Carina Chocano

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  • Giddyup, spaceman

    Buffy's creator gallops into outer space with "Firefly," taking the connection between sci-fi and westerns a little too literally.
  • Family, work and literary vampirism

    This week's new TV sitcoms offer two dismal duds -- and a sly, bittersweet comedy about a dissipated writer who hits on his own daughter.
  • Same old mish-"M*A*S*H"! Stat!

    On "MDs" and "Presidio Med," rogue, renegade and maverick doctors search for a cure for HMOs.
  • Play it again, scam

    Crimes shown backward, heroes sent back to high school, and yet another trip to the '60s. This week's lame new TV shows prove a trip down Memory Lane can be a snooze.
  • Fall's tube of plenty

    Saintly small-town doctors, Lynchian mysteries and repeating your teen years, twice: The new prime-time season lurches out of the gate this week.
  • Sympathy for the misanthrope

    It would be easy to feel sorry for "Curb Your Enthusiasm's" Larry David -- if only he wasn't so damn unlikable.
  • "Everything comes to an end"

    Money, drugs, psychiatry and rampant individualism threaten both of Tony's families as "The Sopranos" sounds an even darker, bleaker tone.
  • How to make an "American Idol"

    Fox's sadomasochistic battle of the power ballads mercifully ends tonight, but it's been a jaded recording executive's ultimate summer fantasy.
  • Arab-Americans, one year later

    A new PBS documentary delicately explores the lives of "100 percent American, 100 percent Arab" citizens, who find themselves permanent outsiders in a season of war.
  • The filth and the fury

    Conservative watchdogs at the Parents Television Council now have scientific proof: Sabrina is better for your kids than Buffy! And "Doc," starring Billy Ray Cyrus, is the best show on TV.
  • When "Friends" meet the Lord

    All is not as it seems in "Contest Searchlight," Comedy Central's mockumentary series about the making of a bogus sitcom starring Peter Gallagher as Jesus. In chaps. In New York City.
  • Greetings from Desperation, N.J.

    Armed with devastating performances from Uma Thurman, Juliette Lewis and Gena Rowlands, director Mira Nair trains her sociologist's eye on the Garden State in HBO's "Hysterical Blindness."
  • Viewer discretion

    CNN's al-Qaida tapes were grisly and important, and offered a promising look at what a news channel could actually be.
  • Stranger in a strange land

    Anna Nicole Smith is a parody of a blond bombshell in a parody of a TV show. Bloated, lonely and pathetic? Yes. The end of civilization? No.
  • Heavy meta

    When the networks start gleefully indulging in self-referential, self-mocking camp, as in NBC's terrifying "The Rerun Show," is it about time? Or is it just time for an attitude adjustment?
  • Meat market plunges to five-year low

    Shaken confidence, lower interest rates, slow recovery: A new season of "Sex and the City" explores the darker side of serial monogamy and finds it's a bear.
  • CNN's breakout comedy hit

    Connie Chung's new talk show, a parade of pedophilia and murder fueled by inane kindergarten-teacher musings, is so flat-out weird it just might acquire a cult following.
  • Watching the defective

    Tony Shalhoub plays a brilliant San Francisco detective (with a morbid fear of dairy products) in USA's agreeable old-school puzzler "Monk."
  • Cruel summer

    Amateur Whitney Houston covers! "Baywatch" babes turned low-rent spokesmodels! Obscene crank calls! If you found the prime-time season too taxing, summer TV is for you.
  • Who wants to marry a regular person?

    In Michael Apted's sad, hopeful and deeply moving new documentary series on marriage in America," "I do" isn't a happy ending -- but rather an uncertain beginning.
  • They care a lot

    The cops, firefighters and paramedics of ABC's reality series "Boston 24/7" are so inspiring, dedicated and hardworking it's ... weirdly depressing. Still, just try to switch it off.
  • Scenes from the class struggle on Long Island

    Barbara Kopple's "The Hamptons" offers a dishy, surprisingly soft-focus vision of the summer playground for America's elite and those who want to be them.
  • ... And in with the old

    The upcoming fall season will be heavy on cop dramas, dysfunctional family sitcoms, office comedies and other TV comfort food.
  • Out with the old ...

    The TV season ends in an orgy of sex, birth, death and other life-changing events.
  • Thy tight buns are like a red, red rose

    Vicariously thrilling, coldly pragmatic and wildly popular, TV's new dating shows are the 21st century equivalent of medieval courtly love -- in a hot tub.
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