Deliciously Scandalous



Every once in a while, there comes a show that transcends any expectations, exceeds any hopes, and goes so far beyond mere mortal comprehension that it becomes an instant favorite and a downright unaplogetic obsession.

Scandal is one such a show. It hails from the very creative mind of Shonda Rhimes whom ABC absolutely adores since she has like a hundred shows on there. Only kidding! It's more like 3, I think. There's Grey's Anatomy, Scandal, Private Practice, and I know I'm missing something else but oh well. Say what you will about Shonda Rhimes and all the controversey surrounding her and her choices at attacking other female show runners, but there's no denying that Shonda has a little crevice floating around in her brain that she accesses whenever she needs something. And boy does she create some juicy, tantalizing characters and shows!

I personally haven't seen Private Practice but I have seen Grey's Anatomy. Say what you will about all the sex and really fatal medical conditions (seriously, no normal stomach aches here!) but there's no denying that there are real characters with real problems with highly quotable and relatable lines. "You're my person" anyone? And it's also the reason why the show is still on the air, because these characters are relatable. She may not have written all the episodes, but she has a smart team working on the show. And I've seen people's reports about how fans are upset about the lack of asian male doctors or even more black characters. Basically more diversity and all I can say is shutup! This is the most diverse a TV show in this day and age is going to get and people should sit down and take it.

But this isn't about that. Honestly, there's so many seasons to get through, I highly doubt I would review Grey's Anatomy unless I only did the past two seasons or you guys want me to do another one. Anywho, Scandal is a fairly recent show by Shonda Rhimes and what a show it is.

It's basically about a famous fixer, like this is the go to fixer for really high end clients like billionaires and senators and she gets the job done no matter the cost. She spins stories that the fictional public eats up and she helps gets these ruined people some semblence of their life back while they obviously made some bad choices. But, this dear fixer is hiding a really terrible secret. She's in love with the Prez. This isn't a spoiler because it's no secret that she is and to call it a spoiler would be a gross injustice to all of you.



Season 1 began as we're just entering Olivia Pope's life, played by Kerry Washington, but it's obvious she's been living way before us. So often have I seen shows with characters that actually feel like their lives began when we see them. I think some writers often forget that these characters are people with flaws, childhoods, parents, ex boyfriends, and weird friends. But Shonda Rhimes didn't make Olivia like that which I thought was really clever. What I didn't like was that season 1 only had 7 episodes . Seven episodes????? Never have I seen that, especially on a broadcast network. That's what makes them different from cable shows and that insufferable maximum 12 episode bit.

However, the show was so good that I just had to return to season 2 and it did not disappoint in anyway. What's also good is that this stars an African American woman in the lead. As history will show, typical black shows or even other minority shows don't have a long shelf life. The Parkers, Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, The Boondocks, George Lopez, Ugly Betty, Girlfriends, The Game, all these minority shows just can't make it in TV. I think Shonda was really smart with having an African American lead but with other race people so that it could cross in all racial households. Some of you won't agree but that's the way it is. Race may not still be a conscious thing, but look around, there's less diversity on shows and it's sad because black people can't understand white humor, like white people can't understand black humor. It's sad but it's a reality.



So on all accounts, there's really a hidden diamond in Scandal. The show mostly revolves around a case a week like any procedural but there are definitely arcs that will play over a couple of episodes which I believe was a smart choice. So many times will you see a show with a good concept that falls short because they're playing by procedural rules that are meant to be broken. Beauty and the Beast on CW, I'm talking to you!

One of such over arcing themes would be Olivia's ties with the white house. This show could easily be political fodder, a chance for writers to broadcast their political views and shove it down people's throats, especially when the past year has been surrounded by politics and the recent election. BUT like all shows or movies created after 2008, people are just so allergic to portraying a black president. I'm not saying that every show or movie has to have it, but on a show with only two black people, I mean come on. But whatever, this isn't a race issue and I'm sorry I'm turning it into one, but hey, that's life.

Basically, in the first season, we saw the push and pull of Olivia's relationship with Prez Fitz. At one glance they're two people who have this magnetic attraction to each other but on the other hand are obviously only hurting each other. I thought Shonda really struck gold here as she portrayed this kind of connection. So often do you see the first meeting between characters, even if they have a shared history and it's an obvious love attraction. Again, this may be my inner feminist, but I like to see my characters fleshed out and really work for what they want. Prez Fitz is married with two kids but he was very much in love with Olivia and it's so obvious on his face every time he sees her. It's like his whole world is instantly better because he's breathing the same air as her.



This was the kind of attraction that I absolutely adored in Grey's Anatomy. Kristina and Owen had such a powerful dynamic and undeniable attraction that there was so much passion and heat, I felt it and that's saying somethig. It wasn't all out speeches or inner turmoil that shows the passion between these two characters on Scandal and Grey's, it's the little moments. Like the moments when Owen and Kristina are standing next to each other, their hands on the railing, and little by little, their fingers are moving closer and closer to each other. Or Olivia and Fitz standing by each other and she's on the verge of tears because she craves him yet can't have him, and his face has absolute torture because he's so close to the object of his love and he can't touch her because he's the Prez. So he settles with pretty words and his fingers itching to hold hers but only able to lightly graze it. Honestly, they're kind of like horny teenagers who have to keep themselves in check because they're sitting in front of their parents.

These kind of relationships run high on passion but when they're mad, watch out because it's like watching fireworks. At once beautiful and so great to look at but also one huge disaster waiting to happen. Olivia feels so bad about having this little tryst with Fitz and he feels bad as well. It's like his whole presidency is built on a lie and also his marriage but he took an oath, two as a matter of fact, and he can't just suddenly betray that. It's duty over feelings, honor before selfishness, it's a really explosive cocktail.



But, here's where the fireworks turn bad. Turns out, Fitz really hates his wife. He had to if he slept with another woman because Olivia left him. Olivia finds out and her image of this man that she loves with her entire being has all been a lie. It was one thing to do it with her because they were in love but for this unknown woman? A little unacceptable. And so Olivia reps her at her company and so begins this cold war with the Prez. Really interesting and dare I say scandalous stuff. I won't give season 1 away but it definitely had me gasping and wanting to see season 2 already.

This show isn't about just their relationship however, thank the TV gods. There's so much more to it than that. Olivia runs Olivia Pope and Associates, or gladiators in suits as one such associate puts it, and they handle really high profile clients. They handle military veterans, notorious madames, sons of millionaires, a dictator, and crazed scorned lovers of the Prez. Okay, to be fair, he's only had two lovers but still. When something goes wrong, Olivia is the one you want on your side. And she has an army in her corner. A newbie, an ex con, a spy, a really mean girl, and a man slut for season 1. These guys basically do whatever she says. And they fix situations that are in desperate need of it.




First up is Kerry Washington as Olivia Pope. Say what you will about her weight and big head but there's no denying that she is absolutely phenomenal in this role. She really brings a fierce fire to this character who is so good at fixing other people's problems yet a complete failure at her own and isn't that always the case? Honestly, Kerry's Olivia has jumped to the top of my favorite role models list. The writers were smart in creating her character. She's independent, smart, crafty, creative, and very fashion forward, yet at the same time so very much a woman with needs, feelings, pains, and all kinds of stuff. So often are women today portrayed as men in skirts but it also gives us a chance to appreciate the rare roles like this one.

On many levels, I can identify with her character. She has this master plan for everything, everything follows a basic script and no one can change that. She doesn't take no for an answer and her gut is never wrong. But she has a nasty habit of not trusting people least of all herself. She falls in love with the wrong person and when someone good comes along, they don't want them because they don't make their blood sing, they don't make them excited to see them, their whole world isn't instantly better because they're there.

Yet, Olivia keeps this all to herself. She paces, she frets, she takes care of things. She does all this for other people because she's trying to protect them but at the same time, she keeps them at arm's length and doesn't let them in for fear of them just getting hurt. So this is a deeply flawed character but she's also real. We've all had moments when we love our friends but when something goes wrong, we feel like we're alone and can't trust them because we're ashamed or embarrassed, whatever the case. I'm just glad that there is such a character on the show like Olivia. She's the type of character I aspire to write about one day. One that's deeply flawed and you can almost believe it's an actual person.


Next is Cyrus Beene played by Jeff Perry. If he looks familiar, it's because he is. He played Meredith's alcoholic father on Grey's Anatomy who died from a bad liver I think. One thing you can definitely say about Shonda Rhimes, it's that she's good to her people.

Anywho, Cyrus is Prez Fitz chief advisor and he wrangles Prez Fitz and handles any and all problems. He's constantly fretting and wringing his hands, constantly sweating, and trying to get Fitz to be a good president. He's gay with a husband who's constantly on him about having a baby. He's basically getting attacked from all sides. At first, I thought that was all there was to this guy. He's always advising Fitz on what to do, he always seems like he's about to go off the deep end. Plus, I remember him from Grey's Anatomy and he didn't seem like that much of an actor to me.

Mann, was I wrong! I don't know if it's the writing or Jeff's amazing acting chops but Cyrus is one tough cookie. He has a lot on his plate yes, and though he looks like you can push him around and get away with it, don't think you can. He will chew someone out if need be and he has some of the greatest insults, it's like man, you do not want to be on his list. He's trying so hard to keep everything together that he really doesn't have time for nonsense. I may not agree with everything he does, but Cyrus is one of my favorite characters.




Next is President Fitzgerald Grant played by Tony Goldwyn. Honestly, I didn't like his character in the beginning. I thought he was whiny, a pushover, and  I really wondered what fictional America saw in him as a president. It was like he didn't have a mind of his own. And when it turned out that he was having an affair with Olivia, he did some pretty shady things and said some pretty shady things and I really did not like his character. He was constantly in her business, acted like a super jealous, super protective ex boyfriend and it made me wonder over the future of this character. Jealousy is okay in any relationship because it's sign that you truly care about someone but at the level he was at, it was overboard.

But as the show went on, you could see his evolution slowly. Bit by bit, he developed a voice and a brain and began to speak for himself. Season 2 brought out his more masculine side. Instead of asking, he demanded. He became the president in every sense of the word. And again, this is another flawed character. Though he is the president, he has a wife and kids, one on the way, but the only person he wants to be with is Olivia. If these aren't star crossed lovers, I don't know what is. Deep down, he just wants be a regular man with the woman of his dreams and live a fat, happy life, waking up to her every morning. He truly is a romantic. But then you have to look at his actions and his words, (he has some of the best damn speeches you would ever want to hear!) and your loyalties will shift.

This is a character that will really have you on the fence. You want to like him, you want to be sympathetic of his plight, but at the same time, he does things that makes you cringe, says things that makes you want to wash his mouth out or slap him, and you can't see any hope in sight. He started out bad in my eyes but quickly evolved. And again, the passion and chemistry between him and Kerry/Olivia is astounding. If there was ever a love to have, it would be like this. This is the type of love that will last beyond anything.


Then there's Mellie Grant played by Bellamy Young. Love her as an actress, but I hate her character with a fierce passion. She's the First Lady to Prez Fitz but she's so mean spirited it almost makes you glad that Fitz is pining after Olivia. It's like now you get why he drove himself to her. Not saying it's her fault, I believe it's never the woman's fault if her husband cheats on her, but Mellie is just a mean lady.

She always has to put someone in their place and acts like she's sitting on this huge pedastal that mere humans can't touch. She looks for any oppurtunity to stretch her vocal power but she gets shut down by Cyrus and Fitz. In a recent episode, she said that she wanted to sit at the big boys table, but to be honest, she couldn't hold her own at the table. She puts on airs, but she really doesn't know anything.

As my inner feminist would attest, Mellie is a gross under representative of women. Would you really sit by idly while your husband has an affair with another woman, one you considered your friend and actually liked, right under your nose while the secret service and Cryus knows what's going on, all so your husband could make it to the white house? Like what kind of a woman are you? This is the father of your children, the love of your life, and you're willing to let him cheat if it means you get to redecorate the nursery in the white house? Come on, get real. You're only there for four years, it is so not that important. I wish my husband would do some stuff like that. Leader of the free world or not, his ass is going down!

And then, she wants to act like nothing bothers her but it does. And it's like no wonder Fitz doesn't like you or won't talk to you, you're such a meanie. She wants to berate him, chide him, give him ultimatums, and then wants to hold his hand in the limo and say that she doesn't want to pretend to be happy anymore. Like what kind of planet are you living on? That's just not realistic. At all. I really don't like her character but I am interested to see where she goes from here.



For the other characters, their storylines aren't really essential to the main show. And they're not too developed to the point to warrant a review. They're great actors and great characters, but they're not central to the overall plot.

There's an underlying mythology surrounding how Fitz became the president and everything that was involved. I'm not going to give it away here because that is a spoiler but  just know that this show is about so much more than the Prez's love life and the clients Olivia works with.

However, if you like well written shows with deliciously scandalous plot lines, with flawed but interesting characters, this is definitely a show you want to check out. It has everything. Action, drama, romance, and all around things that will make you tune in every night. Honestly, you won't be disappointed when you see it.

TV Needs More Eli Stone's!

Just know that I write this blog with a very heavy heart. I've only recently discovered this show and already, I've made it to the second and last season.

Rarely has a show filled my heart with such joy and rarely has a show made me so upset to reach the latest episode and realize that there won't be anymore. That the actors moved on to far greener pastures while I'm still stuck behind in the dead grass, wandering aimlessly in this great field of TV not knowing what to do with the rest of my life.

Yes, there have been other shows that I've took such passionate stands on like not watching a single episode of Glee because my own show got cancelled or watching a show like Scandal religiously because it is that great. But Eli Stone filled a deep seated crater that I didn't know I had and I owe it all to Marc Guggenheim and Greg Berlanti. Those two minds together is a powerhouse. They're the great minds behind Arrow and No Ordinary Family. No wonder I like this show so much!

It seems as if shows done in 2006-2008 had the most awesome premises, great actors, but for some reason, just couldn't get enough traction to keep going. Here was a time that people were taking big, huge risks in TV that paid off for loyal fans like me. Now, it seems like TV has gotten so complacent and it's sad. But, if not for that, then we wouldn't appreciate the rare gems like this show or any other show that comes along.



As I watched the final episode, I felt like crying. No longer was I able to know what happens to these characters in the future. I won't know what great things Eli would go on to do and it's terrible that the writers' strike happened. If not for that, I'm one hundred percent confident that this show would still be on today. Granted, we wouldn't have Elementary and Jonny Lee Miller wouldn't be in it, but still, this show was that good.

This show follows Eli Stone, one of those loathsome lawyers who actually likes his job. He's cocky, arrogant, rich, and engaged to his boss' daughter. By anyone's standards, he was living the life. But then came one horrible (awesome?) day when he began to hear music that no one else could hear. And so begins the tale of Mr. Stone, attorney to the big guy in the sky. Eli became a modern day prophet. He climbed off his white horse and began to mingle with the little people, to take cases for free and speak where they had no voice.

It's very easy to raise an eyebrow at the grandeur of the premise. This guy is God's prophet with a change of heart and in almost every episode, there's musical number or some fantastical and whimsical hallucination God is giving him in order to help save the ones God tells Eli to save. What I liked most, though, was how even though this was a show about God, they didn't necessarily play around with it. They didn't have Morgan Freeman in an abandoned warehouse giving and ex parte meeting with Eli and telling him which cases to take.

This is an example of religion in TV done right. It was there but it wasn't a central focus to the story. There's two explanations that they give. It's being God's prophet but also having the same brain aneurysm that destroyed his father. So it gave them room to decide which side Eli falls on. He wasn't a quick convert, like, oh God is talking to me, I absolutely believe in him. Eli questioned, he defied, he went his own way, they really made him struggle in this show and I couldn't imagine anyone else playing the title character.
If it weren't for Elementary, I wouldn't have known who Jonny Lee Miller was. Yet, in Eli Stone, it's such a huge departure between the two characters, I'm surprised it's the same person. Jonny has an uncanny ability to really disappear into his roles and actors like these rarely, if ever, come along. It made me look at his other credits, yes, he is British so it made sense that I wouldn't have seen his stuff until he crossed over to the American market. He was in Aeon Flux starring Charlize Theron, and again, this was another example of how much of a chameleon he is. I didn't know it was him but I specifically remember how adorable I thought he was!
Anywho, this show begins with Eli living his life. He's engaged to his boss' daughter and he's a successful attorney who actually likes his job. I know, go figure! But, he begins to see George Michael in his living room or at his office, singing and doing these elaborate dances that sometimes involved the people in his life and Eli would get swept away, until someone brought him back down to earth. 



He enlists the help of a acupuncturist who helps Eli decipher the meaning of his visions. His brother is a doctor who helps him with any and all problems and though they have their moments, they're the best brothers I've seen in a long time.

What I liked was how they really threw Eli on top of the proverbial cliff and threw boulders at this guy. He lost his fiance, lost favor with his boss, became a laughing stock of his firm, lost the other girl he loved, found his soul mate but she left him, and almost died. There was just no mercy for this guy and again, my weird fascination with tragic heroes was never more so than for Eli Stone. But even though Eli went through all of this, he was never a pathetic character. JLM played this character with a certain charm that made it near impossible to pity him for any reason.

What I also liked was how Eli was dealing with some real issues. He voiced basic human concern like being alone forever. I know most people feel that way, him it's doubly so, but still, it's a concern that people have. We are a social race, we can't survive on our own no matter what people say. Eli was willing to be a prophet for God, it was just that he was worried that he'd be alone forever.

Eli Stone is a rare gem of a show that doesn't come along often. You have to suffer through more doctor/cop/lawyer shows and really high concept shows until you get something like Eli Stone. It's hard not to like this show. If you're a fan of musicals and tragic heroes, complicated love plots, and quirky characters, definitely watch it!



Natasha Henstridge played Eli's fiance who bore the brunt of his aneurysm apart from him. This is in no way reflective of the actress, but she was a real bitch on this show. She just wasn't a good match for him. In the first couple of episodes, you kind of have to accept her as Eli's girl because that's what the writers wrote. But they just weren't a good match. If someone is going through something tramatic, especially something as big as a hole in your brain, you're not going to make it all about you and that's exactly what her character, Taylor, did. She made it all about her.

What ensued was a tennis game of breakups. She breaks up with him in the freakin' doctor's office when Eli learns his has an aneurysm and then he breaks up with her when he realizes it's affecting her life in a bad way. Okay, I get Eli was really important to her, but what follows wasn't right.

She basically gets with Eli's jerk of a nemesis and the only thing she can talk about is Eli. I mean, there is a point to how much you can talk about your ex no matter how much your new beau may know him. If I was the guy, I would have been walked away. Who wants to sit through that? And then Taylor wants to act all glassy eyed when the guy actually shows some emotion about it as if she didn't know what was going on.

As if that weren't bad, Natasha is a big lady. She's not only tall, but she had broad shoulders, and they wrote her character kind of like a man. I get that her dad doesn't like to show emotions and though I don't like my female characters to be a blundering idiot, I would have liked to see more substance to Taylor. Of anyone, she should have been the first person to believe Eli when he said he was having visions of which cases to take. Yes, it's far fetched, but if your man believes it, don't count him crazy all too soon. And again, she wants to walk around glassy eyed as if she didn't see it coming that he was breaking up with her.

All in all, I really didn't like her character. I thought she was mean, spiteful, hurtful, and completely unright for him. I don't know where this idealogy of women have to be men in skirts came from, but they really need to stop.


Of course, you can't talk about Eli Stone without commending Loretta Devine. Everyone knows she's a great actress because she's just so good at what she does. She plays Eli Stone's secretary who basically does whatever she wants to with that creative snark Loretta is known for. She could have easily been a 2D character but she was a major influence in Eli's life. She may not believe that he's a prophet for God but she knew that it was changing him in a good way and that's all she wanted. Apart from me, she hated Taylor too because she didn't like who Eli became when he was with her. I can say here that I completely agree.

What I also liked was the little glimpses into Patti's life. In the first season, it was more about Eli and getting the show off it's feet but now that they had a confirmed season 2, they could start playing around with things. There was a suggestion that Patti was involved with one of the partners of the firm, Posner, and she wouldn't even look at him. I was hooked on that little exchange because I really wanted to see where it would have gone. You can't just dangle something that juicy in front of a starving animal and then take it away never to be out again. That's just not right.

It did come as a surprise because there was never any clues to suggest something between them until that one episode where Posner was talking to Patti. But still, it was just enough to make me want to know why they got together, how they were doing, and how they broke up. That would have been a very interesting story arc because we could see Posner trying all his sleazy ways to woo Patti and she resisting him and then Eli's like ooo what's going on?

But alas, they left it at that and then in season 2, there was a little thing about her daughter. Honestly, I didn't even know she had a daughter or maybe I was just caught up in Eli's world that she may have mentioned it in passing and I just didn't catch it. Maybe this was kind of a deciding factor in cancelling the show aside from the writers' strike. They were introducing a lot of stuff that people might not have remembered or even heard.

I did enjoy the little glimpses into Patti's life though. It was good making her a person instead of just another character to influence Eli to do his best in life.



I've had a love hate relationship with this next character of epic proportions. Maggie played by Julie Gonzalo was supposed to be a love interest for Eli. In the beginning, she was just a ditzy aspiring lawyer who kept fumbling over so much that it really irked Eli. Surprisingly, I didn't find her annoying nor did her can't do well personality ruffle any feminist feathers. Even when she was flailing, she didn't count on any man to save her. She just wanted a shot and I liked that about her.

What I also liked was the tension between Maggie and Eli. It wasn't sizzling as some couples I've seen on TV, it was more gradual and somehow it was more satisfying to me. Don't get me wrong, I still prefer the sizzling will-they-or-won't-they, but for these two, I think they went along at a good pace. They started out being annoyed with each other and somehow out of annoyance turned affection.

Maggie won her first case and she was so excited that she kissed Eli. I couldn't help but celebrate because I really didn't like him with Taylor but absolutely loved him with Maggie. But of course, whatever I like has to be shot down and it's too good to be true to think that Eli could have a happy ending. After the kiss, Maggie tried to act like it didn't happen and Eli told her that he didn't want to burden her with his eccentricities. But it was so sad because she was the first one to believe him when he said he was having visions from God.

So Maggie is sad, runs off to Ohio and comes back engaged. Anyone can see that they like each other but Eli refuses to believe it. Late one night, he kisses her and she's like you can't do things like that and runs away. Here is where our relationship started to turn sour. I get that she's so in love with Eli that it hurts because he's on the fence about being with her. (Another classical male thing about not wanting to be with her but not wanting anyone else to be with her either.) But she ends up turning into a class A butthole and a huge ice queen. She's so cordial and unfriendly to Eli and then betrays him by going with the new firm. Like how mean is that? The old one practically raised her and she abandoned ship for a higher paycheck and her own department. She started off sweet but turned into another power hungry attorney.

Then, on a case, Maggie and Eli ended up sleeping with each other and instead of letting him get his words out as men are so slow to do, she got angry, stole the documents and acted like a real bxxch towards him. She wouldn't let him talk and told him that it took sleeping with him to get over him. I didn't buy that crap for a second, she still loved him, but whatever. She just turned into a real butt and I didn't like it. There's a difference between being upset over nothing and blowing it up the way she did. Had she just let him explain himself, they probably would be together.

I just really didn't like her character towards the end. It was another case of men in skirts because if women are too vulnerable, they're weak and can't cut it in a man's profession, and if they're too icy they come out as real buttholes and no one likes them. I think writers have a hard time balancing the two and I'll admit, I'm like that too. That's partly why I don't like the book versions to Twilight or The Gunger Games. Bella is a neurotic nobody who just so happened to hit the vampire lotto but her personality is like a wet dirty mop. Katniss is some robotic emotionless drone who at the slightest hint of affection, treats it as if she's going to walk the plank.



As far as characters go, these are pretty much the heavy hitters. There are more but they're more central to Eli's story than have one for themselves.

What I also liked about this show was that Eli had problems with his dad. This goes beyond the normal "my dad ruined my life" bit. Eli had real issues with his dad. His dad, played fantastically by Tom Cavanaugh (why is he always playing sick people?) had the same hole in the brain as Eli but no one knew that. They thought he was just a drunk who only cared about himself and couldn't see the damage he was doing to his kids.

Instead of tying it up in a neat little bow, the creators carried this theme with them throughout the whole run of the show which I thought was clever. It's so easy to tidy things up but Eli's dad was such a central influence on who he became as an adult and he got his second chances thanks to his visions. Eli and his brother Nate spent years hating their dad but then they just now realize that it was misplaced because he had something he couldn't identify, control, or explain to his kids who only saw a negligent father.



This show had some really heavy elements going on and it was so easy to get swept up into that but they balanced it so well with the comic bits. They had musical numbers, they had dancing, they had flashbacks, they had all kinds of things going on meshed with the serious things like Eli's dad or feeling alone and that's what made this show really clever. I'm really, really sad that this show didn't have the chance to go on and see what else was in store for Eli. The show ended on a really happy note and it's obvious that Eli and crew are going to be fine. But still, I would have liked more adventures in Eli land.

You won't be disappointed in this show, at all. Like I said, if you're a fan of both whimsical and serious shows, this one is perfect for you. I like old concepts with new twists and this show doesn't disappoint.




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