I have spent the last week falling obsessively face first into watching Medium. I'm up to the fourth season right now, and suspect I will be finished with all of it by next week if the inability to stop at 'just one more episode' continues. Clearly, given my getting sucked into Ghost Whisperer awhile back, I have been in need of woman sees the dead type stories and as entertained as I was by that romp in the genre, Medium is kicking that button way harder right now.
I think it's the blood splatter. I'm a sucker for police procedurals, and as much as I love a good cry there's a point at which I overload on sentimentality. Medium gives me a main female lead, ghost stories, AND crime scenes with completely unrealistic forensics and police work followed by equally nonsensical trials and legal mumbo jumbo. It's like they know me.
I am also more than a little in love with the three daughters and the inherited gift storylines weaving through. The whole concept of what the heck do you do when not only do you see horrible things, but your kids do too because you passed it on to them. I like (like seems like an awful word to use here, but you get my meaning) that this hasn't gone unexplored or dodged by only giving them benign visions. We're told Allison has lived with this all her life, so giving it to her daughters as well drives home what that means and what they go through, plus how Allison handles it is a good window into that experience. Also, strong mother and daughter relationships, yay!
So, yeah, that's what I'm doing with my time right now.
I think it's the blood splatter. I'm a sucker for police procedurals, and as much as I love a good cry there's a point at which I overload on sentimentality. Medium gives me a main female lead, ghost stories, AND crime scenes with completely unrealistic forensics and police work followed by equally nonsensical trials and legal mumbo jumbo. It's like they know me.
I am also more than a little in love with the three daughters and the inherited gift storylines weaving through. The whole concept of what the heck do you do when not only do you see horrible things, but your kids do too because you passed it on to them. I like (like seems like an awful word to use here, but you get my meaning) that this hasn't gone unexplored or dodged by only giving them benign visions. We're told Allison has lived with this all her life, so giving it to her daughters as well drives home what that means and what they go through, plus how Allison handles it is a good window into that experience. Also, strong mother and daughter relationships, yay!
So, yeah, that's what I'm doing with my time right now.
From:
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I loved Lee (he and Allison had such great chemistry) and Manny, and Joe was a pretty cool husband. And, OMG, I adored Captain Push. <3
I don't want to spoil anything, but I'll just tell you flat out: if I could go back, I wouldn't watch the series finale.
From:
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I find it interesting that this appeals to me even though they're not people I can identify with, since I don't have kids or much of a family (created or otherwise). I just still think it's nice to see that part of life portrayed positively in those kinds of scenarios.
From:
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And yes, OMG. I am fairly certain a scene from the family table is playing out downstairs between my niece and nephew RIGHT NOW, heh as it did between my brothers and myself when we were kids, and if I'd not had an only child would've been the dinner table for my kid too.
And I love that Allison and Joe don't always get along and snipe at each other or have petty arguments and they don't *mean* anything other than that two people who've been married that long sometimes get on each others nerves and have dumb arguments about cereal.
From:
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From:
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I've been pondering going the other direction and giving Ghost Whisperer another try. *g* I made it in a few eps when it first aired, but it didn't stick.