TV Review: 24 - Hour 17: Extreme Customer Service
Back at the bank heist or pseudo heist – or intel gathering – wait, is this what they mean by ‘data-mining’?
Posted to Video by Mary K. Williams on April 12, 2006 03:00 AM
24 Day 5: 11:00 PM - 12:00 AM
Oops, give me a sec. The graphic violence warning piddled on the kitchen floor. I gotta go clean it up. The recaps replay just about the entire previous episode. Buckaroo is still an open protocol. (Someday someone will do a PhD...
Posted to Video by Jeff Kouba on April 11, 2006 01:01 PM
TV Review: Episode 17 of 24: You Can Bank on It
As the excitement and conflict continue to escalate on 24 this week, we can see a brilliant use of drama and action to facilitate the move up the ladder toward an inevitably bloody Shakespearean kind of climax and resolution.
Posted to Video by Victor Lana on April 11, 2006 09:59 AM
Fox Extends Jack Bauer and 24 Through 2009
Kiefer Sutherland signed as star, exec producer, and given development deal.
Posted to Video by Eric Olsen on April 10, 2006 04:26 PM
Review: 24, Hour 16: Holy Jack!
Robocop is grilling Evelyn: "What took you so long to answer the phone? You don't look so pretty tonight."
Posted to Video by Mary K. Williams on April 5, 2006 07:22 PM
24 Day 5: 10:00 PM - 11:00 PM
As we pop open a can of fresh, vacuum-packed episode this week, Bill is staring at Google Earth.
Posted to Video by Jeff Kouba on April 4, 2006 05:17 PM
TV Review: 24: Wagging the Dog - Episode 16
Since the very beginning of the series, 24 worked because of the dynamic between politicians and the people protecting them and the American public.
Posted to Video by Victor Lana on April 4, 2006 04:54 PM
24 - Hour 15: Sex, Lies and Gas?
Snakehead: “take us to the control room!” Sam: “Sure, just let me change my shorts first”
Posted to Video by Mary K. Williams on March 28, 2006 05:36 PM
24 Day 5: 9:00 PM - 10:00 PM
Ooh, I just felt the graphic violence warning kick! In the recaps from last week, Vice President Hal still refuses to open the pod bay doors. RunLoganRun is on tv, even though last week we saw his presser live and in...
Posted to Video by Jeff Kouba on March 28, 2006 05:22 PM







Article comments
1 - Mary K. Williams
Eric -
Thanks for putting this all together!
2 - Eric Olsen
thanks for doing such great reviews!
3 - Glen Boyd
Seperated At Birth:
President Charles Logan From TV's
And...
President Richard Milhous Nixon
From The World Wide Glen
http://theglenblog.blogspot.com
If the two night, four hour season premiere of Fox TV's hit drama 24 is any indication, this year's weekly cliff hangers promise to be the best yet.
But it won't be just the non-stop twists and turns that face Keifer Sutherland's back from the dead counter terror agent Jack Bauer, that keep me on the edge of my seat this time around.
Nope.
The guy who I'll be keeping my eye on is the character of President Charles Logan. You see, I first noticed it when then Vice President Logan assumed the Presidency on the tightly wound drama last season.
The guy playing President Logan (actor Gregory Itzin for those keeping score) is a dead ringer for Nixon. Seriously, it's uncanny. Check out the two pics I posted above. He's got it all. The jowls. The beady, shifty eyes. The slicked back hair receding from each side of his face. The Drabby Suit...
I fully expect to see beads of sweat dripping from just above his upper lip on future 24 episodes, just as Nixon's so famously did like clockwork in his own televised speeches.
From the debates with JFK all the way to his famous denials of wrongdoing ("I Am Not A Crook"), as the Watergate scandal slowly closed in on his presidency.
Well it seems somebody on the writing staff of 24 has also noticed the resemblance.
Because on this season of 24, the writers have apparently decided to run the Nixon thing right up the ol' flagpole.
The first signs are subtle...things like the fact that the Logan character is keenly mindful of his legacy and his place in history.
He persues his own version of detente with a Russian counterpart (in the form of an anti-terrorist accord) as the ultimate photo-op...even as a former President has just been assassinated and terrorists are publicly executing civilians in an airport on national TV.
"I realize that I'm ambitious", Logan remarks matter of factly, "But I didn't think civilians would be killed." Which immediately brought back memories for me of the Nixon Watergate tapes:
"We could raise the money," Nixon said in one breath, referring to paying hush money to the Watergate burglars. And in the very next, always mindful of covering his steps, came the qualifying statement, "...But it would be wrong."
Speaking of tapes, 24's President Logan keeps not only tapes of all recorded White House conversations, but transcripts as well. Which brings us to the ultimate Nixon tribute (at least so far) the writers of 24 have resurrected from the historical grave of the Nixon/Watergate era.
Thats right, it gets even better.
They've actually decided to resurrect Martha Mitchell herself as a character on 24 this season.
For those either too young, or perhaps even too old to remember, Martha Mitchell was the wife of Nixon's Attorney General John Mitchell, and a perennial thorn in the side of that administration.
Painted by Nixon's goons as delusional and paranoid, Martha Mitchell went to the press (and anyone else who would listen) often and loudly, with stories of government shenanigans branded as "conspiracy theories" at the time.
She was eventually silenced through medication (and worse some have suggested). But perennial "kook" Martha Mitchell was eventually vindicated when the Watergate scandal verified at least some of her louder, wilder claims.
24's First Lady Martha Logan, herself a medicated conspiracy theorist prone to emotional outbursts and wild mood swings is portrayed by actress Jean Smart.
My friends, to quote one of the man himself's most famous campaign slogans, Now More Than Ever.
Richard Nixon is alive and well.
Don't be surprised to see 24's President Logan hitting the bottle and having long, late night conversations with the other Presidents hanging on pictures in the halls of the White House before this season of 24 is over.
Remember, you read it here first.