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King of the nerds

4/2/2014

Silicon ValleyWith “Beavis and Butt-head,” Mike Judge established himself as the bard of mumbling, antisocial, all-American nerds. But Judge tops himself with “Silicon Valley” (Sunday, 9 p.m., HBO), which locates the nerve center of modern-day nerd culture in the San Francisco area’s tech industry.

Our hero is, at first glance, anything but heroic. Richard (Thomas Middleditch) is a shoe-gazing introvert toiling for an oppressive tech company while living in a pathetic startup “incubator” with four fellow misfits. Like everyone else, these guys are working on apps that could make them rich — or, as it’s fashionable to say in Silicon Valley, that could “make the world a better place.” At the bottom of the totem pole, Richard rolls his eyes at the pretentious personalities above him, including his self-aggrandizing boss (Matt Ross) and a renowned venture capitalist (Christopher Evan Welch).

But by chance, Richard’s compression algorithm comes to their attention, and they get the idea that it could earn them billions — I mean, that it could “make the world a better place.” In the blink of an eye, Richard is elevated to kingly status. That’s the subject of “Silicon Valley”: nerds on the throne for the first time in human history. In Judge’s view, they’ll be no less noxious than their grunting tyrant predecessors.

“Silicon Valley” is a brilliant comedy of manners that will shed light on our techie future and — dare I say it — make the world a better place.

 

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Surviving-Jack-TV-Show-Review“Surviving Jack”

Thursday, 8:30 p.m. (Fox)

I have raved about this new sitcom, which follows hilariously strict Jack Dunlevy (Christopher Meloni), as he takes over primary child-rearing duties for his teenage son and daughter. After watching another episode, I stand behind that rave. The series is set in an absurd time period – 1991, land of “Baywatch,” the Thighmaster and Milli Vanilli. The Dunlevy family is correspondingly absurd. Jack uses extreme drill-sergeant measures to train his son and two others for varsity baseball. His methods include air horns, blindfolds and rubber snakes.

“I promise you, there is a point to all this,” Jack insists.

Indeed, there is. Jack’s methods are simply a form of (extremely) tough love. As silly as it is, “Surviving Jack” features people who really care about each other. Along with rubber snakes, it has a heart.

 

20120225Continuum“Continuum”

Friday, 9 p.m. (Syfy)

In the season-two premiere, the time-travel series gets even more convoluted. Kiera (Rachel Nichols), the police officer from 2077, is imprisoned in the past for trying to change history. Alec (Erik Knudsen), her computer-genius friend from the present day, uses a time-travel device to go back two weeks to prevent his girlfriend from being killed. By the end of the episode, the space-time continuum gets so mixed up that there are two versions of Kiera and two versions of Alec running around. “It’s confusing,” one of the Kieras admits, as if by way of apology.

“Continuum” can get tedious when the script takes too much time explaining itself, but the series offers nice effects and appealing characters.

 

game of thrones“Game of Thrones”

Sunday, 8 p.m. (HBO)

In the fourth-season premiere, warring factions compete for the Iron Throne in the medieval-ish realm of Westeros. The Lannisters hold power at the moment, but they have plenty of rivals in fuzzy-pelt fashions.

The episode offers fans all the skin and slaughter they’ve come to expect. HBO is asking reviewers not to give away plot points. That won’t be hard for me. I don’t closely follow the series, so the many characters, clans and ancient resentments are almost impossible to understand.

At its worst, “Game of Thrones” is like a Renaissance Faire with decapitations. The dirty gray palette grows as tiresome as the torture porn. The saving grace is Peter Dinklage, who brings much-needed humor as a Lannister married to a rival Stark. Conversing with his bride, he delivers the best line of the week, a droll commentary on “Game of Thrones” itself with perfect understatement:

“Your mother, I admired her. She wanted to have me executed, but I admired her….” CV

Dean Robbins is a syndicated TV columnist from Madison, Wis. He graduated from Grinnell College and went on to become an award-winning journalist, but he’s been a committed couch potato long before he figured out a way to get paid for watching TV. See more of his work at www.thedailypage.com.

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