Author Topic: JACK & BOBBY  (Read 5224 times)

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Offline pinoymovies

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JACK & BOBBY
« on: Jan 25, 2005 at 11:27 AM »

JACK & BOBBY
Wednesdays on WB

Show Synopsis:

From the producers of Everwood and The West Wing, Jack & Bobby is a contemporary story enriched by insights from 40 years into the future. Jack (Matt Long), 16, is confident, athletic, and popular. Bobby (Logan Lerman), 13, is something of an outcast with nerdy leanings. Both brothers have been strongly influenced by their mother Grace (Christine Lahti), a university professor who has pushed her sons to be the overachievers she herself has tried to be with mixed success. By the way, one of the brothers will be President of the United States in the year 2040.

Jack & Bobby will be back with fresh episodes this Wednesday, January 26, 2005 on WB. After being derailed from its Sunday timeslot by Desperate Housewives, now Jack & Bobby has to compete with The West Wing and Alias on Wednesdays. The show will need a lot of support to survive the season. Check it out this Wednesday!









Offline pinoymovies

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Re: JACK & BOBBY
« Reply #1 on: Jan 25, 2005 at 11:37 AM »

Offline pinoymovies

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Re: JACK & BOBBY
« Reply #2 on: Jan 25, 2005 at 01:56 PM »
Grace McCallister's Moonlight Address to the students of Plains State University

Good evening. I want to welcome you tonight to... a renaissance.

For some of you this night marks a return to your college life, for some of you a new beginning. And so, upon the eve of the tremendous journey upon which you are all embarking, I'd like to offer you a thought to take with you. Listen carefully: you will fail here. All of you. College is not the culmination of your high school career. It is the beginning of your adult life. Only it is a slow sweet beginning that feels nothing like what life and all the attending obligations will eventually bring. So fail here... This is your chance.

Do things you know you can't do, or think you can't do but hope in your deepest most secret hidden heart that you can.

Be bad at things. Be embarrassed. Be vulnerable. Go out on a limb. Or two. Or twelve.

The harder you fall, the farther you'll rise. And the louder you fail, the clearer the distant bell of your future will ring. Failure is a gift. Welcome it. There are people who spend their lives wondering how they became the people they became, how certain chances passed them by and why they didn't take the road less traveled. Those people are not you.

You have the front-row seat to your own transformation. And in transforming yourself, you might just transform the world. Believe that, and embrace the new person you're becoming. This is your moment. Now. Not ten minutes from now, not tomorrow, really now. Know that, truly in your bones, and wake up each morning remembering it. And then keep going.

Offline downtown

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Re: JACK & BOBBY
« Reply #3 on: Jan 26, 2005 at 12:30 PM »
an excellent series with great acting all around, it's just too bad that it's going up against West Wing that's why its only drawing a small amount of viewers.

Offline pinoymovies

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Re: JACK & BOBBY
« Reply #4 on: Jan 26, 2005 at 09:55 PM »
posting a review from Entertainment Weekly:

Jack & Bobby
 
Reviewed by Gillian Flynn
 
Glorious timing, in the midst of the presidential campaign season, when we're pickled in the arcana of two public lives -- their boyhood choices, family influences, favorite cookies -- to debut Jack & Bobby. The WB series about the portentously monikered McCallister brothers, popular sophomore jock Jack (Matt Long) and Bobby (Logan Lerman), a nerdy sweet heart of an eighth grader, piques on the promise that in 2041, one of them will become president. (Which brother nabs the Oval Office is a secret The WB would prefer that critics keep.)

Thus, what could have been a simple coming-of-age story gains the heft of a political biopic, or a clever mystery: What choices and influences land this kid in the White House? What kind of boy becomes a president? In our deeply analytical world, the series is resonant in another way: On a grand scale, ''Jack & Bobby'' reflects the American obsession with picking apart our childhoods ad nauseam for clues to the adults we become.

Interspersed with flash-forward, circa-2049 interviews with insiders like President McCallister's VP (Tess Harper) and campaign adviser (David Paymer), the modern-day story is set in the boys' hometown of Hart, Mo. Created by a fitting consortium of ''The West Wing'' and ''Everwood'' execs (Thomas Schlamme and Greg Berlanti, respectively), ''J&B'' nails the perverse, political world of high school, where conformist kids are paid off with popularity and engaged oddballs like Bobby end up at lunch tables alone. Credit the players, too: Long, with his gently frayed cockiness and stony face, can almost pass for one of those flawless, flaccid, cool kids until he reveals his own well-tended hurts. For his part, Lerman lends Bobby a bedraggled optimism in the vein of ''E.T.'''s Henry Thomas. (The show's one major school-yard misplay was the introduction of a clove-smoking bully so cliché you expect him to kick sand in Bobby's face.)

The pilot episode is, on the surface, a basic week in the life: Bobby courts permanent nerddom by starting a space club during his first week in high school; Jack meets his first love (Jessica Paré). But these boys' lives are not, naturally, that normal. Blame -- or credit -- their spitfire of a mom, played by Christine Lahti, whose wiry presence is so vibrant she practically hums. As Grace, a single mom and local-college professor, we first see her lecturing Bobby on the banality of television and the human beings who watch it. By the time she convinces the kid that he wants a keyboard instead of a TV for his birthday, we know we're dealing with a woman who has a viselike love grip on her young son. We also know we've got one of the tartest and most opinionated female characters to bang against the small screen since Roseanne. (Think of Grace as the très educated, non-yowling version.) Here's a woman who harangues stoic, confident Jack as ''an all-American automaton'' and dismisses Bobby's only friend as a bore who'll ''grow up to be an accountant.''

But Lahti plays Grace with such a thwarted, injured energy -- and the insults are so dead-on -- you can't help but dig her. Unless you're a staunch Republican, in which case you'll probably see in Grace the sort of liberal elitism (distaste for the mainstream, fondness of pot smoking, aversion to organized sports) that's been a trigger point in the culture wars for so long. Not that in-name-only Democrats should feel safe: Her diatribe against the limp campus Kerry boosters (yes, John Kerry) in the second episode will sting quite nicely. But here's hoping that in the future Grace's acerbity is directed at less predictable targets than the college's new dean (John Slattery) with whom she shares a too-cute meet-cute more suitable to a teen romance than this bright show.

Thankfully, the pilot's end reveals which son is White House-bound, making a rewatch necessary to catch all the sly hints and slyer misdirects. The choice to nip the gimmick in the first episode is a hopeful hint in itself: ''J&B'' is packed with enough personal tangles -- family lies, favoritism, and a complicated sibling rivalry -- that it doesn't need that political twist. Even Lahti's skeptical Grace would deem ''Jack & Bobby'' smart TV. Grade: A-
 
(Posted:09/17/04)

Offline Mr. Hankey

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Re: JACK & BOBBY
« Reply #5 on: Aug 08, 2005 at 03:52 PM »
It started last weekend on Studio 23. I haven't seen it, but I recorded it.

For those interested, it airs every Saturday at 8:40PM.
Mr. Hankey the Christmas Poo... He loves me, I love you...

Offline riverfan

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Re: JACK & BOBBY
« Reply #6 on: Aug 09, 2005 at 06:38 PM »
Christine Lahti... got to love her. she's great.

any replays? saturday 8.40? alanganin ang oras.

Offline downtown

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Re: JACK & BOBBY
« Reply #7 on: Aug 10, 2005 at 05:58 PM »
just a warning. watched this one but got tired of it when it was not  picked up for the next season. It had an excellent presentation.