This week's Touchbase takes a look at a couple of sitcom debuts.
Let's start with NBC's The Fall & Rise of Reggie Dinkins.
This series stars Tracy Morgan as Reggie Dinkins, a once popular and successful NFL quarterback who was brought down by a gambling scandal. Reggie is looking to rehabilitate his image, earn the respect of his son and maybe win back the heart of his ex-wife. So Reggie has decided to make a documentary about his life.
Which brings us to Daniel Radcliffe as Arthur Tobin, an Oscar winning director who has made the questionable life choice of directing this cooky concept.
About halfway through the half hour pilot, my wife Andrea said, "I'm not feeling this."
And I agreed with her.
Not only were there few laughs but I couldn't escape the feeling that this territory had been explored already but on better,funnier shows.
Tracy Morgan playing a guy looking to improve his rep, gain the respect of his kids and the love of his ex? Did that one that on the sadly gone & it seems forgotten The O.G. that ran for 4 seasons on TBS.
Tracy Morgan playing a celebrity past the peak of his fame and lacks all impulse control? Done that on 30 Rock where it was funny.
Andrea was prepared to cut bait half way through the pilot but I presevered to finish the episode which gave us the only real laugh out loud moment, a flashback to Arthur Tobin's post Oscar win gig directing a Marvel movie where he has a total meltdown.
I find it funny how "Marvel movie" has become a trope in shows about people in show business (actors, directors, etc). A person landing a "Marvel movie"...
1) has grasped the brass ring of success, achieving a pinnacle of fame and fortune
2) been consigned to the nadir of their career, an interminable purgatory of dread and self loathing.
Or 3) both 1 and 2 at the same time.
Anyway, The Fall & Rise of Reggie Dinkins is not for us.
Despite all the reviews I've seen that have described this show as sharp, witty, funny. Well, good for them.
For Andrea and I, this has been the debut of The Fall & Rise of Reggie Dinkins on the Tuesday TV Touchbase. And it's exit.
Next up is the return of Scrubs and spoiler: we did feel this one.
It's been 15 years since the series finale of Scrubs at the end of season 8*.
*Wait! Wasn't there a 9th season? Yes, there was and we don't talk about that.
Zach Braff, Donald Faison and Sarah Chalke are back as J.D., Turk and Elliot and some things haven't changed and others have.
The J.D./Turk bromance? Still a thing!
The J.D./Elliot romance? NOT still a thing.
It seems that J.D. and Elliott did get married as glimpsed in J.D.'s flash forward fantasy at the end of season 8 but something somewhere somehow went wrong and J.D. and Elliot are divorced.
And not amiacably.
Well, as a fan, I think that sucks. But I do recognize that the new dynamic does provide all sorts of avenues for drama and even comedy in the revived series.
The new Scrubs has Turk and Elliot still working at Sacred Heart Hospital but J.D. has a private practice as a concierge doctor to the idle rich. One of his patients gets admitted to Sacred Heart which brings J.D. back to his old stomping grounds.
Head nurse Carla (who is still married to Turk and they have 4 daughters) is happy to see J.D. again. "Bambi!" (Judy Reyes is listed as a "special guest star" and Carla is a recurring character since Judy is busy over on High Potential. Which will be back with a new episode tonight. Yay!)
Dr. Cox (John C. McGinley) is still there, tasked with wrangling a new batch of newbies but forced to reign in his ascerbic wit by an ever watchful H.R. person played by Vanessa Bayer (who is always funny in everything she does).
Cox finagles J.D. to return to Sacred Heart and replace Cox as Chief of Medicine.
Wait! Newbie is in charge of the hospital? OK, there are too many lines on Zach Braff's face to call him "newbie" but yeah, he's in charge now.
J.D.'s flights of fantasy and his need to please people run headlong into the realities of modern healthcare. J.D. comes to terms with the reality there is only so much money and so much time and not everyone gets what they want and they can't save everyone. But he is dedicated to fighting the battles where he can to save as many as he can. J.D.'s sense of hope maybe tempered but it's not gone.
Like the original series, the revived Scrubs effectively balances comedy with drama, channeling what made the original series work and merging it with a new direction with the trio of J.D., Turk and Elliot at it's core.
Oh, there is a new cast of interns and nurses who have potential to be interesting but they need time for us to get used to them.
Overall, I'm counting the revival of Scrubs as a win.
That is that for this week's Tuesday TV Touchbase.
Until next time, remember to be good to one another and try to keep it down in there, would ya? I'm trying to watch TV over here.



