This Is Us, Season 5 (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in March 2022, our panel of Pearson-loving resident Couch Potatoes – moderator Chief Couch Potato Kylie, Kristen (L), Spencer, Emily (S), Kristin (T), and Jared (one of the prior panelists temporarily departed the panel for lives behind the podcast) – reconvenes around the CPU! Water Cooler, cheering “Big Three!” all the while, to discuss Season 5 of the critically-acclaimed and widely popular NBC family drama This Is Us. As always, if you have not watched any of This Is Us, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “This Is Us,” the Season 5 Recap & Review (MAJOR SPOILERS)

Come In, Let's Discuss 'This Is Us' Here! - TV/Movies - Nigeria

Moderator: Chief Couch Potato Kylie

THE SPECS:

Who: “This Is Us” is a romantic family drama series that currently airs on NBC, winter to spring Tuesdays at 9:00 PM.

What: Created by Dan Fogelman, the series follows the lives and families of two parents and their three children in several different time frames and stars an ensemble cast featuring Milo Ventimiglia, Mandy Moore, Sterling K. Brown, Chrissy Metz, Justin Hartley, Susan Kelechi Watson, Chris Sullivan, Jon Huertas, Eris Baker, Faithe Herman, Lyric Ross, and Asante Blackk in Season 5.

When: Season 5 aired on NBC from October 27, 2020, to May 25, 2021, with a total of eighteen episodes.

SYNOPSIS

This Is Us follows the lives of siblings Kevin (Hartley), Kate (Metz), and Randall (Brown, known as the “Big Three”), and their parents Jack (Ventimiglia) and Rebecca Pearson (Moore). It takes place mainly in the present and uses flashbacks to show the family’s past. Kevin and Kate are the two surviving members from a triplet pregnancy, born six weeks premature on Jack’s 36th birthday in 1980; their brother Kyle is stillborn. Believing they were meant to have three children, Jack and Rebecca, who are white, decide to adopt Randall (Brown), an African American child born the day before and brought to the same hospital after his biological father William Hill abandoned him at a fire station. Jack dies when his children are 17, and Rebecca later marries Jack’s best friend Miguel (Huertas). Randall becomes a successful finance professional and marries college classmate Beth (Watson); they raise two daughters (Tess, played by Eris Baker, and Annie, played by Faithe Herman). Kevin becomes a successful actor while struggling to be taken seriously. After lacking direction for much of her life, Kate meets Toby (Sullivan).

Most episodes feature a storyline taking place in the present (contemporaneous with airing) and a storyline taking place at a set time in the past, but some episodes are set in one time period or use multiple flashback time periods. Flashbacks often focus on Jack and Rebecca in and around 1980, both before and after their babies’ birth, or on the family when the Big Three are children or adolescents (and played by two sets of younger actors); these scenes usually take place in Pittsburgh, where the Big Three and their parents are born and raised. As adults, Kate lives in Los Angeles, Randall and his family are in New Jersey but relocate to Philadelphia in Season 4, and Kevin relocates from Los Angeles to New York City and back again.

Where: The action follows the core family members – two parents, three children, and their eventual spouses – who are originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but who later move and spread, particularly in the present/future timelines, to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Los Angeles, California; and New York City, New York.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the Season 1 podcast episode via the link below!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

In 2021, we launched our This Is Us panel, caught up quickly on the first four seasons, and now continue this series as a Water Cooler entry. You can listen to our first four episodes in this series below; the second, third, and fourth episodes are still part of our audio feeds at Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, and Amazon Music:

Season 1

Season 2

Season 3

Season 4

Panelists Kristen L, Spencer, Emily, Kristin T, and Jared triumphantly reconvene with moderator Chief Couch Potato Kylie (one of our previous panelists temporarily departed the panel due to lives behind the podcast) Around the Water Cooler after almost one year’s hiatus to pick up where our This Is Us series left off in 2021 when we last discussed the family Pearson and those who love them. In tonight’s episode, CPU! continues forward-looking Water Cooler coverage of This Is Us with our penultimate Season 5 recap and review, in which our panel remarks upon the success or lack thereof of this gripping and layered family drama, and in so doing, ruminates in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and, in the case of this panel, the music of this acclaimed program. In this chapter, our panel reflects upon and recaps our continued learning about the Pearson family in several different eras of the family’s story and in pieces and parts, providing clues to a larger mystery around how the family survives hardship while remaining centered and grounded in the face of life’s greatest challenges. The enthusiasm from our panel remains truly palpable, as this series has become one of the highest-rated shows (by review of our panelists) that we have covered on the podcast.

This episode was recorded in March 2022, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points of the fifth season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, on iHeartRadio, and on Amazon Music to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly!  Next Wednesday, our Call the Midwife panel returns to the CPU! Water Cooler to continue our Catching Up Series reacting, two seasons at a time, to the popular BBC/PBS period drama by discussing Series 3 and 4 in Episode 2 of our Series. Stay tuned!

Questions, Impressions, and Future Considerations

1) Who does Kevin end up with in the future? Is it Sophie (guest: Alexandra Breckinridge)? Is it Cassidy (guest: Jennifer Morrison)? Or, is it someone entirely new? Will we get a chance to meet her in any sort of meaty or flushed-out way with the limited amount of airtime real estate left in this final season?

2) Why do Kate and Toby officially end their marriage since it is clear from the fifth season finale that Kate marries Phillip, the teacher she comes to assist at the music school for the blind? How does that love affair even come to be?

3) Are the producers/network really considering making a movie of any type and/or with an alternate storyline in mind, exploring what might have happened had Jack survived the fire?

4) Will Rebecca see Jack as she inevitably passes away in the future/flash-forwards as a result of the progression of her Alzheimer’s Disease, either as an actual vision of him or by mistaking, the vigilantly watching and patiently waiting, Nicky (guest: Griffin Dunne) for Jack as he sits by her bedside?

5) What happens with the farmhouse inherited by Randall and Beth from Randall’s birth mother Laurel, who survived long past what was understood to be her death, so we learn in Season 5?

6) Will the show reexplore some of the side stories they have seeded, such as the depiction of the inventor of email?

7) Will we see adult Nicky and Franny, Kevin and Madison’s children, in the future?

8) Will we see a big family reunion far into the future, following Rebecca’s death and focusing on the children of Kevin, Kate, and Randall?

9) Who will inherit Rebecca’s crescent moon necklace?

10) What happens to Miguel? Does he die before Rebecca? Or, does Rebecca “release” him from marriage with her, so that he will not have to witness her Alzheimer’s-influenced decline?

11) Where are Miguel’s kids from his first marriage? Will we see them at any point in Season 6?

12) What sort of Kate will we see in the end? A happier one? A thinner one?

13) What happens to Tess, Annie, Deja, and Malik in the future?

14) Will we see Kevin, Kate, and/or Randall’s grandchildren? Will the show invest in a Six Feet Under type of projection or time jump in any of the final episodes?

15) What will Nicky do in this not-too-distant future?

16) What happens to Toby in the end?

PARTING SHOTS

This Is Us continues to be wholeheartedly and boisterously recommended by our CPU! panel to “almost anyone” who enjoys watching television – full stop – but particularly to those who enjoy family dramas like Parenthood, Brothers & Sisters, and The Council of Dads and to those with some years of life experience behind them that would make some of the more difficult parts of this series, in terms of the challenges that the characters face, resonate more fully on an emotional level with would-be watchers. Our panel believes that this show will appeal most to people who appreciate some reality in their fiction, as opposed to pure fantasy, because the creator and writers have infused their story with an undercurrent of wisdom and a concentrated sense of genuineness that renders the show a fulfilling and emotional viewing experience that keeps one wanting more, as the story is told non-linearly, with meted out clues and parallelisms connecting well-meaning, three-dimensional characters with whom it quickly becomes easy to identify. The panelists universally describe This Is Us as well-written, well-performed, and well-directed, with expertly plotted, interweaving storylines that both tease the mind and fill the heart and are executed by earnest and genuine performers who breathe a comfortable vitality into smart, relatable, and emotionally complex characters. Our panel notes that a decision to watch this NBC drama should be one made with a firm commitment, a preparation for an investment that requires full concentration for the watch without the “second screen experience” and other distractions, as there are glimpses and hints of story revelations in early seasons that ultimately play out masterfully in later seasons. The panel further praised the casting, lauding the seamless ensemble of this drama and its effortless cast chemistry.  In the end, the panelists unanimously enjoy this series, Season 5 as much as the seasons preceding it, and enthusiastically recommend it to any would-be viewer who would be enticed by it to start, without hesitation; in fact, our supersized panel proved all too eager to continue watching Season 6, which we will discuss following the airing of the (gulp) series finale later this year, at which point we will also Look Back at the whole darn show. Stay tuned!

LOOKING AHEAD

NBC renewed This Is Us for three additional seasons, including a sixth season, at the same time that the show received its fourth season renewal (May 2019). In May 2021, it was announced that Season 6 would be the show’s final season, which premiered on January 4, 2022. Our panel will visit This Is Us one final time to discuss Season 6 following the airing of the series finale on May 24, 2022; we will Look Back at the entire show in that same episode.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Amazon Music, Patreon, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding This Is Us as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

Riverdale, Season 5 (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in April 2022, our slightly smaller panel of peppy River Vixens and tough-as-nails Southside Serpents – moderator Sarah, Emily (S), Micah, Jessica, and Chief CP Kylie (one of our previous panelists departed the panel) – convenes for the fifth time around the CPU! Water Cooler (or are we at Pop’s Chock’lit Shoppe?) to discuss Season 5 of the CW teen drama series Riverdale. As always, if you have not watched any of Riverdale, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “Riverdale” – the Season 5 Recap and Review (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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Moderator: Sarah

THE SPECS:

Who: “Riverdale” is an American teen drama based upon the characters of Archie Comics, which currently airs fall to spring Sundays at 8:00 PM on the CW.

What: Adapted for The CW by Archie Comics’ chief creative officer Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, “Riverdale” features an ensemble cast playing the traditional “Archie Comics” characters, with series regulars KJ Apa as Archie Andrews; Lili Reinhart as Betty Cooper; Camila Mendes as Veronica Lodge; Cole Sprouse as Jughead Jones, the series’ narrator; Madelaine Petsch as Cheryl Blossom; Casey Cott as Kevin Keller; Charles Melton as Reggie Mantle; and Vanessa Morgan as Toni Topaz as well as Mädchen Amick as Alice Cooper and Mark Consuelos as Hiram Lodge.

SYNOPSIS

The series follows Archie Andrews’ (Apa) life in the small town of Riverdale and explores the darkness hidden behind its seemingly perfect image.

When: Season 5 aired on the CW from January 20, 2021, to October 6, 2021, with a total of 19 episodes.

Where: The action is set primarily in the fictional town of Riverdale, the comics-based home of the “Archie Comics” characters, though this season branched into New York City, New York as well as to an unspecified war location. The time is contemporaneous present day, presumably, but also seven years from when the main characters graduate, which occurs this season. Frankly, we are not really sure when this series is supposed to be taking place.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the podcast episode covering Season 1 via the link below!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

In 2020, we launched our Riverdale panel, caught up quickly on the first three seasons, and then continued this series as a Water Cooler entry later that year. You can listen to our first three episodes in this series below; the fourth episode was rerun last week into our audio feeds at Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, and Amazon Music and is also below:

Season 1

Season 2

Season 3

Season 4

Panelists Emily (S), Micah, Jessica, and Chief CP Kylie triumphantly reconvene with moderator Sarah (one of our previous panelists departed the panel) Around the Water Cooler after an eighteen-month hiatus to pick up where our Riverdale series left off in 2020 when we last discussed this dark, soapy, and twisty Archie Comics adaptation. In tonight’s episode, CPU! continues forward-looking Water Cooler coverage of Riverdale with our Season 5 recap, and the Chief CP once again steps aside from the moderating microphone, so that Sarah may serve as the main moderator once more; if you recall, Sarah was a college roommate of Sarah Habel, who played Geraldine Grundy on the series for the first two seasons. 

As such, our panel continues to remark upon the realness of Riverdale compared to its idyllically drawn source material in talking about the fifth season of this sudsy soap-opera-like teen drama, and in so doing, we ruminate in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and dark mysteries of this show – with a continued, and unmistakably plummeting, veritable variety of results and even more so in reaction to Season 5 and its seven-year time jump into the respective adulthoods of our four main characters. In tonight’s episode, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 5 of Riverdale, in which the town, the teens, some of their parents, and the various villains pockmarking this wry study of human nature, where real clashes with the ideal, grapple with saving the titular wicked little town from Hiram Lodge’s (Consuelos) efforts to de-incorporate its charter, resulting in even more new forms of darkness as well as new rounds of attempted murder, kidnapping, torture, and suicide, all of which definitely leave our panel confused and without proper suspension of disbelief as we try to puzzle through what is passing for the plot of the series in this fifth season.

This episode was recorded in April 2022, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points – very key plot points – of the fifth season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, on iHeartRadio, and on Amazon Music to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and/or blog posts are published weekly! Next Wednesday, our This Is Us panel triumphantly returns to the CPU! Water Cooler, ready to process all of the informative events and jaw-dropping twists of the penultimate Season 5 in advance of the beginning of the end, the currently airing Season 6 and the upcoming series finaleStay tuned for the return of arguably CPU!’s most enthusiastic panel – next week!

Questions, Impressions, and Future Considerations

Old Questions

1) Who is creating and/or sending the videotapes, and what is their purpose? Is it Charles? Is it Chic? Is it Mr. Honey after all (guest: Kerr Smith)? What do they even mean?

ANSWER: In a bit of an unexpected and marginally lame twist, the videotape auteur is revealed – in the leftover episodes clearly intended for the end of the fourth season – to be none other than Jughead’s (Sprouse) sister Jellybean, who becomes involved in snuff and other film productions for the purpose of capturing her brother’s attention, so that he would be compelled to stay in Riverdale. Unsurprisingly, she moves back to live with her mother following the family’s discovery of this information.

2) Has Skeet Ulrich left the show never to appear again, even though the end of Season 4 did not really tie off his character? Reports in the press and impressions left with the panel most certainly conflict, as some reports have Ulrich gone for good, while others suggest that he will at least appear in Season 5 in a recurring status, if for no other reason than to provide FP with a proper sendoff.

ANSWER: Skeet Ulrich appears in the handful of episodes starting this season that was clearly meant to be those originally planned to end Season 4; however, when Jellybean’s macabre hobby is revealed to the world, he leaves with her to ensure her good future. Ulrich does not reappear in the remaining episodes of Season 5.

3) What about Marisol Nichols? Is she going to appear long enough to provide Hermione Lodge an organic departure after Nichols announced her own departure from the series?

ANSWER: Marisol Nichols recurs somewhat in Season 5, but Hermione’s life transmutes to being a “real housewife” on some show that echoes real-life equivalents. She connects with Veronica (Mendes) once this season when Hiram’s (Consuelos) history and backstory are further explored, but she otherwise seems to have departed the show for good.

4) Will Molly Ringwald become a series regular in the future since Mary Andrews decides to stick around and care for Archie in the wake of Fred’s untimely passing (following Luke Perry’s untimely passing)?

ANSWER: Molly Ringwald has not become a series regular.

5) In Season 4, the show seems to tease “Barchie,” i.e. the romantic pairing of Archie and Betty (Reinhart), when they exchange some illicit kisses and, um, some illicit make-out sessions behind Veronica and Jughead’s respective backs, but then the show seems to “chicken out,” as several of our panelists described it, by having Archie return to Veronica and Betty return to Jughead. Was this sampling of “Barchie” a tease of what’s to come? Will “Varchie” and “Bughead” lose each pairing’s respective relationship momentum in the coming season? Will the show finally pull the controversial trigger of mixing up Archie’s love life, as often occurs in the comics?

ANSWER: In Season 5, Bughead is definitely a non-entity. With the passage of seven years as part of the show’s in-season time jump, Betty and Jughead drift apart and fail to reconnect, particularly when Jughead, in a state of progressive alcoholism, drunk-dials Betty one night to give her a piece of his mind about how she is an unsupportive significant other, which only serves to alienate Betty, somewhat understandably. In the meantime, as Archie and Betty reconvene in Riverdale as adults, their decidedly adult passions are teased and explored throughout the season, even though Archie temporarily contemplates reuniting with a separated-from-the-different-guy-who-is-her-husband Veronica, only for Varchie to realize that they are two different people who have evolved past the point of being able to understand one another and/or to make their enduring love work and/or to hold similar priorities.

6) At several points in Season 4, our characters remind us that they are living through their senior year of high school. Does the show mean to follow these characters to college? How would that even work?

ANSWER: No. In light of the writers’ decision to implement a seven-year time jump, we bypass “Archie: The College Years” and go straight to a future where Betty is a budding FBI agent, Jughead is a floundering and alcoholic novelist, Archie is a war veteran with ambitions for revitalizing his hometown, and Veronica is the “She-Wolf of Wall Street” as well as a high-end jewelry/valuables trader. In light of these developments, our podcast panel comes to tonight’s discussion equipped with some of its spiciest reactions to date. Listen to the episode for details.

7) For several seasons, the series has discussed, and the character of Betty has grappled with, the idea that there is genetically-derived darkness within her; in fact, mysterious and possibly shady Charles informs her in Season 4 that she has the infamous “serial killer” gene, which she inherited from her father Hal. Is the show teasing a future in which Betty fully loses herself to this alleged darkness? Does that future transpire in Season 5?

ANSWER: While Betty continues to lean into that alleged genetic dark side with some choice decision-making this season – particularly during a vigilante investigation of a new serial killer – she does not fully lose herself in Season 5. Listen to the podcast episode for details.

8) Will we see Mr. Honey again since he informs our heroes that he has accepted the position as headmaster of Stonewall Preparatory Academy in the season finale and since Stonewall apparently battles Riverdale regularly in football?

ANSWER: No. Mr. Honey does not return to Riverdale. Stonewall leads itself, perhaps.

9) Josie left Riverdale to join the Katy Keene spinoff, which was subsequently canceled by the CW. Will Josie return to Riverdale in the coming season?

ANSWER: Josie (special guest Ashleigh Murray) returns in a one-off episode exploring the lives of Josie and her Pussycats post-time jump. This one-off episode has been heavily rumored and all but confirmed to be a back-door pilot for a “Josie” spinoff. This is the only episode in which we see Josie in Season 5, though.

10) Who has access to Jughead’s story about Mr. Honey, which is played out in the series finale. It seems that the producer of the videotapes is someone who has proximity to sensitive information, particularly given the use of the masks in Jughead’s story and in the final videotape. Theory: is the videotape maker Betty? Does Betty have a dissociative identity that has started to engage in voyeuristic behavior, which she forgets when the “core” Betty reappears? Alternatively, who else could have access to the information, and why are the videotapes being made?

ANSWER: We were on the right track with our theories but were ultimately off-base, as we failed to suspect Jughead’s kid sister Jellybean in all of this voyeurism and videotape production. The child’s exposure to Riverdale was a bad influence on her, as the characters and our panelists all agree.

11) What will next season’s musical episode be?

ANSWER: “Next to Normal,” and, hoo boy, does our panel have *opinions*! Listen to the podcast episode for some strong ones.

12) Is Betty still in the FBI Junior Training Program? Or, did she quit?

ANSWER: Her length of stay in the training program is unspecified, but she’s now a full-blown employee of the FBI, so this question feels as if it’s pretty much moot.

13) Will we see Charles and Chic and/or learn more about them and their past next season?

ANSWER: Yes. Their relationship and, as it turns out, murderous schemes are, more or less, fully flushed out in Episode 2 of Season 5.

14) Is Kevin (Cott) and the others intent on restarting their “tickle ring” business? Why was this even a plot point this season? The story was universally unpopular with our Riverdale panelists.

ANSWER: Fortunately, this plot development was abandoned for Season 5, though Kevin is still cruising the woods outside the town. Poor Kevin. Giving him positive plot development seems like a challenge for this group of writers.

New Questions

1) What possible Big Bad can or will appear in Season 6? Will it actually be Cheryl (Pestch), on the warpath and determined to exact vengeance on behalf of her ancestor against the ancestors of Archie, Betty, and Jughead, who wronged her? Will Cheryl become a serial killer? Will her young, ginger protege kill for her?

2) What is the “Blossom Family Magic?” How did Cheryl seemingly manifest magical powers this season? Is she going to be the connective tissue that allows for the confirmed special guest appearance of Chilling Sabrina, Kiernan Shipka?

3) Will the show allow the relationship between Archie and Betty – otherwise known as the “Barchie” ship – to truly expand and evolve in Season 6 as Archie and Veronica and Betty and Jughead once did?

4) What will next season’s inevitable musical episode be? Guesses from the panel: Guys and Dolls, West Side Story, Urinetown, Moulin Rouge, Spring Awakening (though Chief CP Kylie noted that Chilling Adventures of Sabrina already dipped into the Spring Awakening well), Rocky Horror Show, and Dear Evan Hansen?

5) Will there actually be a Josie and the Pussycats series?

6) Will Betty go “full dark side” in Season 6? Does Archie bring it out of her?

7) How effective is the town council in Season 6?

8) We assume that Archie and Betty will survive the bomb that exploded in Archie’s bedroom, having been set and activated by a disgraced Hiram Lodge. Where will Archie live now (presuming the house is destroyed), and will he and Betty go after Hiram, with or without Veronica and Jughead’s help?

9) How much of Veronica and Reggie’s (Melton) relationship do we see in Season 6?

10) Which of the supporting characters outside of the main four and Cheryl will return for Season 6?

PARTING SHOTS

Following the viewing of Season 5, the slightly smaller CPU! Riverdale panel reached a full consensus of opinion related to this series; at this juncture and unlike in previous episodes of CPU!’s Riverdale reviews, our five current panelists (including the moderator) do not currently recommend Riverdale to new viewers because the panel believes that anyone who has not yet chosen to watch this series will not likely be attracted to the show now, particularly as the panelists regard the series’ already uneven quality to be at an all-time, disjointed low.  In fact, several panelists went so far as to suggest that they might recommend the series instead to their worst enemy/enemies as a surreptitious means of subjecting them to torture and/or to suggest that consuming alcohol (drink legally and responsibly, kids!) could possibly aid the proceedings but for the fact that one would risk alcohol poisoning from the sheer volume of need for the dulling effects of the substance. Our most forgiving panelist, Micah, noted that the show was a tough sell from the start but would now ultimately require a phone scam to successfully foist it onto new viewers, so disreputable and ultimately trashy the show has become, at least to our current roster of panelists.

Our panelists also believe that Riverdale, if it is to appeal to new viewers, would still be most appropriate for anyone who enjoys watching teen dramas generally; for fans of noir storytelling, owing to Jughead’s overarching narration, as well as of horror and/or murder mysteries, in which this show heavily dabbles; for Archie Comics fans, with the caveat that these versions of the characters are nothing like their comic book counterparts; and for fans of CW-level standards of attractiveness, as the cast is filled to the brim with the usual types, in physical appearance anyway, that populate this network’s plethora of youth-oriented shows.  To wit, the panelists spent much of tonight’s discussion focusing on how the writing remains woefully uneven to the point of nonsensical in Season 5, with most panelists regarding this season as the worst season yet.  All panelists struggled with the time jump, the character choices and evolutions related to that time jump, and the repetitive nature of the storytelling despite the time jump, which only seems to heighten and emphasize the theory of many panelists that the writers have run out of ideas, despite the decades of source comics from which they can draw their perverted tales of inverted American utopia. In any event, our entire Riverdale panel, despite the panelists’ vociferously absent enthusiasm for this series (4 out of 5 panelists rate this show as 1 or 1.5 stars of 5 currently), remains committed if entirely unmotivated to watch Season 6, if for no other reason than morbid curiosity and a mild interest in a possible upcoming crossover between two CPU! panels, this one and that of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. Stay tuned for all of the idyllic mischief, magic, and mayhem in our upcoming Season 6 recap and review, likely to publish later this year!

LOOKING AHEAD

In February 2021, the CW renewed Riverdale for a sixth season, which is currently airing and which premiered on November 16, 2021. In March 2022, the CW renewed the series for a seventh season as well. CPU! will next visit Riverdale at some point following the airing of the sixth season finale.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Amazon Music, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding Riverdale as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

This Is Us, Season 4: Episode Four of the “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series (MAJOR SPOILERS)

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is cpu-final-01large.jpg

A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in April 2021, our supersized panel of Pearson-loving resident Couch Potatoes – moderator Chief Couch Potato Kylie, Kristen (L), Spencer, Eddy, Emily (S), Kristin (T), and Jared – reconvenes around the CPU! Water Cooler, cheering “Big Three!” all the while, to discuss Season 4 of the critically-acclaimed and widely popular NBC family drama This Is Us, in this, Episode Four of our four-part “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series. As always, if you have not watched any of This Is Us, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), or our Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/couchpotatoesunite. Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “This Is Us” – The Season 4 Recap & Review, Episode Four of CPU!’s “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series (MAJOR SPOILERS)

Come In, Let's Discuss 'This Is Us' Here! - TV/Movies - Nigeria

Moderator: Chief Couch Potato Kylie

THE SPECS:

Who: “This Is Us” is a romantic family drama series that airs on NBC, though it is currently on hiatus.

What: Created by Dan Fogelman, the series follows the lives and families of two parents and their three children in several different time frames and stars an ensemble cast featuring Milo Ventimiglia, Mandy Moore, Sterling K. Brown, Chrissy Metz, Justin Hartley, Susan Kelechi Watson, Chris Sullivan, Jon Huertas, Eris Baker, Faithe Herman, Lyric Ross, as well as Asante Blackk and Griffin Dunne in Season 4.

When: Season 4 aired on NBC from September 24, 2019, to March 24, 2020, with a total of eighteen episodes.

SYNOPSIS

This Is Us follows the lives of siblings Kevin (Hartley), Kate (Metz), and Randall (Brown, known as the “Big Three”), and their parents Jack (Ventimiglia) and Rebecca Pearson (Moore). It takes place mainly in the present and uses flashbacks to show the family’s past. Kevin and Kate are the two surviving members from a triplet pregnancy, born six weeks premature on Jack’s 36th birthday in 1980; their brother Kyle is stillborn. Believing they were meant to have three children, Jack and Rebecca, who are white, decide to adopt Randall (Brown), an African American child born the day before and brought to the same hospital after his biological father William Hill abandoned him at a fire station. Jack dies when his children are 17, and Rebecca later marries Jack’s best friend Miguel (Huertas). Randall becomes a successful finance professional and marries college classmate Beth (Watson); they raise two daughters (Tess, played by Eris Baker, and Annie, played by Faithe Herman). Kevin becomes a successful actor while struggling to be taken seriously. After lacking direction much of her life, Kate meets Toby (Sullivan).

Most episodes feature a storyline taking place in the present (contemporaneous with airing) and a storyline taking place at a set time in the past, but some episodes are set in one time period or use multiple flashback time periods. Flashbacks often focus on Jack and Rebecca in and around 1980, both before and after their babies’ birth, or on the family when the Big Three are children or adolescents (and played by two sets of younger actors); these scenes usually take place in Pittsburgh, where the Big Three and their parents are born and raised. As adults, Kate lives in Los Angeles, Randall and his family are in New Jersey but relocate to Philadelphia in Season 4, and Kevin relocates from Los Angeles to New York City and back again.

Where: The action follows the core family members – two parents, three children, and their eventual spouses – who are originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but who later move and spread, particularly in the present/future timelines, to Alpine, New Jersey; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Los Angeles, California; and New York City, New York.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the Season 1 podcast episode via the link below!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

This is Episode Four of our “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series.  You can listen to Episodes One, Two, and Three here and at our audio feeds (Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, and Amazon Music):

Season 1

Season 2

Season 3

Frequent CPU! contributors and panelists often suggest shows for CPU! to cover in our podcast episodes – loyal listeners should have picked up on this particular trend by now. As the podcast has been underway for several years now, many of our long-yearning Couch Potatoes and This Is Us devotees called repeatedly for a This Is Us panel and subsequently encouraged meticulous season-by-season coverage of the whole shebang. Thus, herein we offer our Season 4 recap and review of This Is Us, in which our panel – consisting of Kristen L, Spencer, Emily, Eddy, Kristin T, and Jared – remarks upon the success or lack thereof of this gripping and layered family drama, and in so doing, ruminates in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and, in the case of this panel, the music of this acclaimed program.

As such, tonight’s episode is the fourth and final episode of a four-episode series in which CPU! gets caught up on this show, which premiered on NBC in 2016; our panel will convert to one of our regular Water Cooler panels to discuss Season 5 later this year.  In this chapter, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 4 of This Is Us, in which we continue learning about the Pearson family in several different eras of the family’s story and in pieces and parts, providing clues to a larger mystery around how the family survives hardship while remaining centered and grounded in the face of life’s greatest challenges. The enthusiasm from our panel remains palpable, as this series has become one of the highest rated shows (by review of our panelists) that we have covered on the podcast.

This episode was recorded in April 2021, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points of the fourth season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, on iHeartRadio, on Amazon Music, and now on Patreon (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly!  Next Wednesday, our Altered Carbon panel triumphantly (or, perhaps, defeatedly) returns to the Water Cooler in the first of a two-part panel-ending series, in which the panelists recap what has now become the series’ final season, Season 2, in light of Netflix’s late-2020 cancellation of the high-concept science fiction drama. Stay tuned!

RECOMMENDATION

This Is Us continues to be wholeheartedly and boisterously recommended by our CPU! panel to “almost anyone” who enjoys watching television – full stop – but particularly to those who enjoy family dramas like Parenthood, Brothers & Sisters, and The Council of Dads and to those with some years of life experience behind them that would make some of the more difficult parts of this series, in terms of the challenges that the characters face, resonate more fully on an emotional level with would-be watchers. Our panel believes that this show will appeal most to people who appreciate some reality in their fiction, as opposed to pure fantasy, because the creator and writers have infused their story with an undercurrent of wisdom and a concentrated sense of genuineness that renders the show a fulfilling and emotional viewing experience that keeps one wanting more, as the story is told non-linearly, with meted out clues and parallelisms connecting well-meaning, three-dimensional characters with whom it quickly becomes easy to identify. The panelists universally describe This Is Us as well-written, well performed, and well directed, with expertly plotted, interweaving storylines that both tease the mind and fill the heart and are executed by earnest and genuine performers who breathe a comfortable vitality into smart, relatable, and emotionally complex characters. Our panel notes that a decision to watch this NBC drama should be one made with a firm commitment, a preparation for an investment that requires full concentration for the watch without the “second screen experience” and other distractions, as there are glimpses and hints of story revelations in early seasons that ultimately play out masterfully in later seasons. The panel further praised the casting, lauding the seamless ensemble of this drama and its effortless cast chemistry.  In the end, the panelists unanimously enjoy this series and enthusiastically recommend it to any would-be viewer who would be enticed by it to start, without hesitation; in fact, our supersized panel proved all too eager to continue watching – or to re-watch – Season 5, which we will discuss in one of our standard “Water Cooler” formatted episodes later this year. Stay tuned!

LOOKING AHEAD

NBC renewed This Is Us for three additional seasons, including a sixth season, at the same time that the show received its fourth season renewal (May 2019). In May 2021, however, it was announced that Season 6 would be the show’s final season; a Season 6 premiere date has not yet been announced, and there is some speculation that This Is Us is not expected to return until 2022. Our panel will react to the announcement regarding Season 6 being the final season when they recap and review Season 5; in fact, CPU! will next visit This Is Us to discuss Season 5 “Around the Water Cooler” later this year.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Amazon Music, Patreon, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding This Is Us as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

This Is Us, Season 3: Episode Three of the “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series (MAJOR SPOILERS)

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is cpu-final-01large.jpg

A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in February 2021, our supersized panel of Pearson-loving resident Couch Potatoes – moderator Chief Couch Potato Kylie, Kristen (L), Spencer, Eddy, Emily (S), Kristin (T), and Jared – reconvenes around the CPU! Water Cooler, cheering “Big Three!” all the while, to discuss Season 3 of the critically-acclaimed and widely popular NBC family drama This Is Us, in this, Episode Three of our four-part “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series. As always, if you have not watched any of This Is Us, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), or our Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/couchpotatoesunite. Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “This Is Us” – The Season 3 Recap & Review, Episode Three of CPU!’s “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series (MAJOR SPOILERS)

Come In, Let's Discuss 'This Is Us' Here! - TV/Movies - Nigeria

Moderator: Chief Couch Potato Kylie

THE SPECS:

Who: “This Is Us” is a romantic family drama series that currently airs on NBC, fall to spring Tuesdays at 9:00 PM.

What: Created by Dan Fogelman, the series follows the lives and families of two parents and their three children in several different time frames and stars an ensemble cast featuring Milo Ventimiglia, Mandy Moore, Sterling K. Brown, Chrissy Metz, Justin Hartley, Susan Kelechi Watson, Chris Sullivan, Jon Huertas, Eris Baker, Faithe Herman, as well as Melanie Liburd and Lyric Ross in Season 3.

When: Season 3 aired on NBC from September 25, 2018, to April 2, 2019, with a total of eighteen episodes.

SYNOPSIS

This Is Us follows the lives of siblings Kevin (Hartley), Kate (Metz), and Randall (Brown, known as the “Big Three”), and their parents Jack (Ventimiglia) and Rebecca Pearson (Moore). It takes place mainly in the present and uses flashbacks to show the family’s past. Kevin and Kate are the two surviving members from a triplet pregnancy, born six weeks premature on Jack’s 36th birthday in 1980; their brother Kyle is stillborn. Believing they were meant to have three children, Jack and Rebecca, who are white, decide to adopt Randall, an African American child born the day before and brought to the same hospital after his biological father William Hill (Jones) abandoned him at a fire station. Jack dies when his children are 17, and Rebecca later marries Jack’s best friend Miguel (Huertas). Randall becomes a successful finance professional and marries college classmate Beth (Watson); they raise two daughters (Tess, played by Eris Baker, and Annie, played by Faithe Herman). Kevin becomes a successful actor while struggling to be taken seriously. After lacking direction much of her life, Kate meets Toby (Sullivan).

Most episodes feature a storyline taking place in the present (contemporaneous with airing) and a storyline taking place at a set time in the past, but some episodes are set in one time period or use multiple flashback time periods. Flashbacks often focus on Jack and Rebecca in and around 1980, both before and after their babies’ birth, or on the family when the Big Three are children or adolescents (and played by two sets of younger actors); these scenes usually take place in Pittsburgh, where the Big Three and their parents are born and raised. As adults, Kate lives in Los Angeles, Randall and his family are in New Jersey, and Kevin relocates from Los Angeles to New York City and back again.

Where: The action follows the core family members – two parents, three children, and their eventual spouses – who are originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but who later move and spread, particularly in the present/future timelines, to Alpine, New Jersey; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Los Angeles, California; and New York City, New York.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the Season 1 podcast episode via the link below!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

This is Episode Three of our “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series.  You can listen to Episodes One and Two here and at our audio feeds (Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, and Amazon Music):

Season 1

Season 2

Frequent CPU! contributors and panelists often suggest shows for CPU! to cover in our podcast episodes – loyal listeners should have picked up on this particular trend by now. As the podcast has been underway for several years now, many of our long-yearning Couch Potatoes and This Is Us devotees called repeatedly for a This Is Us panel and subsequently encouraged meticulous season-by-season coverage of the whole shebang. Thus, herein we offer our Season 3 recap and review of This Is Us, in which our panel – consisting of Kristen L, Spencer, Emily, Eddy, Kristin T, and Jared – remarks upon the success or lack thereof of this gripping and layered family drama, and in so doing, ruminates in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and, in the case of this panel, the music of this acclaimed program..

As such, tonight’s episode is the third episode of a four-episode series in which CPU! gets caught up on this show, which premiered on NBC in 2016.  In this chapter, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 3 of This Is Us, in which we continue learning about the Pearson family in several different eras of the family’s story and in pieces and parts, providing clues to a larger mystery around how the family survives hardship while remaining centered and grounded in the face of life’s greatest challenges. The enthusiasm from our panel remains palpable, as this series has become one of the highest rated shows (by review of our panelists) that we have covered on the podcast.

This episode was recorded in February 2021, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points of the third season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, on iHeartRadio, on Amazon Music, and now on Patreon (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly!  Next Wednesday, our “Star Trek 50+ Series” returns to the Water Cooler to continue their mega-sized Retrospective Series covering all shows under the Star Trek franchise banner. Next week’s episode will talk the penultimate Season 6 of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Stay tuned!

RECOMMENDATION

This Is Us continues to be wholeheartedly and boisterously recommended by our CPU! panel to “almost anyone” who enjoys watching television – full stop – but particularly to those who enjoy family dramas like Parenthood, Brothers & Sisters, and The Council of Dads and to those with some years of life experience behind them that would make some of the more difficult parts of this series, in terms of the challenges that the characters face, resonate more fully on an emotional level with would-be watchers. Our panel believes that this show will appeal most to people who appreciate some reality in their fiction, as opposed to pure fantasy, because the creator and writers have infused their story with an undercurrent of wisdom and a concentrated sense of genuineness that renders the show a fulfilling and emotional viewing experience that keeps one wanting more, as the story is told non-linearly, with meted out clues and parallelisms connecting well-meaning, three-dimensional characters with whom it quickly becomes easy to identify. The panelists universally describe This Is Us as well-written, well performed, and well directed, with expertly plotted, interweaving storylines that both tease the mind and fill the heart and are executed by earnest and genuine performers who breathe a comfortable vitality into smart, relatable, and emotionally complex characters. Our panel notes that a decision to watch this NBC drama should be one made with a firm commitment, a preparation for an investment that requires full concentration for the watch without the “second screen experience” and other distractions, as there are glimpses and hints of story revelations in early seasons that ultimately play out masterfully in later seasons. The panel further praised the casting, lauding the seamless ensemble of this drama and its effortless cast chemistry.  In the end, the panelists unanimously enjoy this series and enthusiastically recommend it to any would-be viewer who would be enticed by it to start, without hesitation; in fact, our supersized panel proved all too eager to continue watching – or to re-watch – Season 4, which we will discuss in Episode Four of our “Catching Up” Series next month!

LOOKING AHEAD

NBC renewed This Is Us for three additional seasons, including a sixth season, at the same time that the show received its fourth season renewal (May 2019); Season 5 is currently airing, and a Season 6 premiere date has not yet been announced. It was widely reported as of today’s publication, however, that Season 6 would be the series’ final season, to which our panel will react when they recap and review Season 5 later this year. CPU! will next visit This Is Us for Episode Four of this “Catching Up” Series in June 2021, during which our panel will focus upon Season 4.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Amazon Music, Patreon, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding This Is Us as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

This Is Us, Season 2: Episode Two of the “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series (MAJOR SPOILERS)

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is cpu-final-01large.jpg

A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in November 2020, our supersized panel of Pearson-loving resident Couch Potatoes – moderator Chief Couch Potato Kylie, Kristen (L), Spencer, Eddy, Emily (S), Kristin (T), and Jared – reconvenes around the CPU! Water Cooler, cheering “Big Three!” all the while, to discuss Season 2 of the critically-acclaimed and widely popular NBC family drama This Is Us, in this, Episode Two of our four-part “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series. As always, if you have not watched any of This Is Us, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), or our Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/couchpotatoesunite. Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “This Is Us” – The Season 2 Recap & Review, Episode Two of CPU!’s “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series (MAJOR SPOILERS)

Come In, Let's Discuss 'This Is Us' Here! - TV/Movies - Nigeria

Moderator: Chief Couch Potato Kylie

THE SPECS:

Who: “This Is Us” is a romantic family drama series that currently airs on NBC, fall to spring Tuesdays at 9:00 PM.

What: Created by Dan Fogelman, the series follows the lives and families of two parents and their three children in several different time frames and stars an ensemble cast featuring Milo Ventimiglia, Mandy Moore, Sterling K. Brown, Chrissy Metz, Justin Hartley, Susan Kelechi Watson, Chris Sullivan, Jon Huertas, Eris Baker, Faithe Herman, as well as Alexandra Breckenridge and Ron Cephas Jones in Season 2.

When: Season 2 aired on NBC from September 26, 2017, to March 13, 2018, with a total of eighteen episodes.

SYNOPSIS

This Is Us follows the lives of siblings Kevin (Hartley), Kate (Metz), and Randall (Brown, known as the “Big Three”), and their parents Jack (Ventimiglia) and Rebecca Pearson (Moore). It takes place mainly in the present and uses flashbacks to show the family’s past. Kevin and Kate are the two surviving members from a triplet pregnancy, born six weeks premature on Jack’s 36th birthday in 1980; their brother Kyle is stillborn. Believing they were meant to have three children, Jack and Rebecca, who are white, decide to adopt Randall, an African American child born the day before and brought to the same hospital after his biological father William Hill (Jones) abandoned him at a fire station. Jack dies when his children are 17, and Rebecca later marries Jack’s best friend Miguel (Huertas). Randall becomes a successful finance professional and marries college classmate Beth (Watson); they raise two daughters (Tess, played by Eris Baker, and Annie, played by Faithe Herman). Kevin becomes a successful actor while struggling to be taken seriously. After lacking direction much of her life, Kate meets Toby (Sullivan).

Most episodes feature a storyline taking place in the present (contemporaneous with airing) and a storyline taking place at a set time in the past, but some episodes are set in one time period or use multiple flashback time periods. Flashbacks often focus on Jack and Rebecca in and around 1980, both before and after their babies’ birth, or on the family when the Big Three are children or adolescents (and played by two sets of younger actors); these scenes usually take place in Pittsburgh, where the Big Three and their parents are born and raised. As adults, Kate lives in Los Angeles, Randall and his family are in New Jersey, and Kevin relocates from Los Angeles to New York City and back again.

Where: The action follows the core family members – two parents, three children, and their eventual spouses – who are originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but who later move and spread, particularly in the present/future timelines, to Alpine, New Jersey; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Los Angeles, California; and New York City, New York.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the Season 1 podcast episode via the link below!

How – as in How Was It?THOUGHTS

This is Episode Two of our “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series.  You can listen to Episode One here and at our audio feeds (Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, and Amazon Music):

Season 1

Frequent CPU! contributors and panelists often suggest shows for CPU! to cover in our podcast episodes – loyal listeners should have picked up on this particular trend by now. As the podcast has been underway for several years now, many of our long-yearning Couch Potatoes and This Is Us devotees called repeatedly for a This Is Us panel and subsequently encouraged meticulous season-by-season coverage of the whole shebang. Thus, herein we offer our Season 2 recap and review of This Is Us, in which our recently formed panel – consisting of Kristen L, Spencer, Emily, Eddy, Kristin T, and Jared – remarks upon the success or lack thereof of this gripping and layered family drama, and in so doing, ruminates in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and, in the case of this panel, the music of this acclaimed program..

As such, tonight’s episode is the second episode of a four-episode series in which CPU! gets caught up on this show, which premiered on NBC in 2016.  In this chapter, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 2 of This Is Us, in which we continue learning about the Pearson family in several different eras of the family’s story and in pieces and parts, providing clues to a larger mystery around how the family survives hardship while remaining centered and grounded in the face of life’s greatest challenges. The enthusiasm from our panel remains palpable, as this series has become one of the highest rated shows (by review of our panelists) that we have covered on the podcast.

This episode was recorded in November 2020, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points of the second season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, on iHeartRadio, on Amazon Music, and now on Patreon (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly! Next week, our Outlander panel re-gathers at the CPU! Water Cooler to continue a five-part Catching-Up series with Episode Three, in which we discuss the third season of the wildly romantic historical Starz drama.  Stay tuned!

RECOMMENDATION

This Is Us continues to be wholeheartedly and boisterously recommended by our CPU! panel to “almost anyone” who enjoys watching television – full stop – but particularly to those who enjoy family dramas like Parenthood, Brothers & Sisters, and The Council of Dads and to those with some years of life experience behind them that would make some of the more difficult parts of this series, in terms of the challenges that the characters face, resonate more fully on an emotional level with would-be watchers. Our panel believes that this show will appeal most to people who appreciate some reality in their fiction, as opposed to pure fantasy, because the creator and writers have infused their story with an undercurrent of wisdom and a concentrated sense of genuineness that renders the show a fulfilling and emotional viewing experience that keeps one wanting more, as the story is told non-linearly, with meted out clues and parallelisms connecting well-meaning, three-dimensional characters with whom it quickly becomes easy to identify. The panelists universally describe This Is Us as well-written, well performed, and well directed, with expertly plotted, interweaving storylines that both tease the mind and fill the heart and are executed by earnest and genuine performers who breathe a comfortable vitality into smart, relatable, and emotionally complex characters. Our panel notes that a decision to watch this NBC drama should be one made with a firm commitment, a preparation for an investment that requires full concentration for the watch without the “second screen experience” and other distractions, as there are glimpses and hints of story revelations in early seasons that ultimately play out masterfully in later seasons (these become subjects of this and future episodes in our “Catching Up” Series). The panel further praised the casting, lauding the seamless ensemble of this drama and its effortless cast chemistry.  In the end, the panelists unanimously enjoy this series and enthusiastically recommend it to any would-be viewer who would be enticed by it to start, without hesitation; in fact, our supersized panel proved all too eager to continue watching – or to re-watch – Season 3, which we will discuss in Episode Three of our “Catching Up” Series next month!

LOOKING AHEAD

NBC renewed This Is Us for three additional seasons, including a sixth season, at the same time that the show received its fourth season renewal (May 2019); Season 5 is currently airing, and a Season 6 premiere date has not yet been announced. CPU! will next visit This Is Us for Episode Three of this “Catching Up” Series in May 2021, during which our This Is Us panel will focus upon Season 3.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Amazon Music, Patreon, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding This Is Us as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

This Is Us, Season 1: Episode One of the “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in August 2020, our supersized panel of Pearson-loving resident Couch Potatoes – moderator Chief Couch Potato Kylie, Kristen (L), Spencer, Eddy, Emily (S), Kristin (T), and Jared – convenes for the first time around the CPU! Water Cooler, cheering “Big Three!” all the while, to discuss Season 1 of the critically-acclaimed and widely popular NBC family drama This Is Us, in this, Episode One of our four-part “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series. As always, if you have not watched any of This Is Us, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), or our Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/couchpotatoesunite. Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Pilots, Premieres, & First Looks: “This Is Us” – The Season 1 Recap & Review, Episode One of CPU!’s “Catching Up on This Is Us” Series (MAJOR SPOILERS)

Come In, Let's Discuss 'This Is Us' Here! - TV/Movies - Nigeria

Moderator: Chief Couch Potato Kylie

THE SPECS:

Who: “This Is Us” is a romantic family drama series that currently airs on NBC, fall to spring Tuesdays at 9:00 PM.

What: Created by Dan Fogelman, the series follows the lives and families of two parents and their three children in several different time frames and stars an ensemble cast featuring Milo Ventimiglia, Mandy Moore, Sterling K. Brown, Chrissy Metz, Justin Hartley, Susan Kelechi Watson, Chris Sullivan, and Ron Cephas Jones in Season 1.

When: Season 1 aired on NBC from September 20, 2016, to March 14, 2017, with a total of eighteen episodes.

Where: The action follows the core family members – two parents, three children, and their eventual spouses – who are originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but who later move and spread, particularly in the present/future timelines, to Alpine, New Jersey; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Los Angeles, California; and New York City, New York.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the podcast episode via the link below!

How – as in How Was It?

The pilot/premiere rating scale:

***** – I HAVE TO WATCH EVERYTHING. HOLY SMOKES!

**** – Well, it certainly seems intriguing. I’m going to keep watching, but I see possible pitfalls in the premise.

*** – I will give it six episodes and see what happens. There are things I like, and things I don’t. We’ll see which “things” are allowed to flourish.

** – I will give it three episodes. Chances are, I’m mainly bored, but there is some intrigue or fascination that could hold it together. No matter how unlikely.

* – Pass on this one, guys. It’s a snoozer/not funny/not interesting/not my cup of tea… there are too many options to waste time on this one.

This Is Us = 4.8, by average of the podcast panel.

SYNOPSIS

This Is Us follows the lives of siblings Kevin (Hartley), Kate (Metz), and Randall (Brown, known as the “Big Three”), and their parents Jack (Ventimiglia) and Rebecca Pearson (Moore). It takes place mainly in the present and uses flashbacks to show the family’s past. Kevin and Kate are the two surviving members from a triplet pregnancy, born six weeks premature on Jack’s 36th birthday in 1980; their brother Kyle is stillborn. Believing they were meant to have three children, Jack and Rebecca, who are white, decide to adopt Randall, an African American child born the day before and brought to the same hospital after his biological father William Hill (Jones) abandoned him at a fire station. Jack dies when his children are 17, and Rebecca later marries Jack’s best friend Miguel. Randall becomes a successful finance professional and marries college classmate Beth (Watson); they raise two daughters (Tess and Annie). Kevin becomes a successful actor while struggling to be taken seriously. After lacking direction much of her life, Kate meets Toby (Sullivan).

Most episodes feature a storyline taking place in the present (contemporaneous with airing) and a storyline taking place at a set time in the past, but some episodes are set in one time period or use multiple flashback time periods. Flashbacks often focus on Jack and Rebecca in and around 1980, both before and after their babies’ birth, or on the family when the Big Three are children or adolescents (and played by two sets of younger actors); these scenes usually take place in Pittsburgh, where the Big Three and their parents are born and raised. As adults, Kate lives in Los Angeles, Randall and his family are in New Jersey, and Kevin relocates from Los Angeles to New York City and back again.

THOUGHTS

Frequent CPU! contributors and panelists often suggest shows for CPU! to cover in our podcast episodes – loyal listeners should have picked up on this particular trend by now. As the podcast has been underway for several years now, many of our long-yearning Couch Potatoes and This Is Us devotees called repeatedly for a This Is Us panel and subsequently encouraged meticulous season-by-season coverage of the whole complex, multi-layered shebang. Thus, herein we offer our Season 1 recap and review of This Is Us, in which our new panel remarks upon the success or lack thereof of the series. The panel convening at the Water Cooler tonight includes requesting CPU! panelists Kristen (L), our most involved panelist and one of our moderating team; Spencer, our fifth most involved panelist (this week) and one of our moderating team; Eddy, who is currently active on our American Horror Story Series panel but who has appeared on several past panels; Emily (S), who is currently active on our American Horror Story Series and Riverdale panels but who has appeared on several past panels; Kristin (T), who is currently active on our The Crown panel; and Jared, who is currently active on our Full/er House Series panel. Our newly constituted panel of “Big Three”/Pearson supporting Couch Potatoes, therefore, gathered “Around the Water Cooler” to take a “First Look” at this gripping and layered family drama, and in so doing, to ruminate in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and, in the case of this panel, the music of this acclaimed program.

As such, tonight’s episode is the first episode of a four-episode series in which CPU! gets caught up on this show, which premiered on NBC in 2016.  In this chapter, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 1 of This Is Us, in which we are introduced to the Pearson family in several different eras of the family’s story and in pieces and parts, providing clues to a larger mystery around how the family survives hardship while remaining centered and grounded in the face of life’s greatest challenges. The enthusiasm from our panel is palpable – this series is one of the highest rated shows (by review of our panelists) that we have covered on the podcast.

This episode was recorded in August 2020, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points of the first season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, on iHeartRadio, on Amazon Music, and now on Patreon (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly!  Next Wednesday, our “Star Trek 50+ Series” returns to the Water Cooler to continue their mega-sized Retrospective Series covering all shows under the Star Trek franchise banner. Next week’s episode will talk Season 5 of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Stay tuned!

RECOMMENDATION

This Is Us is recommended by our latest CPU! panel to “almost anyone” who enjoys watching television – full stop – but particularly to those who enjoy family dramas like Parenthood, Brothers & Sisters, and The Council of Dads and to those with some years of life experience. Our panel believes that this show will resonate most with people who appreciate some reality in their fiction, as opposed to pure fantasy, because the creator and writers have infused their story with an undercurrent of wisdom and a concentrated sense of genuineness that renders the show a fulfilling and emotional viewing experience that keeps one wanting more, as the story is told non-linearly, with meted out clues and parallelisms connecting well-meaning, three-dimensional characters with whom it quickly becomes easy to identify. The panelists universally describe This Is Us as well-written, well performed, and well directed, with expertly plotted, interweaving storylines that both tease the mind and fill the heart and are executed by earnest and genuine performers who breathe a comfortable vitality into smart, relatable, and emotionally complex characters. Our panel notes that a decision to watch this NBC drama should be one made with a firm commitment, a preparation for an investment that requires full concentration for the watch without the “second screen experience” and other distractions, as there are glimpses and hints of story revelations in early seasons that ultimately play out masterfully in later seasons (these become subjects of future episodes in our “Catching Up” Series). The panel further praised the casting, lauding the seamless ensemble of this drama and its effortless cast chemistry.  In the end, the panelists unanimously enjoy this series and enthusiastically recommend it to any would-be viewer who would be enticed by it to start, without hesitation; in fact, our supersized panel proved all too eager to continue watching – or to re-watch – Season 2, which we will discuss in Episode Two of our “Catching Up” Series next month!

THE FUTURE OF THE SHOW

NBC renewed This Is Us for three additional seasons, including a sixth season, at the same time that the show received its fourth season renewal (May 2019); Season 5 is currently airing, and a Season 6 premiere date has not yet been announced. CPU! will next visit This Is Us for Episode Two of this “Catching Up” Series in April 2021, during which our This Is Us panel will focus upon Season 2.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Amazon Music, Patreon, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding This Is Us as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

Riverdale, Season 4 (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in September 2020, our panel of peppy River Vixens and tough-as-nails Southside Serpents – moderator Sarah, Emily (S), Micah, Jessica, Nate, and Chief CP Kylie (one of our previous panelists departed the podcast for life’s greater journeys) – convenes for the fourth time around the CPU! Water Cooler (or are we at Pop’s Chock’lit Shoppe?) to discuss Season 4 of the CW teen drama series Riverdale. As always, if you have not watched any of Riverdale, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “Riverdale” – the Season 4 Recap and Review (MAJOR SPOILERS)

Image result for riverdale season 1 title card

Moderator: Sarah

THE SPECS:

Who: “Riverdale” is an American teen drama based upon the characters of Archie Comics, which typically airs fall to spring Wednesdays at 8:00 PM on the CW; it is currently on extended hiatus due to delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

What: Adapted for The CW by Archie Comics’ chief creative officer Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, “Riverdale” features an ensemble cast playing the traditional “Archie Comics” characters, with series regulars KJ Apa as Archie Andrews; Lili Reinhart as Betty Cooper; Camila Mendes as Veronica Lodge; Cole Sprouse as Jughead Jones, the series’ narrator; Madelaine Petsch as Cheryl Blossom; Ashleigh Murray as Josie McCoy; Casey Cott as Kevin Keller; Charles Melton as Reggie Mantle; and Vanessa Morgan as Toni Topaz. Other characters in the series include the parents of the main characters: Mädchen Amick as Alice Cooper, Marisol Nichols as Hermione Lodge, Mark Consuelos as Hiram Lodge, and Skeet Ulrich as FP Jones.

SYNOPSIS

The series follows Archie Andrews’ (Apa) life in the small town of Riverdale and explores the darkness hidden behind its seemingly perfect image.

When: Season 4 aired on the CW from October 9, 2019, to May 6, 2020, with a total of 19 episodes after production was halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Where: The action is set primarily in the fictional town of Riverdale, the comics-based home of the “Archie Comics” characters. The time is contemporaneous present day, presumably.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the podcast episode covering Season 1 via the link below!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

Earlier this year, we launched our Riverdale panel and caught up quickly on the first three seasons. You can listen to our first three episodes in this new Water Cooler series here and at our audio feeds at Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, and Amazon Music:

Season 1

Season 2

Season 3

Panelists Emily (S), Micah, Jessica, Nate, and Chief CP Kylie triumphantly reconvene with moderator Sarah (one of our previous panelists departed the podcast for life’s greater journeys) Around the Water Cooler to pick up where our Riverdale series left off in March of this year, when we talked about each of the first three seasons of Riverdale, in turn, in one of our “Catching Up” miniseries. In tonight’s episode, CPU! begins forward-looking Water Cooler coverage of Riverdale with our Season 4 recap, and the Chief CP once again steps aside from the moderating microphone, so that Sarah may serve as main moderator once more; if you recall, Sarah was a college roommate of Sarah Habel, who played Geraldine Grundy on the series for the first two seasons. 

As such, our panel continues to remark upon the realness of Riverdale compared to its idyllically drawn source material in talking the fourth season of this sudsy soap opera-like teen drama, and in so doing, we ruminate in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and dark mysteries of this show – with a continued, veritable variety of results and even more so in reaction to Season 4 and its focus on Stonewall Preparatory Academy, the enigmatic Baxter Brothers mysteries, and the appearance of voyeuristic videotapes across Riverdale’s representation of #smalltownamerica (drink…if you’re playing along). In tonight’s episode, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 4 of Riverdale, in which the town, the teens, their parents, and the various villains pockmarking this wry study of human nature, where real clashes with the ideal, grapple with new forms of darkness resulting in new rounds of attempted murder, kidnapping, torture, suicide, and a confusing mix of technology aiding the proceedings – camcorders meeting older generation cellular telephones definitely leaves our panel confused and without proper suspension of disbelief as we try to puzzle through what is passing for the time setting of the series.

This episode was recorded in September 2020, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points – very key plot points – of the fourth season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, on iHeartRadio, and now on Amazon Music (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and/or blog posts are published weekly! Next Wednesday, our DCTU Series panel triumphantly returns to the CPU! Water Cooler ready to follow the cues presented in this past season’s Arrowverse crossover event Crisis on Infinite Earths, more or less, by beginning a two-part Catching-Up Miniseries. The first part of this miniseries offers a recap and review of the first two seasons of Black Lightning, newly included in the Arrowverse – recently redubbed the “CWVerse” – lineup following the aforementioned Crisis. Stay tuned for all of the DC-related snark from CPU!’s spiciest panel!

Questions, Impressions, and Future Considerations

Old Questions

1) Was the (alleged) Charles, the FBI agent and Alice’s (Amick) first child (possibly) with FP (Ulrich) that we see at the end of Season 3, the same Charles that was rooming with Chic, as Chic told Betty (Reinhart) and Alice in Season 2?  Was FBI Charles living undercover with Chic, as moderator Sarah theorizes?

ANSWER: Yes, FP and Alice’s Charles (guest: Wyatt Nash) is the same Charles that roomed with Chic in Season 2, which means that Chic was, at least partially, telling the truth for once. Based upon information presented in one Season 4 scene, though, it seems that Charles and Chic might have been and might still be legitimately romantically involved, meaning that Charles would not have been living with Chic undercover, as moderator Sarah previously theorized; however, we do not have much detail related to Charles, Chic, or their back story beyond what we have been shown in the last three seasons, so there is still a hornet’s nest of questions surrounding that potentially toxic coupling.

2) In the flash forward in the Season 3 finale, why are Archie, Betty, and Veronica (Mendes) gathered at a campfire without Jughead (Sprouse)? Why do they burn his iconic beanie?

ANSWER: (SPOILER, SPOILER, SPOILER) Pursuant to events that transpire in Season 4, for which it is best to listen to tonight’s podcast episode for details, Jughead fakes his death to hopefully tease out the potential perpetrators of his planned murder by classmates at Stonewall Preparatory Academy. Jughead temporarily transfers to this new school on a writing scholarship, for reasons not entirely clear but which might be related to Jughead being poor and possibly the perfect patsy for mayhem and murder at this highly privileged boarding school, or so it is believed by his obnoxious classmates. His friends stage this campfire scene and burn the beanie to really sell the deception, which is closely monitored by the Stonewall students. It’s a long and convoluted tale: watch the season and then listen to tonight’s episode. The Season 4 plot is a bit of a brain buster that simultaneously rings as less than convincing to the majority of our panelists.

3) Has FP (Ulrich) met Charles prior to Charles introducing himself to Betty and Jughead in the Season 3 finale?

ANSWER: Unknown. When Season 4 starts, Charles seems very chummy with the Coopers and Jones, who are living together in what used to be the Coopers’ house and is now the Jones’ house. The show does not explicitly answer the question of whether FP has encountered his biological son prior to now, but it is presumed that he has not.

4) Is FP actually Charles’ father? The panelists tossed out a wild theory that Hal Cooper is actually Charles’ father after all because the actor who plays Charles has some resemblance to Lochlyn Munro.

ANSWER: So far, the show is advocating that FP is definitely and actually Charles’ father and, therefore, Jughead and Jellybean’s half brother. The show has not even hinted at any nugget of a notion of an idea that Charles’ father could be anyone else, much less the erstwhile Hal.

5) Is Charles really who he says he is?

ANSWER: Unknown. So far, we have seen Charles acting as the FBI agent he claims to be, recruiting his younger half-sister Betty to be a junior FBI recruit, and helping out “Bughead” with their various exploits to get back at the rich and spoiled Stonewall Prep gang. If Charles has secrets beyond Chic, the viewer has not been made privy to them.

6) Where did the “Farm” members go when they “ascended?”  Are they actually dead?

ANSWER: So far, they appear to be pretty dead. They certainly have not reappeared in Riverdale (so far).

7) What is Cheryl (Petsch) really doing with Jason’s corpse?  Is she that far gone?

ANSWER: A little of this, a little of that. Cheryl’s grief over Jason consumes her this season, now confronted with his rotting corpse, which she stows in the Thornhill chapel below stairs. She also seems to have full conversations with his cadaver, which her girlfriend Toni aka “TT” (Morgan) seems far to copacetic with for our panel’s comfort. A B-plot this season revolves around Cheryl and the ensuing madness of the remaining Blossoms, and housing Jason’s body above ground only serves to up the macabre quotient; however, it’s best to watch the season to fully make sense of this development. Word to the wise: our panel barely discusses this plot point in tonight’s episode because, in the end, none of us were sure what difference it made to the overall story, except to further exploit Cheryl’s crazy and, perhaps, by proxy, Toni’s.

8) How does the show pay tribute to Luke Perry (RIP) in Season 4?

ANSWER: The Season 4 premiere is entirely devoted to writing Luke Perry’s character, Archie’s dad Fred Andrews, off the show. After Fred becomes the victim of a “hit and run” accident while helping a stranger on the side of the road, Riverdale, but particularly Archie, is besieged by grief. The town holds a huge memorial; the characters share memories of Fred; and when Archie goes to retrieve Fred’s body from the law enforcement agency that investigated the scene in the next town over, he stops at the location where Fred suffered his fate, only to encounter the stranger that Fred ultimately helped, who arrives to pay tribute to the man who lost his life saving hers. That stranger is played by none other than guest star Shannen Doherty. Many tears will be shed if you have not seen this episode, gentle listener.

9) What “revenge” is Hiram (Consuelos) planning for Hermione (Nichols)? Should we be rooting for these crazy kids at all?

ANSWER: This is a good question without an answer because it seems as if Hiram forgets all about revenge against Hermione and decides, instead, to go ahead with warring against his rebellious daughter Veronica in some sort of Shakespearean power play reminiscent of MacBeth coupled with the Greek tragedy Elektra. In fact, once Hiram is released from prison, where he does not stay for long, Hermione is persuaded to take him back quickly; we subsequently learn, along with Veronica, that Hiram is diagnosed with an unnamed degenerative disease. Of course, most of the season follows Veronica’s determination to upend her father’s hold over the manufacture and distribution of homegrown rum. So, if Hiram really cared to plot revenge against his estranged turned not estranged wife, it appears that he does a lousy job of his revenge machinations in the end.

Also, rooting for any member of the Lodge family feels like an exercise in masochism and futility. Our panel is most assuredly growing somewhat weary of that quarter of the Riverdale main four families. Listen to tonight’s podcast episode for details.

10) Is Season 4 really the best season yet, as some of our panelists earlier suggested?

ANSWER: No. The consensus of the panel is that this season is about as entertaining as Season 3, though it is slightly improved because the “Gryphons and Gargoyles” story line of Season 3 did not entertain as much as enrage, or at least frustrate, most of our panelists. Panelist Jessica, one of the early proponents of the alleged improved quality of this season, admits in tonight’s episode that she spoke too soon. All in all, the panelists described an increasing sense of ennui and repetition plaguing our collective Riverdale viewing experience, which is starting to engender restlessness amongst our panelists. Listen to tonight’s podcast episode for further rants and reviews.

New Questions

1) Who is creating and/or sending the videotapes, and what is their purpose? Is it Charles? Is it Chic? Is it Mr. Honey after all (guest: Kerr Smith)? What do they even mean?

2) Has Skeet Ulrich left the show never to appear again, even though the end of Season 4 did not really tie off his character? Reports in the press and impressions left with the panel most certainly conflict, as some reports have Ulrich gone for good while others suggest that he will at least appear in Season 5 in a recurring status, if for no other reason than to provide FP with a proper sendoff.

3) What about Marisol Nichols? Is she going to appear long enough to provide Hermione Lodge an organic departure after Nichols announced her own departure from the series?

4) Will Molly Ringwald become a series regular in the future, since Mary Andrews decides to stick around and care for Archie in the wake of Fred’s untimely passing (following Luke Perry’s untimely passing)?

5) In Season 4, the show seems to tease “Barchie,” i.e. the romantic pairing of Archie and Betty, when they exchange some illicit kisses and, um, some illicit make-out sessions behind Veronica and Jughead’s respective backs, but then the show seems to “chicken out,” as several of our panelists described it, by having Archie return to Veronica and Betty return to Jughead. Was this sampling of “Barchie” a tease of what’s to come? Will “Varchie” and “Bughead” lose each pairing’s respective relationship momentum in the coming season? Will the show finally pull the controversial trigger of mixing up Archie’s love life, as often occurs in the comics?

6) At several points in Season 4, our characters remind us that they are living through their senior year of high school. Does the show mean to follow these characters to college? How would that even work?

7) For several seasons, the series has discussed, and the character of Betty has grappled with, the idea that there is a genetic darkness within her; in fact, mysterious and possibly shady Charles informs her this season that she has the infamous “serial killer” gene, which she inherited from her father Hal. Is the show teasing a future in which Betty fully loses herself to this alleged darkness? Will that future occur in Season 5?

8) Will we see Mr. Honey again, since he informs our heroes that he has accepted the position as headmaster of Stonewall Preparatory Academy in the season finale and since Stonewall apparently battles Riverdale regularly in football?

9) Josie (Murray) left Riverdale to join the Katy Keene spinoff, which was subsequently canceled by the CW. Will Josie return to Riverdale in the coming season?

10) Who has access to Jughead’s story about Mr. Honey, which is played out in the series finale. It seems that the producer of the videotapes is someone who has proximity to sensitive information, particularly given the use of the masks in Jughead’s story and in the final videotape. Theory: is the videotape maker Betty? Does Betty have a dissociative identity that has started to engage in voyeuristic behavior, which she forgets when the “core” Betty reappears? Alternatively, who else could have access to the information, and why are the videotapes being made?

11) What will next season’s musical episode be?

12) Is Betty still in the FBI Junior Training Program? Or, did she quit?

13) Will we see Charles and Chic and/or learn more about them and their past next season?

14) Is Kevin (Cott) and the others intent on restarting their “tickle ring” business? Why was this even a plot point this season? The story was universally unpopular with our Riverdale panelists.

PARTING SHOTS

Following the viewing of Season 4, the CPU! Riverdale panel coalesced a bit more as far as overall consensus of opinion related to this series. In fact, at this juncture and unlike in previous episodes of CPU!’s Riverdale reviews, five of six of our panelists (including the moderator) do not currently recommend Riverdale to new viewers because the panel believes that anyone who has not yet chosen to watch this series will not likely be attracted to the show now, particularly as the panelists regard the series’ already uneven quality to be slipping and/or deteriorating.  Our panelists believe that Riverdale, if it is to appeal to new viewers, would still be most appropriate for anyone who enjoys watching teen dramas generally; for fans of noir storytelling, owing to Jughead’s overarching narration, as well as of horror and/or murder mysteries, in which this show heavily dabbles; for Archie Comics fans, with the caveat that these versions of the characters are nothing like their comic book counterparts; and for fans of CW-level standards of attractiveness, as the cast is filled to the brim with the usual types, in physical appearance anyway, that populate this network’s plethora of youth-oriented shows.  Beyond these categories, the panelists expressed a wide spectrum of reasons why they would be less likely to recommend Riverdale after Season 4, describing the series as a a “niche” show, the guiltiest of pleasures, and occasionally “trashy” if not absolutely “bonkers,” like only the best soap operas can be.

To wit, the panelists continue to praise the cast performances and the original spin applied to this particular adaptation, even if the writing choices do not always successfully follow standard storytelling logic. As such, the panelists spend much of tonight’s discussion focusing upon how the writing remains woefully uneven in Season 4, with most panelists regarding this season as one of the worst seasons and virtually equivalent, in most panelists’ opinions, to Season 3, except for stalwart panelist Nate, who continues to rate the show “five stars” with the kind of devotion that only a true, unerring fan can muster.  The panel modestly enjoyed the interweaving storylines of Stonewall Prep and Jughead’s alleged/faked death, Archie’s community center, Betty’s buddying around with her brother Charles, and, less so, Veronica’s business-related rebellion against her father Hiram, but common adjectives and phrases used by our panelists in tonight’s review, even by panelist Nate, included “repetitive,” “tedious,” and “it just doesn’t make sense.” In any event, our entire Riverdale panel, despite the panelists’ various and generally waning levels of enthusiasm for the series, remains cautiously motivated if somewhat less eager to watch Season 5, if for no other reason than to see how Season 4 would have ended but for the interruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

LOOKING AHEAD

On January 7, 2020, the CW renewed Riverdale for a fifth season, which is slated to premiere on January 20, 2021, following the delay resulting from a halt in production caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. CPU! will next visit Riverdale at some point following the airing of the fifth season finale.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Amazon Music, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding Riverdale as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

American Horror Story Series, Episode Nine, Season 9: “1984” (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com. In this episode, our returning and robustly full panel of casual to serious horror fans (and rotating moderators!) – including moderator Sarah, Nick, Emily (S), Kallie, Eddy, and, of course, Kylie, the Chief Couch Potato – gathered Around the Water Cooler to chat about the ninth season of American Horror Story, otherwise known as “1984.”  This is the ninth episode of an ongoing CPU! podcast series examining one of our favorite television programs throughout its anthology of various seasons depicting different and unique horror stories per season, and it was recorded in June 2020. If you have not watched American Horror Story: 1984, be aware that there are MAJOR SPOILERS. Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kelsey Sprague
Keyboard: Kelsey Sprague
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “American Horror Story: 1984” – American Horror Story Series, Episode Nine, Season 9 (MAJOR SPOILERS)

American Horror Story Season 9 Opening Credits (HD) AHS 1984 - YouTube

Moderator: Sarah

THE SPECS:

Who: “American Horror Story” airs on cable TV, specifically on FX, most recently on Fall Wednesdays at 10:00 PM, though it is currently on hiatus.

What: “American Horror Story,” a horror drama created by Ryan Murphy (Glee, Nip/Tuck) that tells a new horror story each season while featuring recurring actors and ensemble players.  This season is subtitled “1984.”

SYNOPSIS

Set in the titular year, 1984, the season follows Brooke Thompson (Emma Roberts) as she travels to a remote, newly reopened summer camp, known as Camp Redwood, to work as a counselor following a terrifying encounter with serial killer Richard Ramirez (Zach Villa). Those traveling with Brooke include preppy Xavier Plympton (Cody Fern), athletic Chet Clancy (Gus Kenworthy), easy-going Ray Powell, and spunky Montana Duke (Billie Lourd). Upon arriving at the camp, they encounter its owner, the deeply religious Margaret Booth (Leslie Grossman), who was once a camper there, and who has her own experience surviving a killer. Other residents of Camp Redwood include its nurse Rita (Angelica Ross), activities director Trevor Kirchner (Matthew Morrison), and camp chef Bertie. Not long after the counselors settle into their first week, news breaks that deranged murderer Benjamin Richter, also known as Mr. Jingles (John Carroll Lynch) and who has a violent history at Camp Redwood, has escaped a local insane asylum and is presumed to be heading for the camp.

When: Season 9 aired from September 18, 2019, to November 13, 2019, on FX with a total of nine episodes.

Where: Each season focuses on a different locale.  This season, the locales center mostly upon places in and around Camp Redwood; the name implies that it could be in California, particularly since the Xavier character participates in a particular sort of “film” industry, but the setting of the larger world is never actually explicitly stated or confirmed, and it doesn’t appear that the camp is actually located in the Redwood National Park/Forest – take that for what it is, gentle listener.

Why:  Nick and Sarah, two CPU! regulars, proposed that CPU! publish an American Horror Story podcast series, being big fans of the show, and your Chief CP, who has previously covered this program on the CPU! blog and enjoys the show quite a bit, agreed wholeheartedly to the idea. Thus, we continue our CPU! series revolving around AHS, with each episode in the series focusing on one season of the show.  The series started at the beginning and will be ongoing as long as AHS stays on the air!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

American Horror Story is a groundbreaking horror anthology series that airs on FX.  Not only did this program render the horror genre mainstream television fare, it also propelled anthology formats to popularity.  The show is widely watched and a tent pole for FX, becoming a Halloween/fall-time cable staple of disturbing imagery and grotesque scares, at least so long as worldwide pandemics are not delaying production.

Two of CPU!’s frequent panelists, and one of our resident married couples, Nick and Sarah, are big fans of the show and, as noted above, proposed that CPU! start a series discussing AHS throughout its seasons.  We have already published our first episode in this series, chatting the first season of AHS, widely known as “Murder House;” the second episode discussing the second season, “Asylum;” the third episode discussing the third season, “Coven;” the fourth episode discussing the fourth season, “Freak Show;” the fifth episode discussing the fifth season, “Hotel;” the sixth episode discussing the sixth season, “Roanoke;” the seventh episode discussing the seventh season, “Cult;” and the eighth season discussing the eighth season, “Apocalypse.” Listen here:

Episode 1, Season 1, “Murder House”

Episode 2, Season 2, “Asylum”

Episode 3, Season 3, “Coven”

Episode 4, Season 4, “Freak Show”

Episode 5, Season 5, “Hotel”

Episode 6, Season 6, “Roanoke”

Episode 7, Season 7, “Cult”

Episode 8, Season 8, “Apocalypse”

In today’s episode, the ninth episode of this series, we cover Season 9, “1984.” As the seasons are discussed and published, moderation duties rotate among the members of our robust AHS panel.  To wit, Sarah is back at the moderating mic to talk this ninth season, having most recently moderated the panel’s “Roanoke” episode, along with returning panelists Nick, Emily, Kallie, and Eddy (and the Chief CP). 

In this episode, then, we discuss our favorite and least favorite moments within the “1984” season and our general impressions of the season’s success. Overall, the season induced largely negative reactions from our panel as compared to the preceding season, “Apocalypse,” with some panelists reacting slightly more positively than others. As a result, our panel achieves near consensus in opinion: “1984” is not one of the series’ better chapters, owing to the absence of AHS‘ mainstay players while simultaneously presenting a messy, convoluted story that tries to be both parody and homage to the so-called “slasher” type horror films of the titular decade while never quite achieving either goal. In fact, the panel universally agreed that “1984” was most successful when it focused upon featured characters with the level of detail and emotional nuance that our panel of AHS-devoted viewers have come to expect from the franchise as a whole, based upon our respective viewings and analyses of past seasons.

This podcast episode was recorded in June 2020, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as we cover major plot points throughout the “1984” season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, and on iHeartRadio (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly!  Next Wednesday, our Grace and Frankie panel of gal pals reconvenes Around the Water Cooler, for their penultimate return, to recap and review Season 6, the now penultimate season, of the popular, critically acclaimed Netflix comedy that celebrates growing old gracefully (and Frankie-fully). Stay tuned!

PARTING SHOTS

The CPU! American Horror Story Series panel generally agrees that the “1984” season is one of the more “lackluster,” if not one of the overall worst, of AHS’ nine seasons, when comparing and contrasting the overall quality of all of them. In fact, two-thirds of our panelists ranked this season only slightly better than the universally detested seventh season, “Cult,” while the other third could not rank it higher than fifth best of the nine available. For starters, though the panel did not regard the performances as necessarily terrible in this chapter, most of the panelists registered the absence of key AHS players who have dominated the series casts for prior seasons and have done so more convincingly than any one member of the current cast, including Sarah Paulson and Evan Peters. To wit, all panelists consider Emma Roberts, Billie Lourd, Angelica Ross, and John Carroll Lynch to be the better actors of the ensemble this go-round. Yet, without a solid, experienced anchor to provide a sense of grounded emotional depth and nuance to what was ultimately a messy, convoluted season that could not decide whether it was homage or parody, and one which produced a mutated hybrid of slasher flick and AHS playbook hodgepodge in its wake, our panelists collectively were left with the notion that there was something to be desired about the end product that is now “1984.” Indeed, Chief CP Kylie, the oldest member of the panel, noted that the season did not adequately reflect the decade and the year the story was set in as well as other 80s-inspired horror fare currently on the television market, such as Stranger Things. Not to mention the fact that the panel found the overarching story this season to be confusing at times, particularly as some episodes seemed thin in story execution while others were practically jam-packed with veritable plot dump and too many ideas that probably offered potential in the writers’ room but did not play and/or were not directed well on screen, including the introduction of serial killer Richard Ramirez coupled with the recycling of “angry spirit is trapped on cursed ground” motif that has dominated other AHS seasons, specifically “Murder House,” “Hotel,” and “Roanoke.”

On a more positive note, the panel voted Ross this year’s most valuable new player.  Moreover, our panelists believed that the story arcs associated with Mr. Jingles and Nurse Rita/Donna Chambers were the most satisfying, while Brooke’s and Montana’s portions of the plot, as well as the arcs of the other camp counselors, were the most confounding and least satisfying by the conclusion of the season.

More than anything else, the panel struggled to marry reality with expectations about the season as a whole. Prior to the ninth season premiere, rumors about this year’s topic projected several possible directions for the plot, all of which seemed much more interesting, upon reflection in tonight’s discussion, than the story that was told, even if AHS did not totally disappoint in this ninth season via at least decent performances by regular players as well as the inclusion of a roster of guest stars, cameos, and appearances by past AHS players, like the inimitable Lily Rabe, to attempt to elevate the proceedings to the quality and complexity of past chapters. In the end, though, “1984” was more of a bummer than a radical/tubular, if frightening and gory, television excursion to summer camp; at least, unlike some prior seasons, the writers did their best to pay off all of the story threads by the time the final notes and frames of the sappy, Mike and the Mechanics-underscored end moments of the season finale aired.

LOOKING AHEAD

Our next episode in the American Horror Story series will cover Season 10, the subtitle and release date of which has not yet been announced, due to the fact that production has been delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic.  Thus, our AHS panel will return sometime after the full airing of Season 10 and then, again, after Seasons 11-13, since the horror anthology series enjoys guaranteed longevity for four more seasons (and a spin-off).  Stay tuned!

13 Reasons Why: Shark Jumpers Anonymous (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com. In this episode, recorded in May and in June 2020, our panel of veteran CPU! panelists and conscientious TV fans – moderator Kylie, Kristen, Emily (S), Jeremy, and Amie (one panelist departed the podcast for life’s greater journeys) – continue an interview-style feature on CPU! entitled “Shark Jumpers’ Anonymous,” in which panelists – and about to be former-panelists – explain why they are making leaps and bounds over predatory fish (or like trees and leaving).  Answering a script of questions, panelists explain why they have stopped watching a particular show – which, in this case, is 13 Reasons Why.  If you have not watched any of 13 Reasons Why, be aware that there are MAJOR SPOILERS!

Do you want CPU! to continue covering 13 Reasons Why on the podcast?  If so, volunteer to be a panelist!  We are a podcast by the people for the people, or, for specifically the Couch Potatoes who wish to unite with us.  If you would like to join this panel (and/or bring a friend, as we need at least one to revive it), message us via Facebook or Twitter, via our website (couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com), or via email at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com.  Where ever you may be in the world, we are able to connect with you – via video conferencing or phone conferencing – or, if you want to submit a written review of the show, send it along!

In the meantime, tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Sprague
Keyboard: Kels Sprague
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Shark Jumpers Anonymous (and Streaming Originals): “13 Reasons Why” (MAJOR SPOILERS)

Image result for 13 reasons why title card

Moderator/Interviewer: Chief Couch Potato Kylie

THE SPECS:

Who: “13 Reasons Why” is a drama-mystery web television series based on the 2007 novel Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher and is a Netflix original series, always available on Netflix.

What: “13 Reasons Why,” adapted by Brian Yorkey for Netflix, revolves around a high school student, Clay Jensen (Dylan Minnette), and his friend, Hannah Baker, who committed suicide after suffering a series of demoralizing circumstances brought on by select individuals at her school. A box of cassette tapes recorded by Hannah before her suicide details thirteen reasons why she ended her life.

SYNOPSIS

Clay Jensen (Minnette) returns home from school to find a mysterious box lying on his porch. Inside, he discovers seven double-sided cassette tapes recorded by Hannah Baker, his classmate and unrequited love, who tragically committed suicide two weeks earlier. On tape, Hannah unfolds an emotional audio diary, detailing the thirteen reasons why she decided to end her life. The series explores the fallout from the revelations on Hannah’s tapes.

When: Season 3 was released in its entirety to the Netflix streaming library on August 23, 2019, with a total of 13 episodes.

Where: The action takes place in an unnamed, presumably Californian town (the series was shot in California) at fictional Liberty High School.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the Season 1 podcast episode via the link below.

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

CPU! has covered 13 Reasons Why since the series’ beginning. To listen to our Season 1 and Season 2 reviews, listen via the embedded links below or via our audio feed at Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, and Castbox:

Season 1

Season 2

Unfortunately, coverage of 13 Reasons Why on the CPU! podcast is about to go the way of the dodo.  The remaining panelists – Kristen, Emily (S), Jeremy, and Amie (one panelist departed the podcast for life’s greater journeys) – find themselves at a Fonzie-inspired crossroads: all four of our resident panelists, as it turns out, have discovered an inability and a sheer lack of desire to proceed forward in watching this controversial teen drama, while I, your Chief CP, hope that some other interested 13 Reasons Why fan might turn up to talk the final two seasons with me, as I am still willing to engage with this series until the end but need two more people to run the CPU! 13 Reasons panel at the required minimum of three.  As such, though our panelists visited the Water Cooler in the past to talk about a show that once impressed them, the panelists’ surprising mass exodus and unwillingness to proceed forward triggered our interview-style feature on CPU! entitled “Shark Jumpers Anonymous,” in which panelists – and about to be former-panelists – explain why they are making leaps and bounds over predatory fish (or like trees and leaving).  Answering a script of questions, the panelists explain why they have stopped watching the show in question, in this case 13 Reasons Why, or why they might still be watching, despite the (perhaps unsurprising after all) emergence of all the negativity and nay-saying regarding the series at hand.

If you love this show – never fear.  You can join CPU! as a panelist, for this and for other shows.  Scroll down to “Looking Ahead” for the details!

In the meantime, give this latest CPU! episode a listen and see if you agree or disagree with the panel’s thoughts.  The interviews were recorded in May and in June 2020, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points of at least the first three seasons of 13 Reasons Why. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, and on iHeartRadio (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly! Next Wednesday, our iZombie panel triumphantly returns to the Water Cooler after an almost two year hiatus – and for the last time – to discuss Season 5, the final season, of the quirky and erstwhile CW comedy drama adapted from a DC Vertigo Imprint Comic. In our upcoming episode, we will also Look Back at the entirety of the iZombie series, which we have covered on the podcast since the show’s beginning, and we will examine its relative success (or lack thereof) as an overall series as well as say goodbye, both to the series and to each other (for now). Stay tuned!

Lingering Questions (Related to Season 3, which moderator Kylie watched)

1) We presume that Tyler Down (Devin Druid) will be the focal subject of Season 3, given the ending scene of Season 2, in which Tyler (SPOILER) brings a gun to school with the intention of unloading it during the Spring Fling dance and following Monty’s (Timothy Granaderos) brutal act toward Tyler in the Season 2 finale. How appropriate is it for the show to switch gears from a narrative largely about Hannah and sexual assault/mental health issues/suicide to Tyler and the theme of school shootings/violence? Will the show be able to handle this transition sensitively and to broach this issue with care and responsibility? Should the show even be going down this road?

ANSWER: As it turns out, the narrative focus in Season 3 does not center only on Tyler, though his story is an unmistakable facet of the overall framework. The primary story thrust, instead, emphasizes a surprising underlying mystery that unfolds in the early episodes of the season: Bryce Walker (Justin Prentice), Hannah’s assaulter from Season 1, is murdered by an unknown assailant. The third season marketing and general plot progression, then, asks the viewer to suss out “who killed Bryce Walker?”

At the beginning of the season, however, the viewer learns that after Clay fled the scene of the Spring Fling with Tyler in the second season finale, Clay and the rest of the Liberty High students that we have come to get to know and potentially love, who are all bonded together and determined to support each other, owing to their collective role in Hannah Baker’s fate as detailed on her cassette tapes in Season 1, are supporting Tyler in a long journey from potentially fatal self-harm and underlying depression stemming from the events of Season 2. They never ask him why and how (though he ultimately confesses the reason) he was motivated to bring a gun to the Spring Fling; instead, they ensure that he is never alone and is always escorted from home to school and back, to his classes, and to his sparse extracurricular activities, so that he never feels motivated to harm himself or others. It proves actually kind of nice to see and is an unexpected veer in the series’ overall direction, given the trajectory of the second season finale. The subject of school shootings, in fact, never becomes the central focus of the third season or of the series as a whole, despite what our CPU! panel initially surmised.

2) Given Chloe’s Season 2 finale admission to Jessica (Alisha Boe) that she is pregnant, a result of non-consensual sex with Bryce, the panelists fear that the show might additionally try to tackle the subject of abortion at a time when such a fraught topic might be timely from a sociological and political perspective, even as the vehicle, 13 Reasons Why the series, might not be an appropriate vessel for such a divisive subject. Our panel is especially concerned, as the show originally, again, focused on Hannah as the central character, and as the series has not handled the topics originally depicted by the source novel as sensitively as it could have in these socially aware times. Will the show broach the subject of abortion? Should it?

ANSWER: The show does, in fact, broach the subject of abortion. Chloe obtains an abortion some time during Season 3 and is supported by Zach (Ross Butler) when she actually undergoes the procedure. The addition of this controversial topic to the Season 3 story arc is understandable but is executed in a clunky manner at best for a series that has already clumsily grappled with a plethora of larger issues to varying degrees of storytelling success. In this viewer’s opinion, because the show spends a perfunctory single episode on Chloe’s decision to obtain an abortion as well as on the process of undergoing it – and very little on the emotional aftermath – this viewer strongly advocates that the show should never have broached the subject. If you watched Season 3 and disagree, feel free to comment below.

3) The show seeded a narrative/theme for a supporting character, the Class President Marcus, a black male, in Season 2, in which he was blackmailed by Tyler and his new friend Cyrus into labeling Bryce a “rapist” at a public event. The audience is given a glimpse into Marcus’ home life, in which his father praises his hard work and intelligence, particularly in light of the fact that he and his family expect to experience hardship due to race; yet, the show explored this issue, in the panel’s estimation, rather superficially in Season 2. Will the show revisit this theme in Season 3, since we saw Marcus experience no consequences for his actions against Hannah, his on-the-stand perjury (or obfuscation of the whole truth) during the trial, and his wavering sense of morality in light of his behavior and choices?

ANSWER: The show steers well away from the subject of race in any of the topical conversations broached in the third season. In fact, Marcus is no longer even among the cast of characters of 13 Reasons Why, Season 3.

4) The panel strongly reacted to the show’s handling of Clay’s individual mental health issues, given his profound grief over Hannah’s death, his full-fledged conversations with her “ghost,” and his coping mechanisms related to his pursuit of his private investigation of the revelations around Hannah discussed during the trial, to his reactions and relationship to Skye, and to his dynamic as well as his care and support of Justin (Brandon Flynn) during Justin’s rounds of heroin detox. Will the show more meaningfully revisit Clay’s own mental health journey? Will we be given a better explanation for the Hannah manifestation? Or, were Clay’s reactions and apparent state of mind only dependent upon his obsession with Hannah, in life and in death, and will they be forgotten now that Hannah and, therefore, Clay has “moved on?”

ANSWER: Though Clay appears to continue to struggle with mental health issues in Season 3, the series spends almost no time exploring those issues in any meaningful way, except when his sanity is questioned, as a result of the fact that he is (SPOILER) implicated as the prime suspect for the murder of Bryce Walker. Also, there is a point at which Clay again starts talking to people to whom he should not be able to speak, but the show takes no time to consider why that might be. In essence, Clay’s general mental health journey is sublimated for the larger, more sensational aspects of the story and is, more or less, forgotten in Season 3.

5) Will the show explain or explore how the school district’s defense attorney came to know so many personal details about the various witnesses called to testify in the trial? We can assume or presume that Bryce provided some information, but where did much of the intimate information come from, and how was it vetted, if at all? The trial felt like the consummate courtroom melodrama and, in some ways, represented some of the sloppiest storytelling of Season 2, as far as our panel is concerned.

ANSWER: The show does not revisit Season 2’s trial in any way in Season 3.

6) How will Clay’s parents’ decision to adopt Justin play out in Season 3? Will they be as oblivious to Justin’s ongoing addiction as they are to their son’s mental health state?

ANSWER: The adoption process presses forward, as Clay’s parents become determined to make Justin part of their family. Unfortunately, and in the typical two steps forward, five steps back approach, Justin continues to struggle with drug addiction in the third season. Fortunately, he is able to confess his addiction to his would-be parents in the season finale, and they promise to enroll him in a rehab program when he announces that he needs more help than quitting cold turkey and/or in detoxifying with Clay’s supervision. Until that time, the Jensens remain ostensibly oblivious of Justin’s struggles, though Clay and Justin look out for each other and keep each other’s secrets quite loyally in the third season.

7) Is there more of a history between Tyler and Monty than what we have already seen, and, if so, what is it? Will we learn more in Season 3?

ANSWER: No. There is no additional history or dynamic between Tyler and Monty that is revealed in Season 3; Monty’s heinous assault of Tyler in Season 2 is purely driven by Monty’s somewhat sociopath-like tendencies. On the other hand, we do learn that Monty is secretly gay and highly closeted, in the typical/textbook reflection of homophobia, and that he is physically abused by his father. Thus, the show attempts to present some reasons to potentially sympathize with Monty, whether doing so is successful, works well, is necessary, or otherwise.

8) Will the show use another “device” to tell the story, like the cassettes or the Polaroids, in Season 3? What will it be?

ANSWER: The opening credits of each of Season 3’s 13 episodes refer to “evidence,” but the connected episodes spend little time talking about physical evidence. In fact, it feels as if the show abandons this mechanic almost entirely, as the central aesthetic used for Season 3 is voice-over narration supplied by a new character named Ani (Grace Saif), who, we learn, is talking to the police and attempting to supply motive while simultaneously casting doubt as to why each of the main characters of 13 Reasons Why might have been spurred to murder Bryce Walker.

9) With Chloe’s pronouncement to Jessica that she is pregnant, and with Bryce’s announcement to Zach that he is transferring to a different school, will Bryce be forced to cancel those plans? Will he remain at Liberty? Or, will his parents try to pay Chloe off or otherwise keep her quiet?

ANSWER: Chloe does not tell Bryce that she is pregnant until after she obtains the abortion, so there is need for his parents to pay her off. Bryce, for the time that he is alive in the third season, never returns to Liberty High on a permanent basis.

10) Will our panel fully return to discuss Season 3? Much doubt was expressed about the idea of extending this series even further beyond its source material than previously accomplished via the second season, and the panelists, mostly, feel trepidation about the idea of the coming third season.

ANSWER: Short answer…no. Listen to tonight’s episode for details surrounding the mass exodus of CPU!’s 13 Reasons Why panel.

PARTING SHOTS

The CPU! 13 Reasons Why panelists previously opined that Season 2 of this controversial series was not as well executed as the first season. Without the reliable support of the source material, as the first season wholly adapted the one novel on which the series is based, the series’ second season struck our panelists as “forced,” “contrived,” superficial in its revisit of the issues that rendered the show such a water cooler TV topic in 2017, scattered in its attempt to tackle even more social issues than those originally addressed without being able to deeply or genuinely delve into them, “manipulative,” and, in some ways, more sensationalized in its depiction of sensitive issues, considering the strong negative response to the perceived sensationalism of the show’s first season. The panelists struggled most with the writing and narrative structure of Season 2, finding many of the plot choices and revelations about Hannah to be contradictory to what was learned in Season 1, which was based on the actual book, and in a way that did not add to her story. Panelists also panned some performances, particularly by some of the actors and actresses playing the parents, with the notable exceptions of the fabulous Kate Walsh and Brian d’Arcy James as Olivia and Andy Baker, Hannah’s parents, respectively. To that end, some of the episode direction suffered as a result, with choppy pacing and framing that felt as manipulative as the story being peddled in the series’ sophomore season, at least in our panel’s particular regard.

Curiously, the panel’s departing panelists – everyone except Chief CP Kylie – are willing to recommend 13 Reasons Why, at least in part and mostly only Season 1, though some of our panelists charitably described Season 2 as, at least, a satisfactory conclusion to Hannah’s story line and, therefore, a worthwhile continuation season to add to their general recommendation, as long as interested viewers heed advice to stop before the final moments of the Season 2 finale. In the end, what many of the panelists enjoyed and lauded about the first season, especially the program’s ability to push the conversation about teen suicide, sexual assault, bullying, and other serious issues affecting today’s youth to the forefront, seemed watered down and worryingly “surface-level” in the second season.  In addition, the risky decision to renew an already shaky story structure for a third season left most panelists with uneasy feelings, particularly as the show markedly moved away from Hannah as a main focus. Ironically, only Kylie (who also writes these weekly posts) proved the most hesitant to recommend the series to would-be viewers due to erratic quality, a severe departure from elements that defined the series in the first season, and sloppy handling of such controversial and salient social issues, though Kylie also equivocates in tonight’s episode that she plans to persist in watching the fourth and final season before her last word on recommendation is rendered good and final itself. Thus, for anyone who has not watched this series and is considering it, take this mixed-message recommendation for what it is: watch, and judge for yourself, but watch with highly advised caution all the same.

In the end, though, only one panelist – Chief CP Kylie – remains standing, even as Netflix recently released the fourth and final season on June 5, 2020…unless new panelists join.  Care to be one of them?

LOOKING AHEAD

13 Reasons Why was renewed for a fourth and final season by Netflix, which was released to the Netflix streaming library on June 5, 2020! Because the panel “jumped the shark,” CPU! will not return to the Water Cooler to discuss 13 Reasons Why again….unless…

Dear Viewer/Listener:

Do you want CPU! to continue covering 13 Reasons Why on the podcast for the remaining two seasons?  If so, volunteer to be a panelist!  We are a podcast by the people for the people, or, for specifically the Couch Potatoes who wish to unite with us.  If you would like to join this panel (and bring a couple of friends, as we need at least two panelists to revive it), message us via Facebook/Twitter/Instagram, via our website (couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com), or via email at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com.  Where ever you may be in the world, we are able to connect with you – via video conferencing or phone conferencing – or, if you want to submit a written review of the show, send it along!  In the meantime, Chief CP Kylie will return down the road to offer some final thoughts on the end of 13 Reasons Why.  Stay tuned!

Riverdale, Season 3: Part Three of the “Catching Up on Riverdale” Miniseries (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in February 2020, our panel of peppy River Vixens and tough-as-nails Southside Serpents – moderator Sarah, Emily, Micah, Jessica, Gabby, Nate (aka The Funniest Guy at Work on Facebook Live!), and Chief CP Kylie – convenes for the third time around the CPU! Water Cooler (or are we at Pop’s Chock’lit Shoppe?) to discuss the third season of the CW teen drama series Riverdale, in this, Part Three of our three-part “Catching Up on Riverdale” Miniseries. As always, if you have not watched any of Riverdale, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “Riverdale” – the Season 3 Recap and Review; Part Three of CPU!’s “Catching Up on Riverdale” Miniseries (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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Moderator: Sarah

THE SPECS:

Who: “Riverdale” is an American teen drama based on the characters of Archie Comics.

What: Adapted for The CW by Archie Comics’ chief creative officer Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, “Riverdale” features an ensemble cast playing the traditional “Archie Comics” characters, with series regulars KJ Apa as Archie Andrews; Lili Reinhart as Betty Cooper; Camila Mendes as Veronica Lodge; Cole Sprouse as Jughead Jones, the series’ narrator; Madelaine Petsch as Cheryl Blossom; Ashleigh Murray as Josie McCoy; and Casey Cott as Kevin Keller. The Season 3 cast also features Charles Melton as Reggie Mantle and Vanessa Morgan as Toni Topaz. Other characters in the series include the parents of the main characters: Luke Perry as Fred Andrews, Mädchen Amick as Alice Cooper, Marisol Nichols as Hermione Lodge, Mark Consuelos as Hiram Lodge, and Skeet Ulrich as FP Jones.

SYNOPSIS

The series follows Archie Andrews’ (Apa) life in the small town of Riverdale and explores the darkness hidden behind its seemingly perfect image.

When: Season 3 aired on the CW from October 10, 2018, to May 15, 2019, with a total of 22 episodes.

Where: The action is set primarily in the fictional town of Riverdale, the comics-based home of the “Archie Comics” characters. The time is contemporaneous present day.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the podcast episode via the link below!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

This is Part Three of our “Catching Up on Riverdale” miniseries.  You can listen to Parts One and Two here and at our audio feeds (Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and Spotify):

Riverdale, Season 1

Riverdale, Season 2

Frequent CPU! contributors and panelists often suggest shows for CPU! to cover in our podcast episodes – loyal listeners should have picked up on this particular trend by now. Well, with the emergence of the CW’s highly popular Riverdale and sister Netflix show The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, acknowledged by both networks to be set in the same universe if not on the same network (one hopes logistics can be worked out for a crossover), several frequent CPU!ers became decidedly atwitter and began encouraging podcast coverage of the whole shebang in short order.

In addition, as Chief CP Kylie watches a lot of TV around this here couch and Water Cooler, and while I am entertained by the sometimes “guilty pleasure” nature of Riverdale, with its CW-brand attractive cast staffed by fresh faces and the existence of teen idols from my generations’s yesteryear and yore, and by the disturbingly dark take on the comic most easily accessible from a grocery store checkout line, I think I lack some passion for this story, at least compared to tonight’s moderator, who has a somewhat personal tie to the series. To wit, frequent panelist and Moderator Team Member extraordinaire Sarah abounds in some passion of this nature, having the personal tie in question.

Thus, herein we offer a Riverdale Season 3 recap, with the Chief CP once again stepping aside from the moderating microphone, so that Sarah may serve as main moderator with the kind of passion that having a friend (specifically Sarah Habel, who we interviewed last week) that she can watch inspires.  For now, your friendly neighborhood Chief CP participates as a regular old panelist to remark upon the realness of Riverdale compared to its idyllically drawn source material. Sarah and I are, in turn, joined at the Water Cooler by our recently constituted panel of resident Riverdale reviewers, including Emily (S), Micah, Jessica, Gabby, and Nate, host of The Funniest Guy at Work on Facebook Live. All gathered “Around the Water Cooler” to talk Season 3 of this sudsy soap opera-like teen drama, and in so doing, ruminate in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and dark mysteries of this show – with a continued, veritable variety of results and even more so in reaction to Season 3 and its conceit centered on the surprising appearance of Dungeons and Dragons-like role-playing game, “Gryphons and Gargoyles.”

Tonight’s episode, therefore, is the third and final part of a three-part miniseries in which CPU! gets caught up on this show, which premiered on the CW in 2017.  In this episode, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 3 of Riverdale, in which the town, the teens, their parents, the shocking number of gangs (just how big is this small town?), and the various villains pockmarking this wry study of human nature, and when real clashes with the ideal, grapple with the onset of obsession with the new “G and G” game and the introduction of a new, seemingly religious organization known only as “The Farm.”

This episode was recorded in February 2020, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points – very key plot points – of the third season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, or on Spotify (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly! For the next two weeks, however, the podcast is going into hiatus, as Executive Producer, Editor, and Chief Couch Potato Kylie undergoes and recovers from major surgery, provided the spread of COVID-19 doesn’t put a wrench in those plans.  We will, thus, be rerunning two episodes; next Wednesday, we will resurrect our “Look Back” at Downton Abbey, from our second year of existence, in anticipation of a being-planned live event centered on the film shown in cinemas in the fall of 2019, again provided that the pandemic can be contained.  The following week, we will rerun our Season 2 discussion of Stranger Things in anticipation of our Season 3 publication sometime this spring and Netflix’s expected release of Season 4 this year.

In the meantime, we recognize that these are times of great uncertainty and anxiety.  We feel it too.  Fortunately for couch potatoes everywhere (we’re not advocating a lifestyle, remember), as a small silver lining and if you can manage it, now is a great time to get caught up on the massive list of television content available for consumption while we wait out this storm.  As you watch different TV series, find us on a podcast client or at YouTube (or here at this site) and listen to corresponding episodes.  Also, feel free to reach out to us with requests for shows we should cover or hellos from wherever you are! Couch Potatoes Unite! is as much about the joys of television as it is about the connections we form, and we’d love to hear from you.  We are one world, and we’re all in this together. Plus, we record remotely all the time (and account for time zones), so if you want to join the discussion, you need only say the word.  Thank you for listening – keep listening, keep watching, stay tuned!

Questions, Impressions, and Future Considerations

1) Was the (alleged) Charles, the FBI agent and Alice’s (Amick) first child (possibly) with FP that we see at the end of this season, the same Charles that was rooming with Chic, as Chic told Betty (Reinhart) and Alice in Season 2?  Was FBI Charles living undercover with Chic, as moderator Sarah theorizes?

2) In the flash forward in the Season 3 finale, why are Archie, Betty, and Veronica (Mendes) gathered at a campfire without Jughead (Sprouse)? Why do they burn his iconic beanie?

3) Has FP (Ulrich) met Charles prior to Charles introducing himself to Betty and Jughead in the Season 3 finale?

4) Is FP actually Charles’ father? The panelists tossed out a wild theory that Hal Cooper is actually Charles’ father after all because the actor who plays Charles has some resemblance to Lochlyn Munro.

5) Is Charles really who he says he is?

6) Where did the “Farm” members go when they “ascended?”  Are they actually dead?

7) What is Cheryl (Petsch) really doing with Jason’s corpse?  Is she that far gone?

8) How does the show pay tribute to Luke Perry (RIP) in Season 4?

9) What “revenge” is Hiram (Consuelos) planning for Hermione (Nichols)? Should we be rooting for these crazy kids at all?

10) Is Season 4 really the best season yet, as panelists Jessica and Gabby have suggested?

PARTING SHOTS

Following the viewing of Season 3, the CPU! Riverdale panel became a bit more divided as far as overall opinion of this series. Cautiously, the panel continues to recommend Riverdale to anyone who enjoys watching teen dramas generally; to fans of noir storytelling, owing to Jughead’s overarching narration, as well as of horror and/or murder mysteries, in which this show heavily dabbles; and to fans of CW-level standards of attractiveness, as the cast is filled to the brim with the usual types, in physical appearance anyway, that populate this network’s plethora of youth-oriented shows.  Beyond these categories, the panelists expressed a wide spectrum of reasons why they would be less likely to recommend Riverdale after Season 3, describing the series as a a “niche” show, the guiltiest of pleasures, and occasionally “trashy” like only the best soap operas can be.

To wit, the panelists continue to praise the cast performances and the original spin applied to this particular adaptation, even if the writing choices do not always successfully follow standard storytelling logic. Yet, the panelists also spent much of tonight’s discussion focusing upon how the lapse in storytelling logic is more apparent and more frequent in Season 3, with most panelists regarding the third season as the worst of the three we have reviewed, except for stalwart panelist Nate, who rated it “five stars.”  While the panel generally found the interweaving “G and G,” Farm, and “lonely Archie” story lines to be messy; sloppy with continuity (panelist Emily notes that there were far more Red Paladin cards than the dozen that Hiram Lodge purports to have distributed); and, in some instances, demanding more suspension of disbelief than was earned, Nate, particularly, proved excited by the Easter Eggs and underlying “homage to the 80s teen flick” theme of Season 3 and felt that he was on at least some solid ground in recommending Riverdale to “nerd friends” and/or to skeptical elder Millennial and Generation X types who might otherwise struggle with execution of the overarching premise. In any event, our entire Riverdale panel, despite the panelists’ various levels of enthusiasm for the series but with strong recommendations by the in-time viewers on the panel, i.e. Gabby and Jessica, remains motivated if not altogether eager to watch Season 4!

LOOKING AHEAD

On January 7, 2020, the CW renewed Riverdale for a fifth season, which is expected to release in or around October 2020, though no tentative premiere date has yet been announced. CPU! will next visit Riverdale at some point following the airing of the fourth season finale, when our Riverdale panel converts to one of our regular Water Cooler feature panels for remaining seasons.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding Riverdale as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

Riverdale, Season 2: Part Two of the “Catching Up on Riverdale” Miniseries, Featuring Special Guest Panelist – Sarah Habel (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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THIS EPISODE IS SPONSORED BY: THE FUNNIEST GUY AT WORK ON FACEBOOK LIVE!

A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in February 2020, our panel of peppy River Vixens and tough-as-nails Southside Serpents – moderator Sarah, Emily, Micah, Jessica, Gabby, Nate (aka The Funniest Guy at Work on Facebook Live!) and Chief CP Kylie – convenes for the second time around the CPU! Water Cooler (or are we at Pop’s Chock’lit Shoppe?) to discuss the second season of the CW teen drama series Riverdale, in this, Part Two of our three-part “Catching Up on Riverdale” Miniseries.  In addition, moderator Sarah and Chief CP Kylie talk to Special Guest, Ms. Geraldine Grundy herself (or is she?), actress Sarah Habel about her time on the show, which ended gruesomely in Season 2. As always, if you have not watched any of Riverdale, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

Riverdale, Season 1: Part One of the “Catching Up on Riverdale” Miniseries (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in October 2019, our panel of peppy River Vixens and tough-as-nails Southside Serpents – moderator Sarah, Emily, Micah, Chief CP Kylie, and three brand new panelists: Jessica, Gabby, and Nate (aka The Funniest Guy at Work on Facebook Live!) – convenes for the first time around the CPU! Water Cooler (or are we at Pop’s Chock’lit Shoppe?) to discuss the first season of the CW teen drama series Riverdale, in this, Part One of our three-part “Catching Up on Riverdale” Miniseries.  As always, if you have not watched any of Riverdale, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Pilots, Premieres, and First Looks: “Riverdale” – The Season 1 Recap and Review; Part One of CPU!’s “Catching Up on Riverdale” Miniseries (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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Moderator: Sarah

THE SPECS:

Who: “Riverdale” is an American teen drama based on the characters of Archie Comics.

What: Adapted for The CW by Archie Comics’ chief creative officer Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, “Riverdale” features an ensemble cast playing the traditional “Archie Comics” characters, with KJ Apa as Archie Andrews; Lili Reinhart as Betty Cooper; Camila Mendes as Veronica Lodge; and Cole Sprouse as Jughead Jones, the series’ narrator. The Season 1 cast also features Madelaine Petsch as Cheryl Blossom and Ashleigh Murray as Josie McCoy. Other characters in the series include the parents of the main characters: Luke Perry as Fred Andrews, Mädchen Amick as Alice Cooper, Marisol Nichols as Hermione Lodge, and Skeet Ulrich as FP Jones.

When: Season 1 aired on the CW from January 26, 2017, to May 11, 2017, with a total of 13 episodes.

Where: The action is set primarily in the fictional town of Riverdale, the comics-based home of the “Archie Comics” characters. The time is contemporaneous present day.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the podcast episode via the link below!

How – as in How Was It?

The pilot/premiere rating scale:

***** – I HAVE TO WATCH EVERYTHING. HOLY SMOKES!

**** – Well, it certainly seems intriguing. I’m going to keep watching, but I see possible pitfalls in the premise.

*** – I will give it six episodes and see what happens. There are things I like, and things I don’t. We’ll see which “things” are allowed to flourish.

** – I will give it three episodes. Chances are, I’m mainly bored, but there is some intrigue or fascination that could hold it together. No matter how unlikely.

* – Pass on this one, guys. It’s a snoozer/not funny/not interesting/not my cup of tea… there are too many options to waste time on this one.

Riverdale = 4.1, by average of the podcast panel.

SYNOPSIS

The series follows Archie Andrews’ (Apa) life in the small town of Riverdale and explores the darkness hidden behind its seemingly perfect image.

THOUGHTS

Frequent CPU! contributors and panelists often suggest shows for CPU! to cover in our podcast episodes – loyal listeners should have picked up on this particular trend by now. Well, with the emergence of the CW’s highly popular Riverdale and sister Netflix show The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, acknowledged by both networks to be set in the same universe if not on the same network (one hopes logistics can be worked out for a crossover), several frequent CPU!ers became decidedly atwitter and began encouraging podcast coverage of the whole shebang in short order. Plus, if you haven’t listened to our very recent Look Back at Sabrina the Teenage Witch, in which CPU! forays into the bubblegum side of Archie Comics adaptations, we highly recommend it. Here’s a link to the YouTube entry, but we’re always available at Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and Spotify:

Looking Back at Sabrina the Teenage Witch 

In addition, as Chief CP Kylie watches a lot of TV around this here couch and Water Cooler, and while I am entertained by the sometimes “guilty pleasure” nature of Riverdale, with its CW-brand attractive cast staffed by fresh faces and the existence of teen idols from my generations’s yesteryear and yore, and by the disturbingly dark take on the comic most easily accessible from a grocery store checkout line, I think I lack some passion for this story, at least compared to tonight’s moderator, who has a somewhat personal tie to the series in a way you would never guess (but you can try!). To wit, frequent panelist and Moderator Team Member extraordinaire Sarah abounds in some passion of this nature, having the personal tie in question – which is a foreshadowing clue to a future episode in this miniseries.

Thus, herein we offer a Riverdale Season 1 recap, with the Chief CP stepping aside from the moderating microphone, so that Sarah may serve as main moderator with the kind of passion that having a friend she can watch inspires. Are you getting excited yet? Well, that’s for the Season 2 episode. You best stay tuned!

For now, your friendly neighborhood Chief CP participates as a regular old panelist to remark upon the realness of Riverdale compared to its idyllically drawn source material. Sarah and I are, in turn, joined at the Water Cooler by requesting CPU! panelists Emily, who is currently active on our 13 Reasons Why and American Horror Story panels and who has previously appeared on a hodgepodge of panel formats for a variety of shows, including Once Upon a Time (Once) and Jane the Virgin as well as a Look Back at Glee; Micah, who is active on our Agents of SHIELD panel but who has also appeared on the Once episodes; and three brand new panelists, including panelist Nate, who hosts The Funniest Guy at Work on Facebook Live! Our newly constituted panel of riveted River Vixens and secretly Southside Serpents, therefore, gathered “Around the Water Cooler” to take a “First Look” at this sudsy soap opera-like teen drama, and in so doing, ruminate in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and dark mysteries of this show – with a veritable variety of results, though the chat is decidedly polite and not in the least bit spicy. The panel is new, after all.

Tonight’s episode, therefore, is the first part of a three-part miniseries in which CPU! gets caught up on this show, which premiered on the CW in 2017.  In this episode, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 1 of Riverdale, in which we are introduced to the town, the teens, their parents, the shocking number of gangs (just how big is this small town?), and the various villains pockmarking this wry study of human nature and of when real clashes with the ideal.

This episode was recorded in October 2019, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points – very key plot points – of the first season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, or on Spotify (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly! Next Wednesday, our Riverdale panel returns to the Water Cooler with Part Two of our Catch-Up miniseries in which Archie, Betty, Veronica, and Jughead’s hometown finds itself terrorized by a serial killer – we told you the show is dark!  Moderator Sarah and Chief CP Kylie also interview one of the recurring cast members – our first celebrity interview! Mama, we’re big kids now! Stay tuned!

RECOMMENDATION

Riverdale is recommended by this latest CPU! panel to anyone who enjoys watching teen dramas generally but also to anyone looking for something fresh and new; to fans of noir storytelling, owing to Jughead’s (Sprouse) overarching narration, as well as of horror and/or murder mysteries, in which this show heavily dabbles; and to fans of CW-level standards of attractiveness, as the cast is filled to the brim with the usual types, in physical appearance anyway, that populate this network’s plethora of youth-oriented shows.  The panelists unanimously praise the cast performances and the original spin applied to this particular adaptation, even if the writing choices do not always successfully follow standard storytelling logic, as the show is somewhat soapy in nature and will likely only appeal to certain audiences, specifically to viewers who enjoy at least a subtle lather of suds in their TV viewing. The panel additionally proved impressed by the casting direction, as the actors playing the parents of Archie (Perry, guest: Molly Ringwald); Betty (Amick, guest: Lochlyn Munro); Veronica (Nichols); and Jughead (Ulrich), all famous in their own rights in light of their respective expansive resumes of prior projects, look convincingly similar to the young stars portraying their children, i.e. Apa, Reinhart, Mendes, and Sprouse. The panelists further note that any would-be viewer should be prepared for a tale that, though centered on the familiar, somewhat saccharine characters of the decades-old “Archie Comics” and with the aforementioned dark twist, inspires reminiscent notes of Scooby Doo mixed with the general tone and feel of Twin Peaks. The show additionally offers subtle undertones of the movie Stand By Me as well as of any network soap that aired in the last forty years, from Dynasty to Dallas, from Beverly Hills 90210 (the original, thank you very much) to Dawson’s Creek. In any event, our entire Riverdale panel, despite the panelists’ various levels of enthusiasm for the series seemingly, though not universally, correlated to age, remains motivated if not altogether eager to continue watching – or to re-watch – the second season, which we will discuss in Part Two of our Catch-Up miniseries next week!

THE FUTURE OF THE SHOW

On January 7, 2020, the CW renewed Riverdale for a fifth season, which is expected to release in or around October 2020, though no tentative premiere date has yet been announced. CPU! will next visit Riverdale for Part Two of this “Catch-Up Miniseries” next week, during which our Riverdale panel will focus upon the second season of the show.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding Riverdale as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

(Adios To) Jane the Virgin, a Retrospective Miniseries, Part Three: Season 5 (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com. In this episode, recorded in September 2019, some of our not-so-virginal (keep it clean!) panelists – including moderator Kylie, Kristen, Samantha, Emily S, and Emily D – reconvened Around the Water Cooler for Part Three of our three-part (Adios To) Jane the Virgin Retrospective Miniseries, in which we Look Back at the CW comedy-drama/satirical telenovela.  In this episode, the panel discusses Season 5 while Looking Back at the whole of Jane the Virgin! If you have not watched any of Jane the Virgin, be aware that there are MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kelsey Sprague
Keyboard: Kelsey Sprague
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Looking Back: “(Adios To) Jane the Virgin, a Retrospective Miniseries” – Part Three, Season 5 (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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Moderator: Chief Couch Potato Kylie

THE SPECS:

Who: “Jane the Virgin” is an American romantic comedy-drama and satirical telenovela, which aired on the CW for five seasons from 2014-2019.

What: Developed by Jennie Snyder Urman, Jane the Virgin is a loose adaptation of the Venezuelan telenovela Juana la Virgen, created by Perla Farías. The series stars Gina Rodriguez as Jane Villanueva, a devout 23-year-old Latina virgin, who becomes pregnant after an accidental artificial insemination by her gynecologist.

SYNOPSIS

Set in Miami, Jane the Virgin details the surprising and dramatic events that take place in the life of Jane Gloriana Villanueva (Rodriguez), a hard-working and religious Venezuelan-American woman. Jane’s vow to save her virginity until marriage becomes complicated when a doctor mistakenly artificially inseminates her during a routine examination. To make matters worse, the biological father is a married man, a former playboy, and a cancer survivor, who is not only the new owner of the hotel where Jane works but was also her former teenage crush. In addition to adjusting to pregnancy and to subsequent motherhood, Jane is faced with questions about her professional future and the daunting prospect of choosing to be with either the father of her baby or her detective boyfriend.

When: Season 5 aired on the CW from March 27, 2019, until July 31, 2019, with a total of 19 episodes.

Where: The action is set in Miami, Florida. The time is present day (“ish,” relative to time of airing).

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the podcast episode via the link below! Chief Couch Potato Kylie previously passed on this show during the 2014 Fall Preview, though the full post is (apparently) archived. I mainly passed on the series because I was afraid that the show would approach the “Virgin” concept with some sort of hearkening to immaculate conception, thereby entering into tricky terrain for what was teased to primarily be a comedy. As I say in the first episode recording, however, I was very wrong in my initial assessment. And I’m okay to be so wrong!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

This is Part Three of our “(Adios To) Jane the Virgin” miniseries Looking Back at the five seasons of Jane the Virgin.  You can listen to Parts One and Two here and at our audio feeds (Apple/iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play, and now on Spotify!):

Seasons 1-2

Seasons 3-4

In this episode, we conclude our three-part Jane the Virgin retrospective, in light of the departure of the popular CW comedy-drama and (naturally said in Rogelio de la Vega’s voice) exceptional telenovela!  Kristen, Samantha, Emily S, and Emily D return to their relative seats “Around the Water Cooler” to finalize our Look Back at this satirical comedy-drama, which ended its five-season run this past summer, and in so doing, we ruminate in-depth upon the production values, performances, and general life affirmations of this bright, fresh, funny, and heartwarming homage to Latinx culture and the telenovelas popular within said culture.

Tonight’s episode is the third and final part of a three-part retrospective miniseries in which CPU! reminisces upon this audience-beloved, critically-acclaimed show.  In this episode, our panel reflects upon and recaps Season 5 of Jane the Virgin while Looking Back at the series as a whole.

This episode was recorded in September 2019, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points of the fifth season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, or on Spotify (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly! Next Wednesday, our Will & Grace panel returns to the Water Cooler, but it’s not all for the love of the shenanigans of Will, Grace, Jack, and Karen; in fact, unless hearts and minds change, this will be the final appearance of this panel at said Water Cooler – ever – and this is before the show has concluded.  Wondering what’s up with that little teaser? Stay tuned!

Lingering Questions

1) Why was there a different narrator for only one episode in Season 4?

2) Why did the show do a retrospective for Episode 99? They should have made the finale a two-parter, so says the majority of our retrospective panel.

RECOMMENDATION

Jane the Virgin is recommended by our CPU! panel to just about anyone; our panelists believe that this series presents a wide potential appeal to a large cross-section of audiences because of the way the show incorporates and weaves in a multitude of pop culture references as well as utilizes several genre styles to depict its sometimes outlandish and unexpected twists and turns.  This is also a family-friendly program because of its focus on family, though the show is additionally infused with tongue-in-cheek satire and subtle adult humor that most children will not pick up on, even as most adults will get, and potentially laugh at, the jokes. The panelists unanimously agree that the show is smartly written, with quick, engaging pacing; thoughtfully planned story arcs; and an ensemble cast that effuses electric chemistry, none of which is ever lost over the course of all five seasons, these two included. The panelists also proffer that, while later seasons might offer more emotionally impacting moments – especially the final season – the show, by and large, remains interesting, entertaining, and an overall joy to watch throughout all five of its seasons, even if some of the story lines spiral into tedium due to repetition and/or become so over-the-top in presentation because of the standard telenovela mechanic requiring constant twists. In fact, the panel expressed most enthusiasm regarding the moments in which such tropes were subverted by subtle, quieter plot progressions that surprised in how understated they were executed.  Nevertheless, the panel sees Jane the Virgin as solid, consistently entertaining television viewing that anyone of any creed, culture, gender, or otherwise could potentially enjoy, and the panel universally encourages at least one sincere attempt at viewing, in which you, gentle listener, can decide for yourself.