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5 votes
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Golden Globes land at CBS for 2024 telecast
7 votes -
‘M*A*S*H’ said goodbye forty years ago, with a finale for the ages
5 votes -
Star Trek Prodigy - S01E01 "Lost and Found"
6 votes -
Star Trek Day - Join Paramount+ and fans from around the world for a free live-streamed celebration on September 8th, 8:30PM EST
4 votes -
Star Trek San Diego Comic-Con (SDCC) 2021 teasers
3 votes -
Recommendation: Person of Interest (2011-2016)
I want to talk about Person of Interest. A CBS series created by Jonathan Nolan, more famously known for his work on Westworld (and brother of "that" Christopher Nolan, talent runs in the family)....
I want to talk about Person of Interest. A CBS series created by Jonathan Nolan, more famously known for his work on Westworld (and brother of "that" Christopher Nolan, talent runs in the family). This is a spoiler-free post.
Premise: An ex-military badass is hired by a rich ex-usgov genius who built an AI that is plugged into the NSA's spying supernetwork, and can predict crime based on all the datapoints.
Strong similarities with: Westworld, Mr. Robot.
Person of Interest is a series that really took me by surprise. I didn't really care for Season 1, which I left running in the background after it was apparent to me that this was a very run-of-the-mill CBS police procedural. I gave it a chance based on a friend's recommendation, and because IT/sec references were accurate and didn't make me cringe. It also had an interesting premise which was written pre-snowden and raised some interesting philosophical questions on privacy and crime prevention.
Then towards the Season 1 finale, the music got pretty good, the scenes were very action-packed and the series started feeling like it was getting very entertaining. So I kept watching.
Without spoiling: throughout Season 2, the series actually completely shifts genre almost unnoticeably, from "generic police procedural" to "long-arc Westworld-style tech scifi".
I was stunned by how smooth the genre transition was. Of all the series I watched, it's something truly unique to that one, which is one of the reasons I rate it as one of the best TV series in my catalogue. It's also, from what I heard, Nolan's strategy from the get-go in order to get a very unique show greenlit on a "safe" network like CBS.
By the end of the series, Person of Interest had inspired me. Made me extremely interested in AI and data. It affected my work and the way I think about the world. POI really toes the scifi line by taking concepts which are possible, but not there yet and explores the possibilities (again, Westworld); unlike most other Sci-Fi shows which take abstract ideas of what we may want to see in the future, regardless of how possible/reasonable they are.
POI does require some suspension of disbelief. You have to accept the trope of a "supergenius" who can build an AI like this all on his own, for example. I think that's fine, and I found that the show was very rigorous at taking only practical shortcuts with very little fridge logic.
I keep mentioning Westworld and that's no accident. POI predates WW and it feels that WW was a continuation of Nolan's ideas about the implications of AI, in a much higher budget setting. (And as an aside, if you haven't watched Westworld, you should)
Tag spoilers in comments :)
21 votes -
Star Trek - First Contact Day
7 votes -
Nickelodeon creates Avatar Studios to create new Avatar, Legend of Korra content
21 votes -
Star Trek: Lower Decks S01E01 - "Second Contact"
15 votes -
Star Trek: Lower Decks | Trailer
23 votes -
Star Trek: Lower Decks sets release date for August 6th
5 votes -
"Star Trek: Strange New Worlds" announced for CBS All Access
23 votes -
ViacomCBS to launch new streaming service blending CBS All Access with Paramount films, Viacom channels
8 votes -
‘Star Trek: Picard’ officially renewed for Season 2 by CBS before January 23 premiere
6 votes -
Star Trek: Picard | NYCC trailer
13 votes -
What do you think of the new Twilight Zone?
I really enjoyed Peele's new Twilight Zone. It's a bit hit and miss - but most anthology shows have this. Some episodes are great, most are good enough, a couple are forgettable. The critic...
I really enjoyed Peele's new Twilight Zone. It's a bit hit and miss - but most anthology shows have this. Some episodes are great, most are good enough, a couple are forgettable.
The critic reviews (based on the first four episodes) are all over the place, with scoring ranging from 100 to 10. The user reviews are the usual tyre-fire of awfulness. https://www.metacritic.com/tv/the-twilight-zone-2019
I found Replay to be genuinely upsetting and it was the episode that stayed with me longest. I get the impression that this episode split the audience and a bunch of people dislike the social commentary. (Or something, I dunno, I can't understand the mindset that criticises a show for something like this).
So I'm interested in your opinions. Have you watched it? Did you enjoy it?
5 votes -
New Star Trek: Picard series adds two cast members
9 votes -
Patrick Stewart says Star Trek: Picard series is set up to run three seasons
16 votes -
CBS All Access orders two seasons of "Star Trek: Lower Decks", a half-hour animated comedy series focused on the support crew
11 votes -
Planned Star Trek TV shows will differ in style, with breaks in between to avoid burnout
6 votes -
Hillary Clinton makes surprise appearance on 'Murphy Brown' premiere
9 votes -
Discovery actor teases big Star Trek announcement coming Thursday
7 votes -
Year for setting of Star Trek: Picard show established; storyline teased by Executive Producer
16 votes