the show to come on here?
Posted by: shayera | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:17 PM
Lance...we do a big party for Christmas here in Florida. Saturday at noon, snow and palm trees. We truck in the snow. Palm trees are like Chicago roaches.
I like Ellen.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:18 PM
It's serious journalist guy from WW
Posted by: M.A. Peel | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:21 PM
"Marginally talented"
Luke Scott? Plans for the future? We don't need this. The show doesn't need this. Anita Pallenberg?
Ha!
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:22 PM
She certainly does have a better future in something
other than comedy
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:22 PM
Danny is in love. La la la
Matt loves it.
We all love Christmas.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:25 PM
No matter what I've always been your biggest fan. Abs of granite.
Danny knows way too much about Jordan. Love is in the air.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:28 PM
Here is Anita.
I hate any commercial that uses Beatles music.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:30 PM
Would she? No. And no.
Were they to do the Doris Day Story? She could take a meeting.
Posted by: Jim C. | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:31 PM
OK. Where is everyone?
Halfway through the show and all we have are lectures about the FCC and where the history of Christmas is wrong.
No wonder everyone seemed to dislike this show. Maybe it is the live commenting?
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:32 PM
Matt should have gotten a Norelco commercial to complete his Christmas Show--you know, the Santa on the electric razor
Posted by: M.A. Peel | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:33 PM
Lance, I'm in terrific shape too, so long as you
think that round is terrific. Even I can walk across
the street without stopping, except for traffic. I
always stop traffic.
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:33 PM
You know, if Matt and Danny's manners of romancing in any way are based on their creator's--and frankly, he doesn't have enough imagination for them not to be--I am suddenly overwhelmed by sympathy for Kristin Chenoweth.
Posted by: Jim Tourtelott | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:34 PM
Santa Hitler is funny even if they ruined it in the commercials.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:35 PM
Jordan is there for moral support. Yeah, she's his balls. I get it.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:38 PM
Trumpet player is Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews .
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:40 PM
Speaking of Chenoweth, I was a bit surprised how literally Sorkin has lifted from her life, according to the article in yesterday's New York Times:
“God knows I’ve made mistakes and been criticized for them,” Ms. Chenoweth said unflinchingly. (Some have even been turned into TV fiction on “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip.”) “When I was promoting ‘As I Am’ last year,” she said, “I went on ‘The 700 Club,’ ... “I wasn’t thinking about what it represents. I guess I was living in a little bit of a bubble, and I was surprised that it upset so many people. If I had it to do over again, I wouldn’t go, because I don’t agree with that antigay stuff.' …
"But when she assured her theater fans that she supports gay rights her Christian base was outraged; she was disinvited from performing at a Women of Faith conference in September 2005. She drew further criticism when she appeared in a parade of tiny bikinis in the March 2006 issue of FHM."
Posted by: Victoria | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:41 PM
Finally something to make it a christmas special. Give the guys from NOLA a gig.... I like it.
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:42 PM
"how literally Sorkin has lifted from her life" -- Oh, god. Have him meet more interesting comedy writers then.
Thanks for that info Victoria.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:43 PM
This is like the SNL '80 Christmas episode, where they turned the last part of the show over to the cast of the Pirates of Penzance (musical guests!) to sing Christmas carols.
Posted by: Jim C. | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:44 PM
Lance...you're getting better commercials.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:44 PM
The NOLA idea could be a worthy, indeed noble one. However, the four minutes Danny wants from Matt is doubtless to be used to tell us, in excruciating detail, what a noble idea it is.
Posted by: Jim Tourtelott | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:45 PM
No, they'll cut to a Christmas carol.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:47 PM
Damn return key
a Christmas carol played by all those out of their homes musicians
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:48 PM
Okay, I actually think that SNL should have done the dateline sketch...
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:49 PM
Matt wants to mark his territory. Lucky he didn't pee around the desk.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:50 PM
Lou Grant returns!
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:52 PM
Good speech by ed asner....
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:52 PM
OT, one of the songs I've been listening to a lot
recently is Arlo Guthrie's City of New Orleans....
I like what S60 has done tonight with the musicians.
It feels kinda like a West Wing moment...
Posted by: breadbox | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:55 PM
Why wasn't this on a Christmas special last year? Man, I love horns.
Oh, don't cut the adoring family, friends, and lovers.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:55 PM
Oh, I do love Jordan's cheeks on that shot. Chipmunk.
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:56 PM
Why don't they have the Christmas shows near Christmas anymore?
Posted by: Domoni | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:57 PM
For a show set in LA, it sure is dark on them thar sets. Hell, there's more sunlight in an Abel Ferrara vampire movie.
Posted by: James Wolcott | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 10:59 PM
O holy night--the sentimental Sorkin. I'm more a New Year's episode myself.
Posted by: M.A. Peel | Monday, December 04, 2006 at 11:00 PM