Remember when superheroes were upbeat and optimistic instead of dark and
brooding? A bad guy would enter into the story, and you didn’t need to know
why he chose a life of crime; he was just bad and needed to be stopped, and
the superhero stopped him. Nobody cried. And it was all done with roughly
90% less explosions and special effects. There was dialogue.

I’m not saying there shouldn’t be any dark and brooding superheroes, but
can’t we be allowed one or two heroic bits of hope and optimism? One of my
favorite episodes of “Babylon 5” was in the midst of the Shadow War, which
was also in the midst of the civil war on Earth, G’Kar helped one of the
guest stars stop a band of thieves. No palace intrigue... no shades of
grey. “We were the good guys,” G’Kar said. “They were the bad guys,”
adding, “And they made a very satisfying thump when they hit the ground.”
It isn’t that I dislike complex or even dark tales, but that doesn’t mean I
can’t also appreciate something simple and upbeat, too.

Nope, even Archie comic characters have be dark and edgy. And Nancy Drew
can’t just solve mysteries because it is fun and she is smart. No, we need
to see her cry first. I swear, if they remake Scooby Doo again, Shaggy will
be a meth addict, Velma will be sexually assaulted by Freddie in the back
of the Mystery Machine, and Daphne will be a hooker with a heart of gold.
Jinkies.

On Thu, May 16, 2019 at 4:10 PM Mark Jeffries <[email protected]> wrote:

> The network that doesn't need no stinkin' Nielsens when it has social
> media love and Netflix deals (and Netflix isn't renewing, the new shows
> will be individually shopped, probably either on CBS All Access or the new
> WarnerMedia streamer) still has six nights of prime time (along with
> Saturday mornings farmed out to 4Kids and Springer reruns in daytime and
> it's pretty much what you expect from the C-Dub, except that the
> critically-acclaimed shows are both gone of their own accord (that would be
> "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" and "Jane the Virgin").  The lineup from the Wrap,
> with new shows in caps:
>
> SUNDAY
> 8-9 p.m. — “BATWOMAN”--Ruby Rose is Bruce Wayne's niece Kate Kane (Easter
> egg, DC geeks), who is picking up the cudgel for her cousin while he has
> mysteriously disappeared from Gotham City.  And oh yes--she likes the
> girls.  Greg Berlanti's Arrowverse continues apace.  All CW scripted shows
> are in-house CBS and Warners.
> 9-10 p.m. — “Supergirl”
>
> MONDAY
> 8-9 p.m. — “All American” (new night)
> 9-10 p.m. — “Black Lightning”
>
> TUESDAY
> 8-9 p.m. — “The Flash”
> 9-10 p.m. — “Arrow” (new night)
>
> WEDNESDAY
> 8-9 p.m. — “Riverdale”
> 9-10 p.m. — “NANCY DREW”--The plucky girl detective hasn't been on TV
> since Pamela Sue Martin played her on ABC in the late 70s (and got fired
> from "The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries" because the network wanted to
> pander to Shaun Cassidy fans).  This incarnation from "Gossip Girl"
> creators Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage is going to be a lot like
> "Riverdale," as in dark, dark, dark (as Edward Stratemeyer, the original
> "Carolyn Keene," spins in his grave).  Our Nancy is going to take time off
> from sleuthing to go to college, but after her mother dies and she
> witnesses the death of a fellow student, she's back on the case.  Kennedy
> McMann is Nancy and Scott Wolf is her father Carson.  Martin is playing in
> the pilot a character named Harriet Grosset (there's an Easter egg for
> you).  In-house on the CBS side.
>
> THURSDAY
> 8-9 p.m. — “Supernatural”--The one constant in the C-Dub's history (the
> show started on The WB) is finally coming to an end this season.
> 9-10 p.m. —  “Legacies”
>
> FRIDAY
> 8-9 p.m. — “Charmed” (new night)
> 9-10 p.m. — “Dynasty”
>
> One mid-season show (it may even show up next summer, as the net wants to
> expand their summer schedule beyond the magic shows, "Whose Line" and
> overseas pickups of recent years):
>
> 'KATY KEENE"--An obscure Archie Comics character is the focus of what's
> described as a spinoff of "Riverdale" (with Josie of the Pussycats as
> played by Ashleigh Murray carrying over from the parent, in the same
> universe as "Riverdale" and "Sabrina's Chilling Adventures").  C-Dub fave
> Lucy Hale plays apprentice fashionista Katy, hanging in New York with Josie
> and her buds and trying to get a foothold in the fashion industry.  Josie's
> trying to make it in music and hooks up with the sinister Alexander Cabot
> and his twin sister Alexandra (the heavies from the Josie comic books and
> the "Josie and the Pussycats" animated series).  There's also a subplot
> involving something sounding like Andy Warhol's Factory, which makes this
> not your mother's Archie Comics.  Like the other shows, Berlanti and Archie
> Comics chief Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa are the main forces.  In-house from CBS
> and Warners.
>
> And that's all for another year or until the television networks as we
> know them cease to exist.
>
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