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Unlikeable OCD crime solver is hard to watch

Unlikeable OCD crime solver is hard to watch

The Advertiser3 days ago
To tell you the truth, I'm a bit tired of this TV trope where people with OCD or on the autism spectrum seem to have magical abilities to solve crime.
As far as TV seems to think, they're the only people clever enough to crack cases.
Such is the case with Professor T, where title character Prof Jasper Tempest has a big case of OCD. And might be a bit of a germaphobe too, given his habit of wearing rubber gloves everywhere.
He's a very unlikable character, rude to pretty much everyone he meets - which makes it impossible to like him.
In this episode he's reluctantly called in to solve a series of violent attacks on a university campus.
His stunning breakthrough? Having an amnesiac victim close her eyes and think really hard about the incident until she remembers something.
That's not even the only dumb thing about this episode. There was a third victim who fell down a flight of stairs, knocked herself out and is in a coma.
Yet, even though she was found unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and hasn't been able to say anything to police, they make a great leap and decide she was another victim.
How? Lazy scriptwriting is my guess.
As is increasingly the case these days, this is a free-to-air screening of a series that was on a streaming service several years ago.
Based on the book by Celeste Ng it first aired in 2020. But that long delay is no reason not to watch Little Fires Everywhere.
It's not possible to keep up with all the TV shows available on the 876 different streaming platforms and you'd go broke if you subscribed to them all anyway.
So here is your chance to watch a pretty good drama series for free.
The series is about the Richardson family, which is led by wife Elena. Husband Bill (played by Pacey from Dawson's Creek) appears here and there, but he's kind of a bit player.
Elena tends to get all up in other people's business and thinks she's helping them out - though she really isn't.
She decides to rent out the place she owns to artist Mia Warren and her daughter Pearl and then, in her busybody way, sees she works as a waitress and offers her a job as their maid. Understandably that doesn't go down well.
The series kicks off with a fire in the house, which was deliberately lit. I haven't read the book or seen anything beyond the first episode but I reckon the mystery that will travel through the series is just who lit the fire.
The mark of a good music doco is that you find it interesting even if you have not the slightest bit of interest in the music of the band.
That's the case for me with Boyzone - couldn't name even one of their songs. And if the members passed me in the street I wouldn't recognise them.
But I still found this show (this is the third of a three-episode series) very interesting.
That's in part because it's not really a show about their music but rather the friction behind the scenes. Friction between the band and manager Louis Walsh and between each other - especially when Ronan Keating decides to embark on a solo career.
There's the added sadness of the sudden death of band member Kevin Gately and another member who has no interest in reforming the band.
All the surviving members and the manager are interviewed - and they're all quite open about the tensions within the band.
While it didn't make me want to go and listen to Boyzone, this final episode did make me want to go back and watch the first two.
To tell you the truth, I'm a bit tired of this TV trope where people with OCD or on the autism spectrum seem to have magical abilities to solve crime.
As far as TV seems to think, they're the only people clever enough to crack cases.
Such is the case with Professor T, where title character Prof Jasper Tempest has a big case of OCD. And might be a bit of a germaphobe too, given his habit of wearing rubber gloves everywhere.
He's a very unlikable character, rude to pretty much everyone he meets - which makes it impossible to like him.
In this episode he's reluctantly called in to solve a series of violent attacks on a university campus.
His stunning breakthrough? Having an amnesiac victim close her eyes and think really hard about the incident until she remembers something.
That's not even the only dumb thing about this episode. There was a third victim who fell down a flight of stairs, knocked herself out and is in a coma.
Yet, even though she was found unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and hasn't been able to say anything to police, they make a great leap and decide she was another victim.
How? Lazy scriptwriting is my guess.
As is increasingly the case these days, this is a free-to-air screening of a series that was on a streaming service several years ago.
Based on the book by Celeste Ng it first aired in 2020. But that long delay is no reason not to watch Little Fires Everywhere.
It's not possible to keep up with all the TV shows available on the 876 different streaming platforms and you'd go broke if you subscribed to them all anyway.
So here is your chance to watch a pretty good drama series for free.
The series is about the Richardson family, which is led by wife Elena. Husband Bill (played by Pacey from Dawson's Creek) appears here and there, but he's kind of a bit player.
Elena tends to get all up in other people's business and thinks she's helping them out - though she really isn't.
She decides to rent out the place she owns to artist Mia Warren and her daughter Pearl and then, in her busybody way, sees she works as a waitress and offers her a job as their maid. Understandably that doesn't go down well.
The series kicks off with a fire in the house, which was deliberately lit. I haven't read the book or seen anything beyond the first episode but I reckon the mystery that will travel through the series is just who lit the fire.
The mark of a good music doco is that you find it interesting even if you have not the slightest bit of interest in the music of the band.
That's the case for me with Boyzone - couldn't name even one of their songs. And if the members passed me in the street I wouldn't recognise them.
But I still found this show (this is the third of a three-episode series) very interesting.
That's in part because it's not really a show about their music but rather the friction behind the scenes. Friction between the band and manager Louis Walsh and between each other - especially when Ronan Keating decides to embark on a solo career.
There's the added sadness of the sudden death of band member Kevin Gately and another member who has no interest in reforming the band.
All the surviving members and the manager are interviewed - and they're all quite open about the tensions within the band.
While it didn't make me want to go and listen to Boyzone, this final episode did make me want to go back and watch the first two.
To tell you the truth, I'm a bit tired of this TV trope where people with OCD or on the autism spectrum seem to have magical abilities to solve crime.
As far as TV seems to think, they're the only people clever enough to crack cases.
Such is the case with Professor T, where title character Prof Jasper Tempest has a big case of OCD. And might be a bit of a germaphobe too, given his habit of wearing rubber gloves everywhere.
He's a very unlikable character, rude to pretty much everyone he meets - which makes it impossible to like him.
In this episode he's reluctantly called in to solve a series of violent attacks on a university campus.
His stunning breakthrough? Having an amnesiac victim close her eyes and think really hard about the incident until she remembers something.
That's not even the only dumb thing about this episode. There was a third victim who fell down a flight of stairs, knocked herself out and is in a coma.
Yet, even though she was found unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and hasn't been able to say anything to police, they make a great leap and decide she was another victim.
How? Lazy scriptwriting is my guess.
As is increasingly the case these days, this is a free-to-air screening of a series that was on a streaming service several years ago.
Based on the book by Celeste Ng it first aired in 2020. But that long delay is no reason not to watch Little Fires Everywhere.
It's not possible to keep up with all the TV shows available on the 876 different streaming platforms and you'd go broke if you subscribed to them all anyway.
So here is your chance to watch a pretty good drama series for free.
The series is about the Richardson family, which is led by wife Elena. Husband Bill (played by Pacey from Dawson's Creek) appears here and there, but he's kind of a bit player.
Elena tends to get all up in other people's business and thinks she's helping them out - though she really isn't.
She decides to rent out the place she owns to artist Mia Warren and her daughter Pearl and then, in her busybody way, sees she works as a waitress and offers her a job as their maid. Understandably that doesn't go down well.
The series kicks off with a fire in the house, which was deliberately lit. I haven't read the book or seen anything beyond the first episode but I reckon the mystery that will travel through the series is just who lit the fire.
The mark of a good music doco is that you find it interesting even if you have not the slightest bit of interest in the music of the band.
That's the case for me with Boyzone - couldn't name even one of their songs. And if the members passed me in the street I wouldn't recognise them.
But I still found this show (this is the third of a three-episode series) very interesting.
That's in part because it's not really a show about their music but rather the friction behind the scenes. Friction between the band and manager Louis Walsh and between each other - especially when Ronan Keating decides to embark on a solo career.
There's the added sadness of the sudden death of band member Kevin Gately and another member who has no interest in reforming the band.
All the surviving members and the manager are interviewed - and they're all quite open about the tensions within the band.
While it didn't make me want to go and listen to Boyzone, this final episode did make me want to go back and watch the first two.
To tell you the truth, I'm a bit tired of this TV trope where people with OCD or on the autism spectrum seem to have magical abilities to solve crime.
As far as TV seems to think, they're the only people clever enough to crack cases.
Such is the case with Professor T, where title character Prof Jasper Tempest has a big case of OCD. And might be a bit of a germaphobe too, given his habit of wearing rubber gloves everywhere.
He's a very unlikable character, rude to pretty much everyone he meets - which makes it impossible to like him.
In this episode he's reluctantly called in to solve a series of violent attacks on a university campus.
His stunning breakthrough? Having an amnesiac victim close her eyes and think really hard about the incident until she remembers something.
That's not even the only dumb thing about this episode. There was a third victim who fell down a flight of stairs, knocked herself out and is in a coma.
Yet, even though she was found unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and hasn't been able to say anything to police, they make a great leap and decide she was another victim.
How? Lazy scriptwriting is my guess.
As is increasingly the case these days, this is a free-to-air screening of a series that was on a streaming service several years ago.
Based on the book by Celeste Ng it first aired in 2020. But that long delay is no reason not to watch Little Fires Everywhere.
It's not possible to keep up with all the TV shows available on the 876 different streaming platforms and you'd go broke if you subscribed to them all anyway.
So here is your chance to watch a pretty good drama series for free.
The series is about the Richardson family, which is led by wife Elena. Husband Bill (played by Pacey from Dawson's Creek) appears here and there, but he's kind of a bit player.
Elena tends to get all up in other people's business and thinks she's helping them out - though she really isn't.
She decides to rent out the place she owns to artist Mia Warren and her daughter Pearl and then, in her busybody way, sees she works as a waitress and offers her a job as their maid. Understandably that doesn't go down well.
The series kicks off with a fire in the house, which was deliberately lit. I haven't read the book or seen anything beyond the first episode but I reckon the mystery that will travel through the series is just who lit the fire.
The mark of a good music doco is that you find it interesting even if you have not the slightest bit of interest in the music of the band.
That's the case for me with Boyzone - couldn't name even one of their songs. And if the members passed me in the street I wouldn't recognise them.
But I still found this show (this is the third of a three-episode series) very interesting.
That's in part because it's not really a show about their music but rather the friction behind the scenes. Friction between the band and manager Louis Walsh and between each other - especially when Ronan Keating decides to embark on a solo career.
There's the added sadness of the sudden death of band member Kevin Gately and another member who has no interest in reforming the band.
All the surviving members and the manager are interviewed - and they're all quite open about the tensions within the band.
While it didn't make me want to go and listen to Boyzone, this final episode did make me want to go back and watch the first two.
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Unlikeable OCD crime solver is hard to watch
Unlikeable OCD crime solver is hard to watch

The Advertiser

time3 days ago

  • The Advertiser

Unlikeable OCD crime solver is hard to watch

To tell you the truth, I'm a bit tired of this TV trope where people with OCD or on the autism spectrum seem to have magical abilities to solve crime. As far as TV seems to think, they're the only people clever enough to crack cases. Such is the case with Professor T, where title character Prof Jasper Tempest has a big case of OCD. And might be a bit of a germaphobe too, given his habit of wearing rubber gloves everywhere. He's a very unlikable character, rude to pretty much everyone he meets - which makes it impossible to like him. In this episode he's reluctantly called in to solve a series of violent attacks on a university campus. His stunning breakthrough? Having an amnesiac victim close her eyes and think really hard about the incident until she remembers something. That's not even the only dumb thing about this episode. There was a third victim who fell down a flight of stairs, knocked herself out and is in a coma. Yet, even though she was found unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and hasn't been able to say anything to police, they make a great leap and decide she was another victim. How? Lazy scriptwriting is my guess. As is increasingly the case these days, this is a free-to-air screening of a series that was on a streaming service several years ago. Based on the book by Celeste Ng it first aired in 2020. But that long delay is no reason not to watch Little Fires Everywhere. It's not possible to keep up with all the TV shows available on the 876 different streaming platforms and you'd go broke if you subscribed to them all anyway. So here is your chance to watch a pretty good drama series for free. The series is about the Richardson family, which is led by wife Elena. Husband Bill (played by Pacey from Dawson's Creek) appears here and there, but he's kind of a bit player. Elena tends to get all up in other people's business and thinks she's helping them out - though she really isn't. She decides to rent out the place she owns to artist Mia Warren and her daughter Pearl and then, in her busybody way, sees she works as a waitress and offers her a job as their maid. Understandably that doesn't go down well. The series kicks off with a fire in the house, which was deliberately lit. I haven't read the book or seen anything beyond the first episode but I reckon the mystery that will travel through the series is just who lit the fire. The mark of a good music doco is that you find it interesting even if you have not the slightest bit of interest in the music of the band. That's the case for me with Boyzone - couldn't name even one of their songs. And if the members passed me in the street I wouldn't recognise them. But I still found this show (this is the third of a three-episode series) very interesting. That's in part because it's not really a show about their music but rather the friction behind the scenes. Friction between the band and manager Louis Walsh and between each other - especially when Ronan Keating decides to embark on a solo career. There's the added sadness of the sudden death of band member Kevin Gately and another member who has no interest in reforming the band. All the surviving members and the manager are interviewed - and they're all quite open about the tensions within the band. While it didn't make me want to go and listen to Boyzone, this final episode did make me want to go back and watch the first two. To tell you the truth, I'm a bit tired of this TV trope where people with OCD or on the autism spectrum seem to have magical abilities to solve crime. As far as TV seems to think, they're the only people clever enough to crack cases. Such is the case with Professor T, where title character Prof Jasper Tempest has a big case of OCD. And might be a bit of a germaphobe too, given his habit of wearing rubber gloves everywhere. He's a very unlikable character, rude to pretty much everyone he meets - which makes it impossible to like him. In this episode he's reluctantly called in to solve a series of violent attacks on a university campus. His stunning breakthrough? Having an amnesiac victim close her eyes and think really hard about the incident until she remembers something. That's not even the only dumb thing about this episode. There was a third victim who fell down a flight of stairs, knocked herself out and is in a coma. Yet, even though she was found unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and hasn't been able to say anything to police, they make a great leap and decide she was another victim. How? Lazy scriptwriting is my guess. As is increasingly the case these days, this is a free-to-air screening of a series that was on a streaming service several years ago. Based on the book by Celeste Ng it first aired in 2020. But that long delay is no reason not to watch Little Fires Everywhere. It's not possible to keep up with all the TV shows available on the 876 different streaming platforms and you'd go broke if you subscribed to them all anyway. So here is your chance to watch a pretty good drama series for free. The series is about the Richardson family, which is led by wife Elena. Husband Bill (played by Pacey from Dawson's Creek) appears here and there, but he's kind of a bit player. Elena tends to get all up in other people's business and thinks she's helping them out - though she really isn't. She decides to rent out the place she owns to artist Mia Warren and her daughter Pearl and then, in her busybody way, sees she works as a waitress and offers her a job as their maid. Understandably that doesn't go down well. The series kicks off with a fire in the house, which was deliberately lit. I haven't read the book or seen anything beyond the first episode but I reckon the mystery that will travel through the series is just who lit the fire. The mark of a good music doco is that you find it interesting even if you have not the slightest bit of interest in the music of the band. That's the case for me with Boyzone - couldn't name even one of their songs. And if the members passed me in the street I wouldn't recognise them. But I still found this show (this is the third of a three-episode series) very interesting. That's in part because it's not really a show about their music but rather the friction behind the scenes. Friction between the band and manager Louis Walsh and between each other - especially when Ronan Keating decides to embark on a solo career. There's the added sadness of the sudden death of band member Kevin Gately and another member who has no interest in reforming the band. All the surviving members and the manager are interviewed - and they're all quite open about the tensions within the band. While it didn't make me want to go and listen to Boyzone, this final episode did make me want to go back and watch the first two. To tell you the truth, I'm a bit tired of this TV trope where people with OCD or on the autism spectrum seem to have magical abilities to solve crime. As far as TV seems to think, they're the only people clever enough to crack cases. Such is the case with Professor T, where title character Prof Jasper Tempest has a big case of OCD. And might be a bit of a germaphobe too, given his habit of wearing rubber gloves everywhere. He's a very unlikable character, rude to pretty much everyone he meets - which makes it impossible to like him. In this episode he's reluctantly called in to solve a series of violent attacks on a university campus. His stunning breakthrough? Having an amnesiac victim close her eyes and think really hard about the incident until she remembers something. That's not even the only dumb thing about this episode. There was a third victim who fell down a flight of stairs, knocked herself out and is in a coma. Yet, even though she was found unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and hasn't been able to say anything to police, they make a great leap and decide she was another victim. How? Lazy scriptwriting is my guess. As is increasingly the case these days, this is a free-to-air screening of a series that was on a streaming service several years ago. Based on the book by Celeste Ng it first aired in 2020. But that long delay is no reason not to watch Little Fires Everywhere. It's not possible to keep up with all the TV shows available on the 876 different streaming platforms and you'd go broke if you subscribed to them all anyway. So here is your chance to watch a pretty good drama series for free. The series is about the Richardson family, which is led by wife Elena. Husband Bill (played by Pacey from Dawson's Creek) appears here and there, but he's kind of a bit player. Elena tends to get all up in other people's business and thinks she's helping them out - though she really isn't. She decides to rent out the place she owns to artist Mia Warren and her daughter Pearl and then, in her busybody way, sees she works as a waitress and offers her a job as their maid. Understandably that doesn't go down well. The series kicks off with a fire in the house, which was deliberately lit. I haven't read the book or seen anything beyond the first episode but I reckon the mystery that will travel through the series is just who lit the fire. The mark of a good music doco is that you find it interesting even if you have not the slightest bit of interest in the music of the band. That's the case for me with Boyzone - couldn't name even one of their songs. And if the members passed me in the street I wouldn't recognise them. But I still found this show (this is the third of a three-episode series) very interesting. That's in part because it's not really a show about their music but rather the friction behind the scenes. Friction between the band and manager Louis Walsh and between each other - especially when Ronan Keating decides to embark on a solo career. There's the added sadness of the sudden death of band member Kevin Gately and another member who has no interest in reforming the band. All the surviving members and the manager are interviewed - and they're all quite open about the tensions within the band. While it didn't make me want to go and listen to Boyzone, this final episode did make me want to go back and watch the first two. To tell you the truth, I'm a bit tired of this TV trope where people with OCD or on the autism spectrum seem to have magical abilities to solve crime. As far as TV seems to think, they're the only people clever enough to crack cases. Such is the case with Professor T, where title character Prof Jasper Tempest has a big case of OCD. And might be a bit of a germaphobe too, given his habit of wearing rubber gloves everywhere. He's a very unlikable character, rude to pretty much everyone he meets - which makes it impossible to like him. In this episode he's reluctantly called in to solve a series of violent attacks on a university campus. His stunning breakthrough? Having an amnesiac victim close her eyes and think really hard about the incident until she remembers something. That's not even the only dumb thing about this episode. There was a third victim who fell down a flight of stairs, knocked herself out and is in a coma. Yet, even though she was found unconscious at the bottom of the stairs and hasn't been able to say anything to police, they make a great leap and decide she was another victim. How? Lazy scriptwriting is my guess. As is increasingly the case these days, this is a free-to-air screening of a series that was on a streaming service several years ago. Based on the book by Celeste Ng it first aired in 2020. But that long delay is no reason not to watch Little Fires Everywhere. It's not possible to keep up with all the TV shows available on the 876 different streaming platforms and you'd go broke if you subscribed to them all anyway. So here is your chance to watch a pretty good drama series for free. The series is about the Richardson family, which is led by wife Elena. Husband Bill (played by Pacey from Dawson's Creek) appears here and there, but he's kind of a bit player. Elena tends to get all up in other people's business and thinks she's helping them out - though she really isn't. She decides to rent out the place she owns to artist Mia Warren and her daughter Pearl and then, in her busybody way, sees she works as a waitress and offers her a job as their maid. Understandably that doesn't go down well. The series kicks off with a fire in the house, which was deliberately lit. I haven't read the book or seen anything beyond the first episode but I reckon the mystery that will travel through the series is just who lit the fire. The mark of a good music doco is that you find it interesting even if you have not the slightest bit of interest in the music of the band. That's the case for me with Boyzone - couldn't name even one of their songs. And if the members passed me in the street I wouldn't recognise them. But I still found this show (this is the third of a three-episode series) very interesting. That's in part because it's not really a show about their music but rather the friction behind the scenes. Friction between the band and manager Louis Walsh and between each other - especially when Ronan Keating decides to embark on a solo career. There's the added sadness of the sudden death of band member Kevin Gately and another member who has no interest in reforming the band. All the surviving members and the manager are interviewed - and they're all quite open about the tensions within the band. While it didn't make me want to go and listen to Boyzone, this final episode did make me want to go back and watch the first two.

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