TELEVISION

Television has always been the pulse of popular culture—a mirror that flickers, distorts, and occasionally tells the truth. In this section, we explore both the present and the past of the medium: the streaming epics redefining narrative form, the limited series that blur the line between cinema and television, and the classic shows whose shadows still linger across the dial. Each review or essay looks beyond the screen toward what these stories reveal about who we are and what we watch for. From the glow of the cathode ray to the glow of the tablet, Television considers how the small screen continues to tell our biggest stories.

Classic Television

The golden age of TV laid the groundwork for everything that followed. Its innovation in storytelling, performance, and production turned simple broadcast entertainment into an enduring art form.

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Television Reviews

Ozzy Osbourne: No Escape from Now

Streaming on Paramount +

“An unflinching portrait of pain, love, and the courage to keep creating”

 

The Prince of Darkness shuffles into the final chapter of Ozzy Osbourne: No Escape from Now. He’s sporting one of the many black hats the camera never tires of capturing, and the exit tunnel is too long to care about a closer shot. There’s no fireworks on which to close this surprisingly intimate doc, just the slow-motion, death-defying plummet of the legend we thought would live forever.

There are no bats, no wild-man shenanigans, and no freakin’ Kardashians here. This Ozzy is at his most exposed, and No Escape From Now allows us to bear witness to the rock icon’s last years onstage and at home as he comes to terms with the long list of demons both real and imagined that have finally caught up with him. The Parkinson’s diagnosis, spinal operations, sobriety challenges, depression, weight loss, and a persistent body that just wants to give in: they’re all laid out for the world to see and with a startling frankness, Ozzy is honest. Heartbreakingly, hilariously, refreshingly honest.

Opening and closing the film with the Osbourne family, wife Sharon, daughter Kelly, son Jack, and little seen daughter Aimee, all play important roles in providing a much-needed counterbalance to the Ozmaniac’s bravado. Their love, anger, and care for a husband, father, and celebrity still unfolding in real-time serves as a poignant reminder that no matter how rich and famous, a family is never truly safe from tragedy or loss. Sharon in particular emerges as the guide and moral compass. As Ozzy’s longtime manager and wife, she is equal parts stern, spousal, and soldier.

Though the camera can only linger so long on a septuagenarian struggling to move around, Ozzy Osbourne is still an artist. The moments of intimacy as he sits in the vocal booth during recording sessions for his latest album Patient Number 9 or in rehearsal with producer Andrew Watt, guitar hero Tony Iommi, Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith, and bandmate Robert Trujillo are brief but essential to not just his story, but the documentary itself. To see Ozzy sitting at the mic, half in tears and fully terrified of his own frailty as the Parkinson’s tremors rattle his body in rhythm with his soul is crushing and oddly, heartening.

The story that has been his life culminates in the singer’s efforts to walk and take the stage for one final bow at Birmingham’s Villa Park. Not a show; just one last chance for the singer to exit the building under his own two legs while fans cheer him on one final time. Each step is a question; each breath a gamble, not just on his own life, but on whether it would even be possible to continue making Ozzy Osbourne albums. He survives, and when we cut to the show itself, it’s not so much the arena spectacle that will hit you as the complete and utter silence that falls after the first note.

Ozzy Osbourne: No Escape From Now isn’t just a rock documentary; it’s a reckoning. Ozzy is that rare figure who isn’t just laid bare in these waning days, but all the lies, glory, and failures leading up to them. He has been the living embodiment of the excess that defined rock ’n’ roll for so long, and he never stopped showing up for the show. Ozzy is strong not because he’s bulletproof and will live to 100 or because he can get on a stage one last time. He’s strong because he’s finally let us see him break.

4.5 / 5 — Painful, powerful, and unforgettable.

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Monster: The Ed Gein Story

Ryan Murphy’s new Netflix series Monster: The Ed Gein Story, a show that attempts to “look into the disturbed mind of one of America’s most vicious killers,” often does the opposite and get lost in its own mythology. Charlie Hunnam does an admirable job as Ed Gein. The British actor is a changed man; he’s completely and literally transformed to play the role. (He reportedly suffered panic attacks and insecurities getting into character for the role.) The cinematography and set design are also noteworthy. The rundown farmhouse in Wisconsin, the sterile, drab furniture and set pieces, and the ominous, overcast skies all contribute to a sense of claustrophobia and a gradual feeling that Gein is being eaten up by the land.

However, I found it a bit hard to follow at times. It jumps around in time periods, and its fictional subplots were unnecessary and distracting. Also, it crosses the line of the telling the story of one of America’s most vicious killers and often glorifies and sensationalizes him. The series is so gory and gratuitous at times that some reviews have called it “exploitation cinema.”

Yet, it is not without its charms and merits. Laurie Metcalf, as Gein’s mother Augusta, does a great job. The show also does an admirable job of contextualizing and reminding viewers how many of the greatest horror villains were born of his crimes. As written in several reviews I read, he is the grandfather of cinematic icons like Norman Bates, Buffalo Bill, and Leatherface.

In the end, Monster: The Ed Gein Story is a beautiful-looking show with strong performances and ambitious storytelling, but it is flawed and confusing at times with its tone and narrative structure and sensationalizes its subject.

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We celebrate Hollywood—past and present. Through history, biography, and review, this blog explores the people, films, and places that shaped the dream factory, preserving its stories while connecting them to today’s entertainment world.