The Day

TV’s best and worst of 2017 so far

- By VERNE GAY

If the first half of 2017 is prologue to the second, then we’ve got some celebratin­g to do. On TV at least, these past six months have been good ones, full of interestin­g diversions and the occasional indispensa­ble one, too. “The Leftovers” completed its three-season run by making a solid case for an Emmy (or two). “Twin Peaks” returned after 25 years to baffle the world while hooking some old (and new) fans. Ryan Murphy launched another anthology and another winner. Dave Chappelle returned from the comedy witness protection program. We could go on, but please read the list instead.

1. “The Leftovers” (HBO) Few watched the last season, but those who did got a first-class ticket to Australia in search of answers, closure and the meaning to all that came before (hey, two out of three’s not bad). This remarkable series managed something that few usually do — a fusion of human love with spiritual yearning, along with a powerful, moving payoff.

2. “Better Call Saul” (AMC) And speaking of third seasons, this one secured the prequel’s claim as worthy — indeed equal — companion to the rootstock, “Breaking Bad.” This one further enriched and deepened the meaning of “Bad,” while turning Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk) into a tragic hero every bit as complicate­d as Walter White (Bryan Cranston).

3. “Twin Peaks: The Return” (Showtime) Of all the reboots of these reboot-y times, this is the rebootines­t-tootinest of the lot. It has rebooted the original flavor, the original oddness and especially the original disdain for logic, meaning, order or viewer expectatio­ns. David Lynch promised he and Mark Frost would finally do the show they always wanted to do.

4. “Feud: Bette and Joan” (FX) To crib from my review (if you don’t mind), “Full of joy, humor, brilliant writing and performanc­es, and a deep unabiding love for what really makes Hollywood great — the women.” Susan Sarandon (Bette Davis) and especially Jessica Lange (Joan Crawford) were outstandin­g. Lange will likely win her fourth Emmy, too.

5. “Downward Dog” (ABC) With “Fargo” breakout Allison Tolman as the human and Martin as the dog, Ned, these two put out a short series full of warmth, joy and psychologi­cal insight — both human and canine. Meanwhile, dogs do say the darndest things.

6. “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” (CBS) “Colbert” has mounted the single biggest turnaround on TV, one of the biggest in late-night history. With a little help from his friends — most notably the president — “Late Show” is now indispensa­ble viewing. The other big latenight winners: “The Daily Show,” “Late Night With Seth Meyers” and “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” whose host unforgetta­bly wept for his ill newborn and for his comedy hero, Don Rickles.

7. “The Handmaid’s Tale” (Hulu) Elisabeth Moss turned in a performanc­e that will finally— after six lead-actress nomination­s for “Mad Men” and one for “Top of the Lake” (but who’s counting?) — win her a best-actress Emmy and a standing ovation at the September ceremony.

8.”Veep” (HBO) “Veep” long ago ran out of words with which to be praised, but the current season has offered a whole new salad bar of choices. Crazy, outrageous, scabrous … still great. Selina Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), now the ex-president, is without portfolio, and funnier than ever.

9. “This Is Us” (NBC) Would have gone higher except for the freshman season finale, which was a disappoint­ment. Setting that aside, “Us” is one of the most exciting new dramas on a major network in years — also smart, thoughtful, interestin­g, intricate and emotionall­y complex.

10. “Time: The Kalief Browder Story” (Spike) This six-parter, about a 16-year-old arrested for allegedly stealing a backpack and who then spent the rest of his short life in Rikers, was a remarkable tour through a notorious system, and helped launch the ongoing efforts to reform it.

11. “Big Little Lies” (HBO) While based on a David E. Kelley script that reminded everyone why he is such a celebrated TV writer, the brilliant female cast really carried this off: Reese Witherspoo­n, Shailene Woodley, Zoë Kravitz, Laura Dern and Nicole Kidman. Each could be up for an Emmy, while either Witherspoo­n or Kidman could win one if Lange doesn’t. Impossible to say who is more deserving.

12. “The President Show” (Comedy Central) A very soft launch on Comedy Central meant this didn’t get much press, but those who did pay attention saw the best Donald Trump impersonat­or around — Anthony Atamanuik — headline a funny, brutal takedown of the White House.

THE WORST SO FAR: 1. “The Celebrity Apprentice” (NBC) When Donald Trump’s replacemen­t, Arnold Schwarzene­gger, uttered his own special severance catchphras­e — “You’re terminated” — we pretty much suspected this version would be as well. The Governator never seemed to take this seriously, and who could blame him when the most vexing decision he had to make was whether to fire Carnie Wilson or Snooki?

2. Super Bowl ads (Fox) Quick, name the best ad from Super Bowl LI. Great game, right, surely a great ad or two? Surely not. Advertiser­s mostly played it safe, and the result was humdrum.

3. “Summer House” (Bravo) Not the series, so much — which was really kind of tame — but the idea that this was somehow based in Montauk. Battling an old image as party central, Montauk ran “Summer House” out of town before it even had a chance to set up house there. But Bravo still pretended this all took place there. Montaukers knew better.

4. “When We Rise” (ABC) This miniseries about the history of the LGBT movement managed to turn important history into dull history, or — to quote the Newsday review — “you suspect, then fear you are settling in for eight hours of moralizing there are moments — too many of them — when that fear is justified.”

5. “The Mick” (Fox) Not to pick on “The Mick” — with an exception or two, this has not been a great year so far for broadcast comedies — but this sitcom about a reprobate who is hired to care for some Connecticu­t trust fund brats was first off the block. (It launched Dec. 28.) Too vulgar, too offensive, too dumb. Seems like a miss for a funny actress (Kaitlin Olson) even if Fox did renew the series.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States