From Deseret News archives:

29 new shows are headed for your TV

Published: Friday, Sept. 14, 2007 12:16 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Will it work? Scoff if you want, but I think this could work. Hey, if I told you 10 years ago that there was going to be this show about a high school cheerleader who killed vampires and it would run for seven seasons, would you have believed me?

Debuts: Tuesday, Sept. 25

CASHMERE MAFIA (Tuesdays, 9 p.m., ABC/Ch. 4) is either an attempt to make a new "Sex and the City" or the female version of "Big Shots" — and it's not entirely successful at being either one.

It's the story of four very successful businesswomen who are less successful in their private lives. Friends since business school, they form a support network for one another.

Mia Mason (Lucy Liu) is an ultracompetitive, driven executive at a publishing firm. But in the pilot, she has to compete against the man she's in love with. (You can see the trouble brewing there, right?)

Zoe Burden (Frances O'Connor) seems to have it all — a powerful job as an investment banker, a loving husband and two small children. But she's facing a threat from a younger woman.

Juliet Draper (Miranda Otto), the COO of a hotel chain, also seems to have it all. But her husband isn't faithful, and her teenage daughter is a rebellious snot.

Story continues below
Then there's Caitlin Dowd (Bonnie Sommerville), a market executive at a cosmetics firm. Her love life has been less than great, but then she meets a new subordinate at work — a subordinate who happens to be a woman.

There are a lot of soap opera-ish antics going on here, complete with over-the-top developments, high-drama moments and dialogue that no real person would ever say.

What's to like? Well ... um ... the cast is pretty good. And, if you're looking for a rather mindless soap, look no further..

What's not to like? At least in the pilot, nothing quite comes together. You can almost see the writers working on the script instead of seeing the characters as real people. It's neither as funny nor as dramatic as it wants to be.

Will it work? Doubtful.

Debuts: Tuesday, Nov. 27

CANE (Tuesdays, 9 p.m., CBS/Ch. 2) is sort of the Hispanic version of "Dallas" — a rich, powerful family fighting over the family business and feuding with their longtime rivals. Only, instead of oil, this is about sugar cane. "Cane" is about a Latino family — Cuban-Americans. Which is something we don't see much on English-language American networks.

Family patriarch Pancho Duque (Hector Elizondo) immigrated to Florida and built a sugar-cane empire and successful rum business. As the series opens, his longtime rivals, the Samuels family, want to buy his hundreds of thousands of acres of sugar fields — but they've got ulterior motives.

Recent comments

First of all, I really am taking this as what to watch and what not...

Normally a Pierce fan.. | Sept. 17, 2007 at 8:39 p.m.

Thank you for finally being the first person to actually gave an...

Megan | Sept. 17, 2007 at 2:40 p.m.

Image
CW Network

Mary Mouser, K'Sun Ray and, yes, a lion cub are among the stars of the family drama 'Life Is Wild,' which is filmed in South Africa.

previousnext

Latest comments

What Merry Christmas now represents to me "Merry Comsumption, Spending,...

Mistake vs. repeat affairs probed

So why don't our leaders address plural marriage to solve the problems with...

Few details on missing W.V. mom

This is way too FISHY. Something is very wrong here with this woman's...

Once again the NEA proves how out of touch with reality they are. They think...

Letters: Global warming a lie

How many conservanauts have actually seen the documentary, "An inconvienent...

Jazz fall apart late at L.A.

Utahan's cannot face the facts, they are just not that good. They live in a...

Pass timing is very critical for Wynn. He likes to throw the deep ball but I...

Phoenix temple inspires thanks

Yes, it does depend on who you are. If you are an active LDS, you would be...

Obama defends wars, accepts Nobel

I'm glad you are a member, then you know we are taught to be "SELF RELIANT",...

Letters: Reid sold his memory

The 1964 Civil Rights Act is more complexed than many admit. Both the...

Advertisements