Welcome to Joshuaonline

Hello and Welcome to Joshuaonline , we like to look at the TV and Media here it's not updated everyday but we try have a few posts each month, hope you enjoy and thanks for visiting



NETWORK TV Fall 2024

It's that time of year again! The networks are releasing their fall line ups


Fall Line up: FOX NBC CBS ABC The CW

Thursday, May 19, 2022

Fall TV 2022: The CW

The CW TvLookFall2022  Upfronts 


The CW has been through a lot this year, the network is in a spot of a potential sale from it's current parent owners : Paramount and Discovery,  the network has canceled more series than it usually does.  It's feeling downsized more than anything else.  
   
     Riverdale is ending, and the show is moving to midseason for it's final season. The Flash will be moving to midseason.  Nancy Drew is also moving to midseason. Supernatural prequel spinoff, The Winchesters,  and an acquisition  Professionals will be taking up Tuesdays. Stargirl moves from summer to Wednesdays in fall. It's joining Kung Fu which moved from midseason. 
   
         For the fans of the  All American series those will be on Monday nights  and Walker with it's new spinoff series , Walker :Independence  will be on Thursdays. Fridays and Saturdays are now all alternative programming.  Sunday will be with Canadian imports : Family Law and Coroner. 

  Here's the schedule all times ET/PT (Denver and St. Louis as well)  ; new series highlighted in Blue 

Monday 
8pm All American 
9pm All American: Homecoming 

Tuesday
8pm The Winchesters 
9pm Professionals 
      
Wednesday 
8pm DC'S Stargirl (new night) 
9pm  Kung Fu 

Thursday 
8pm Walker 
9pm Walker: Independence 

Friday 
8pm Penn & Teller :Fool Us
9pm  Whose Line Is It Anyway?
9:30pm Whose Line Is It Anyway?

Saturday 
8pm Magic with the Stars
9pm  World's Funniest Animals 
9:30pm World's Funniest Animals 

Sunday 
8pm Family Law 
9pm coroner (new night) 


Press Release after the Jump 

Wednesday, May 18, 2022

FALL TV 2022: CBS

CBS TVLookFall2022  Upfronts 


     CBS' fall line ups are not normally radically changed, and the structures have been mostly the same. This up coming season, there as has been a slight change to Thursday. For many years CBS had devoted 2 hours of comedy on Thursday ,especially after cutting the amount of comedy on Monday nights, but this season CBS has given the 9pm ET hour to a drama that being a new drama called So Help Me Todd . As two Chuck Lorre comedies have been canned, which is also interesting for CBS.  The cutting of comedies also seems to be a theme at networks as well.  Fire Country, a new drama, takes the Magnum P.I slot on Friday. 

    Wednesday is full reality show now, with CSI: Vegas moving to Thursday nights. The Real Love Boat  joins  Survivor and The Amazing Race. Sunday Nights have a new drama as well, with East New York taking up the post Equalizer slot.  NCIS: Los Angles moves down. 

      They have set up True Lies, a drama based off the film, for midseason.  Along with a few alternative series making their way to midseason as well. So far, it seems, CBS hasn't picked up a new comedy series. 
        
        There's not much other changes, otherwise CBS has a stable programming slate. Ghosts moves up to 8:30pm after Young Sheldon on Thursday Nights; the FBI shows still have Tuesdays and there's still 2 NCIS series on the line up.

Here's the line up all times ET/PT (unless otherwise noted) new series are highlighted in blue 

Monday 
8pm The Neighborhood 
8:30pm Bob ♥ Abishola
9pm  NCIS 
10pm  NCIS: Hawai'i 

Tuesday 
8pm FBI 
9pm FBI: International 
10pm FBI: Most Wanted 

Wednesday 
8pm Survivor 
9pm The Amazing Race
10pm The Real Love Boat 


Thursday
8pm  Young Sheldon 
8:30pm Ghosts (new time) 
9pm So Help Me Todd 
10pm CSI : Vegas (new time) 

Friday
8pm S.W.A.T (New Time) 
9pm Fire Country 
10pm Blue Blood 

Saturday
8pm Saturday Encores 
9pm Saturday Encores 
10pm 48 Hours 


Sunday 
7pm 60 Minutes 
8pm The Equalizer 
9pm East New York 
10pm NCIS: Los Angeles (new time) 

Press Release after the Jump

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Fall TV 2022: ABC

ABC  TVLookFall2022  Upfronts 



       Football! Well sometimes. ABC is not going back to the full glory of having Monday Night Football on the network as most of the games will still be on ESPN, so ABC will still have some programs on a Monday night. What you won't be seeing is Dancing with the Stars which has moved to Disney Plus, at least for now. Summer staple Bachelor in Paradise will be running instead.  The series will be running twice weekly on Mondays and Tuesdays. 

      Abbott Elementary gets the prime Wednesday 9pm ET slot; three new series  have been added with Alaska, The Rookie: Feds, and Celebrity Jeopardy!  .  This also means the Tuesday comedy block has been put way with. "The Wonder Years" was renewed, but won't on until midseason.   "A Million Little Things" also has been shifted to midseason 

 Here's the line up all times ET/PT (unless otherwise noted)  New series highlighted in Blue 

Monday 
8pm Bachelor in Paradise
10pm The Good Doctor 

Tuesday
8pm Bachelor in Paradise 
10pm The Rookie: Feds

Wednesday
8pm The Conners 
8:30pm The Goldbergs
9pm Abbott Elementary (new night) 
9:30pm Home Economics 
10pm Big Sky (new night) 

Thursday 
8pm Station 19 
9pm Grey's Anatomy 
10pm Alaska 

Friday
8pm Shark Tank 
9pm 20/20 (two hours) 

Saturday
8pm College Football 

Sunday 
7pm America's Funniest Home Videos
8pm Celebrity Jeopardy! 
9pm Celebrity Wheel of Fortune 
10pm The Rookie 

Press release after the jump

Monday, May 16, 2022

Fall TV 2022: NBC

NBC TVLookFall2022  Upfronts 



 
     NBC has decided to make Friday Night their comedy, an interesting move, for the one of the traditionally lower rated nights of network TV.  NBC schedule is not a big difference from previous years like The Voice is on Monday and Tuesday Nights, Chicago shows on Wednesday, Law & Order shows on Thursday Nights.  The revival of Quantum Leap gets a Monday post- The Voice airing, while La Brea and New Amsterdam get post Voice Tuesdays.

         NBC's Friday is the most change as mentioned above, but first they will be airing quiz show College Bowl  on Fridays in the 8pm ET hour with Dateline taking up it's normal two hours. From November, comedies take the 8PMET which includes "Young Rock" and a new series "Lopez vs. Lopez" .  The rest of NBC's comedies are waiting in the wings most likely for mid-season.  "The Blacklist" is also waiting in the wings. 

        For those who don't watch network shows on networks, NBC programming is moving from Hulu to Peacock next day streaming. 
   
  Here's the Line up  

             All Times ET/PT (unless otherwise Noted) new programs highlighted in Blue 

Monday 
8-10pm The Voice
10pm  Quantum Leap 

Tuesday
8pm  The Voice
9pm La Brea 
10pm New Amsterdam 

Wednesday 
8pm Chicago Med
9pm Chicago Fire
10pm Chicago P.D 

Thursday 
8pm Law & Order
9pm  Law & Order :SVU
10pm Law & Order: Organized Crime 

Friday 
8pm  Capital One College Bowl 
8pm Lopez Vs. Lopez (November) 
8:30pm Young Rock (November) 
9-11pm Dateline NBC 

Saturday
8pm Drama Encores 
9pm Dateline Weekend Mystery 
10pm SNL Vintage 

Sunday 
7-8:20/4-5:20pt  Football Night in America (also live on Peacock) 
8:20/5:20pt   NBC Sunday Night Football (also live on Peacock) 

Press Release after the Jump 

Thursday, May 12, 2022

A Charlie Brown Watch: To Mom (and Dad), With Love

Peanuts 



     Oh no, they did it again with a Peanuts special being called "Snoopy Presents: To Mom (and Dad), with Love"  no Charlie Brown. With that again put aside, apparently, Apple, Wildbrain and Peanuts have decided that they have to make up for the idea there were no Peanuts specials  from 2011 to 2020 by giving three in the span of 5 months.  This time, they are going for a holiday not really covered in Peanuts : Mother's Day.  
 
         "How can Peanuts do Mother's Day, there's no shown adults rrrrrrrrr!" That guy then proceeds to tear his shirt and scream into the street, which is weird.  Yeah, the one thing Peanuts is known for is not showing adults in the strip, but have been shown in some specials, this special won't but it's not like it hasn't been done. 
  
              "To Mom (and Dad), with Love" I'm just going to call this "To Mom" for short later on, because yes, (good reason) first came out May 6, 2022 again on Apple TV Plus. (The streaming service that gives you that fresh new car feeling)    It's 38 minutes again, because they really like that length.  

                I do like to mention the 38 minutes here because the first minute is Woodstock flying around as he goes to Snoopy  and wakes him up. (That was a good minute)  It also shows Charlie Brown kicking a football (reeeee he can't do that, even though he's been shown to kick one, just that Lucy messes things up when she holds it, reeeee) and this leads to more sports because football practice, which um, that's different, Charlie Brown has a football team. (what?) 
 
Lucy almost had a "My Nose" moment / Copyright Peanuts/Wildbrain


         This special has the water color styled backgrounds again while the animation quality is still pretty good (they really want the 2000's specials to feel bad about themselves).

    Peppermint Patty and Marcie show up and it's about Peppermint Patty getting there to be the coach of the team.  You, the person reading this post, might be wondering we are 3 minutes in and no Mother's Day, where the plot?  I say, how do you do know this was 3 minutes in?  Pig Pen shows up with a fancy wrapped gift and has to explain why he's late to football practice. (He prefers soccer?)  The fancy wrapped gift is mother's Day. (They are playing football in Spring, is this the USFL?) 
This is the AAC / Copyright Peanuts/ Wildbrain


       The other kids are like, woah, Mother's Day is tomorrow? Woah! (If you are not reading this on a Saturday before Mother's Day it's not tomorrow) Peppermint Patty quickly changes the subject, because we need more football stuff. (we do?)  Charlie Brown is talking to Linus about what his mother likes and wonder what Linus is doing for Mother's Day. He's going to write her a special letter. (Thanks son)

More after the Jump 

Thursday, May 05, 2022

Those PSA episodes: Punky Brewster says Just Say No

PSA 






           I've not done a "Those PSA episodes" segment in some time, wow. I guess this is time to do one and so we head to the 1980's NBC sitcom "Punky Brewster". For the new, "Those PSA Episodes" is a segment where I talk about episodes of shows that are trying to be like public service announcements or are trying to get a message across.  

      Our Show: Punky Brewster 
      What is it trying to tell the audience? : Don't do Drugs/ Don't fall into peer pressure with drugs 
  
            
        This episode comes from season 2 it's called Just Say No  from the year 1985.  The title is going off the famous 1980's to 1990's campaign of the same name.  This was from the War on Drugs years that was taking an approach from Nancy Reagan to tell kids "Hey kids, just say no to drugs"  It spawned something like Just Say No clubs where kids would be making pacts not to do drugs and say no when someone offered them drugs. 

       This, of course, being the 1980's meant that they also would go to television for their message. (read: this post isn't going to be about the politics of drugs or if policies worked or not or anything, because no, we are just here to look at media and that's what we'll do.) NBC (see National Broadcasting) series "Diff'rent Strokes" had Nancy Reagan appear to spread her "Just Say No Message".  

      Now our episode directly.  The first half the episode is Punky and her friend Cherie faffing around and meeting these girls who call themselves "The Chicklets". They are dressed like how the 2010's thinks the 80's looks.   The girls like that Punky and Cherie have a nice tree house (it is nice) and think to invite them to join the club...and also use the tree house.  These being older girls impresses Punky and Cherie and they want to join.  There's even a moment where the younger girls dress like the older ones and make their parental figures  freak out.  Maybe setting up these two won't be of help for the rest of the episode, but thankfully the plot says they have to let the younger girls hang out with the older ones. 
They are a gang , it's a gang episode / Copyright NBC 
  
      We don't to get to anything major yet, for entire first half until the last minute. It's kind of easing you into the rest of the episode by making you think this is going to be some silly fun about joining a club with older girls and maybe wearing funny outfits and stuff. Well it's NOT!


    Also there's a weird Michael J Fox joke, were young girls concerned about him not being short in the 80's?  (80's people send me your answers!)  Anyway, uh oh commercial break is coming up what are we going to do to make sure you are staying on and not flipping to ABC to watch whatever the heck ABC was airing?  The one girl, Emily, pours open a container of drugs!  What drugs? All the drugs! 
Eww, I'm not touching that... those are on the ground copyright NBC 


         
          More after the jump 

Thursday, April 28, 2022

A Charlie Brown Watch: It's The Small Things, Charlie Brown

Peanuts

     

    Woah, another new Peanuts special, since that Apple thing exists and they proceeding to make more. Better than us waiting 40 years right?   This is "It's The Small Things, Charlie Brown" (wasn't expecting a Blink-182 reference ) is a Peanuts special that came out on April 15, 2022.  I am happy it's using the name conventions of the classic specials, compared to "For Auld Lang Syne".  

     Since this is one of those streaming exclusive specials and that means it has a unquie run time of 38 minutes, which seems to be the same length as "Auld Lang Syne" it's kind of interesting how that length is shorter than what would fill an hour long slot on network TV, but longer than what would fill a 30 minute slot.   If lengths affect things, I would think that filler would be less happening, there are specials where stuff just happens to fill out time. (Though Peanuts filler is like an extra treat sometimes, minus that birthday special.) 

       The animation of the special has the same look as the other one (I'm not going to keep typing the name) it's a very nice high quality 2D animation. Again , I do wish the feature film had this look. Wild Brain is like yeah were putting money into this.   The backgrounds look less detailed than before, they look like they are going for a simplified look, but a comic strip look, the backgrounds are more detailed than the strips, it's almost like a painted look. The characters are walking through a painted world, it's an interesting design choice. It's moves fluidly too and it feels pretty nice, and not too off putting for media that has been done more stilted ,by nature, before.   The character designs go back to their classic known looks that tends to happen now, so Lucy in the blue dress instead of pants (80's -90's strips and some later specials had her and other girls wearing pants). It's full spirited though.  




       The music is once again done by Jeff Marrow who seems to do an alright job of capturing  the right tone of jazz for the specials, if you are picky about your Peanuts jazz music. It also has grand music like at the start giving it a movie quality sound during the baseball game at the start. 
     
    The special starts with Charlie Brown playing baseball in a large field against Peppermint Patty's team. I can tell it's a dream , because I'm me, and I can tell.  Charlie Brown  is able to throw a pitch so powerful that it makes Peppermint Patty collapse. (You're going to prison for murder, Charlie Brown) Like I said, it's a dream, because Snoopy wakes him accidently, with a water hose. They did change Charlie Brown's voice actor from the last special, and to me, it seems little off, most of the time they've been able to capture the same voice type for Charlie Brown, but this one doesn't seem as Charlie Brown. I'm not going to be mean to kid voice actor; I find it a little off for Charlie's voice though.  Linus' voice was retained from the last special and he sounds like how Linus usually sounds, even when there's been different voices.  

Ahhhh Charlie Brown is heavy/ Copyright Peanuts/ Wild Brian 


   
       Charlie and Linus walk around and Charlie talks to him about the dream we saw. Linus is a realist against Charlie Brown's more up spirit and thinks they don't have the best chance to beat Peppermint Patty's team.  (Also we don't ask the question of how many years directly they've been losing that will hurt your head and time in general will rip apart)  I do like how it fits the characters: Charlie Brown is an optimist and wants to have the spirit that he'll win, Linus is a realist and doesn't go for an outcome that seems far fetched from past data. 

When your baseball team loses/ Copyright Peanuts/ Wild Brain




       This special decided to bring back Shermey into usage, they went deep again. Snoopy comes into the special, like how he's been treated in Peanuts media for years. (wow roar)   They really have Snoopy come in trying to steal the scenes, the special has become sentient.  (help!) Sally shows up and she wants to play in the baseball team, because Charlie Brown made a promise when she turned 5 she would get to join the team.    
Home run?  / Copyright Peanuts/ WildBrain


    Sally has the same voice actress that's been used through out the WildBrain Studios era of Peanuts.  Sally seems to very excited on the idea of playing on the baseball team I don't think it makes sense, Charlie Brown, to give Sally an oversized uniform. (Lucy almost dies, so that's something)  It tries to show that Sally isn't good at baseball, which sure she wouldn't be, Charlie Brown's optimism and care are what is at play here. 
Same/ Copyright Peanuts / Wild Brain



       Someone remembered "You're a Good Sport, Charlie Brown" Peppermint Patty shows up on  a motocross bike. (We've won You're a Good Sport bros!)  Her team also shows up on the same kind, minus Marcie is made to suffer. (poor Marcie)  I find it interesting that Thibault is on Peppermint Patty's team and that they decided to use Thibault for something, then again Franklin is on Charlie Brown's team instead of Peppermint Patty's , so, they are going for 100% accuracy here. Also odd to see Peppermint Patty's character be more antagonistic than she normally would be, even with baseball.  There is a difference in her role has been shown and how it was here, but it might only distract a person like me who does too much Peanuts stuff, than a casual viewer. 
it's  a gang! run!/ Copyright Peanuts/ Wild Brain



    Sally also gets to take up the plot, where Sally feels left out and then she meets a flower that's on the pitcher's mound and starts talking to it.  Charlie Brown tries to give his team a pep talk, after they feel bad.   I like that Charlie Brown keeps his spirit and wants to rally his team  to a victory.  Then something happens, the flower plot shows up. 

                

You're watching HGTV....back when we used to do gardening shows/ Copyright Peanuts/ WildBrain


       The team is bothered that Sally is just laying there looking at the dandelion. Sally says that she's not going to move and she's going to protect the flower. No matter what they try. (I wasn't expecting Horton Hears a Who in my Peanuts special) Plan B is to just play around Sally until she gets bored. ( I do wonder where Sally got a book though)  
This is what they mean by dandelion tea/ Copyright Peanuts / Wild Brain 



More after the jump

Thursday, April 21, 2022

The Lookback: The Lorax

Dr. Seuss  The Flashback 




              Haven't done a Dr. Seuss themed post in awhile (The Grinch, I guess) and might as well get back into adaptations of his books. I guess, it's time to begin. 
     
          "The Lorax" is a 2012 movie done by... (gets a message whispered) oh, really, are you sure? (whisper) alright, that's actually better news.   "The Lorax" is a 1972 special based off the book of the same , that book came in 1971. That is some turnaround. 
  
        
       This special ,like many other Dr. Seuss animated specials, was produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises. They made "The Cat in the Hat" in 1971, and would go on to make "Dr. Seuss on the Loose" in 1973.    The special first aired on CBS on Valentine's Day 1972, meaning we missed the direct 50th anniversary.  (Oh well) 
  
         The 1971 book was Dr. Seuss writing about a topic getting steam at the time, the environment. The very first Earth Day had happened in 1970, and media were getting people to try and save the environment. 
The gray grasses are still growing though/ Copyright Dr. Seuss 

      
    The narrator to start the special is Mr. Green Acres himself, Eddie Albert sing about Grickle Grass  and something about the lorax. (roll credits) a boy with black hair, he has no name, so he's just a boy is a walking and meets a guy called the Once-ler, the only parts we see are his gloves, never his face. (It's hideous, and I mean the gloves they  are hideous shade of green) The Once-ler starts to tell a story about the Lorax.  

These aren't gloves uhhh/ Copyright Dr. Seuss 


    
      He says that area was once filled with trees and nature and how he once showed up and saw the pretty colorful Truffula trees. Mr. Bob Holt, voices the Once-ler  you may know him as the voice of Dr. John Doolittle in the 1970's animated series by the same company as this one. (what?)  He also voices the Lorax which makes it fun to see him have two different voices and argue with himself. 

      The Once-ler mentions how he built his factory on the land, and then started cutting down Truffula trees The Lorax shows up and says he speaks for the trees and tells him to stop cutting the down trees. Once-ler tells him he's making thneeds, which apparently can be anything you need.  (Probably should have grown more trees to make more of them things, but getting a head here) 
I'm the Lorax and I thneed to talk to you/ Copyright Dr. Seuss 


  
      Once-ler calls for help from his family to make more thneeds since the market is growing. The Lorax isn't getting any notice, but they don't care.  Trees being killed left and right. (poor trees)   Through the story, there's also the affects of the pollution from the cars and factory causing harm to the animals.  This should be called "Nobody Listens to the Lorax". 

   The area becomes a town for people to live in and the trees are mostly gone now. (not sure that'll  be good for the business)  For all destruction, the music is up beat and fun. (we bought 10 thneeds we didn't need just because of the music) 
Detroit 1950, Copyright Dr. Seuss 


       Eventually, 1,000,000 thneeds have been made and the Lorax shows up to try to get people to...oh never mind.  Oh the Lorax returns to talk the Once-ler and pleads for the trees and the  Bar-ba-loots, creatures, and they are leaving because their resources are going away.   

   
      I think  not seeing the Once-ler's face and most of his body was pretty genius, it gives him a detachment that fits with the story. We haven't been given any indication of what he's fully thinking or his emotions.  After the Lorax pleads to him and leaves, which is also interesting to see him not be aggressive towards the Lorax and allows him to speak, and let's him leave on his own.  We get a moment of the Once-ler having an internal discussion with himself about what's going on.  Mostly justifying it.  

  
    Anyway things are getting worse (this is a timeless statement) the Lorax mentions that more animals are leaving because of the environmental conditions of the area getting worse. The Once-ler says his point is that what should he do? Should he close it down, causing people to lose their jobs? The other thing earlier he says that if he didn't do it, someone else would have.  These are interesting things to spot in the story. 
Look at this! / Copyright Dr. Seuss 


  
       Walking fish. The Once-ler says he understands after more pleas, but the he hears his stocks are up. (And we have like 4 more minutes so...) This makes the Once-ler change his tune back to his normal standing, he tells the Lorax that he's gonna bake his business bigger, and then, the bad news : the last tree. (oops)   Therefore the thing he said would be bad that economics would go south if he shut down, happens anyway because of the tree being gone. (oops) 

This tree was 3 days from retirement/ Copyright Dr. Seuss



       Now it cuts back, to the Once-ler telling his story to the boy that he was left all by himself and a spot that said "unless". The boy wonders what means. Then the Once-ler gives him a tree seed and tells him to plant it, take care of it, grow more trees, the boy takes it , and that's the special.  
Cool! I can't wait to make Thneeds in 40 years!/ Copyright Dr. Seuss


   
       This special (and the book) does it's message very well, it doesn't feel like the message is muddled but it's also very finessed. The Once-ler isn't made over the top and evil, he's normal, to an extent, he's a guy that wants to make money and do something for progress and society, it's not his intentions were to be like "I'm going to kill all the trees" because evil. Also the idea, he wasn't paying attention to the idea that if he wasn't careful, the thing he needed the most of his business could die out anyway. 

        It's not directly telling you what to think, it makes you think though. You can see what could have been done that could have helped both sides and that there is a balance, and not following that balance is a mistake. 
    
   The animation is good,  the coloring is good and you can see how it's being used to as things get worse for the area. The songs are alright, not really catchy , at least to me, but work well. It tells an interesting story all together. 

    I guess, I should address the 2012 film a little. I think, many of the problems of the Dr. Seuss feature film adaptations is that they have to be long and have to add stuff. This is a simple story, it works for the short story and this specials is like 22 minutes long and there's still filler moments.  The 2012 movie didn't want to do that, it instead tries to add in other plots to make it work for a story. It also adds a villain.  I think it hurts the message.  This is not going to be a harp about the feature movie.
       
   I like the special, it works to the story and gives a message about the environment that doesn't feel forced or ham-fisted and that's important.  I think it presents the message that the Once-ler would have benefitted from being more conscious about the environment, while still making money, he could have  planted more trees.  I think showing that he has learned that lesson and telling the boy to not make the same mistakes was good.  It could have been done in a bad way, making it a good guy , bad guy situation , but this doesn't do that, it's more open and that's a way to have the people watching also understand.  
    
    That's it for now, tune in next time when we plant a tree.