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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, December 31, 2007

10 of the best television shows of 2007

By Robert Philpot
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Zachary Levi stars as Chuck Bartowski in NBC's "Chuck."

MITCHELL HAASETH | NBC

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In 2007, TV had three seasons: a good spring, a great summer and a mediocre, strike-affected fall. Yet there were plenty of big, mad reasons to watch. These are just 10 of them.

1. "Mad Men," AMC. Vividly atmospheric, this drama about 1960 Madison Avenue execs and the women they harassed looked like a 1960 movie, from the clouds of smoke and rivers of liquor to the lighting techniques and acting styles. Jon Hamm, John Slattery and Vincent Kartheiser are all terrific as ad men whose primary product is themselves, and what you see isn't always what you get. No DVD date yet.

2. "Big Love," HBO. Bill Paxton anchors a huge cast in a show about marriage, parenthood, childhood, consumerism, standing up for yourself and the ways people adapt their faiths to their lifestyles, instead of the other way around. Think of it as just "that polygamy show" and you'll be missing something. On DVD now.

3. "30 Rock," NBC. Tina Fey's cheeky comedy show about a comedy show can shift from dead-on observational humor to outrageous situations in a split second, and it has a nice way of biting the hand that feeds it, as when it mocked the hypocrisy of NBC's environmentally themed "Green Week." Season one available on DVD.

4. "The Sopranos," HBO. The ambiguous finale ticked a lot of people off, but I was gratified by a show that didn't feel compelled to wrap things up with a tidy little bow. Life is seldom that neat, as dynamite episodes featuring Christopher's shocking death and A.J.'s suicide attempt illustrated. On DVD.

5. "Chuck," NBC. This adventure-comedy, about a computer geek who becomes a spy after accidentally downloading thousands of government secrets into his head, is the one new fall show that had me from the beginning and hasn't lost my interest. Funny, sweet, charmingly retro, with a winning performance by lead Zachary Levi and the best title sequence since "Six Feet Under."

6. "Pushing Daisies," ABC. I initially resisted this romantic fantasy about a young man who can bring folks back from the dead because of its tendency to rub your nose in its cleverness. But the writing often sings, Lee Pace has a delicate melancholy in the lead role, and Kristin Chenoweth is sassy greatness as a co-worker with a crush on him. Will continue in 2008.

7. "Lost," ABC. It's erratic as all get-out, but the show about plane-crash survivors on a very weird island ended its third season in peak form with a series of stories that climaxed with the most mind-blowing TV episode since ... well, since "Lost's" premiere a few years back. On DVD now.

8. "Torchwood," BBC America. A "Doctor Who" spinoff about a team that hunts extraterrestrials and other weirdness in Cardiff, Wales, this rises above other freak-of-the-week dramas by pushing its characters to the emotional limit. Docked several notches for a too-soon end-of-the-world episode that made the apocalypse look like an attack by an old Dio album cover. On DVD Jan. 22; season two begins Jan. 26.

9. "Damages," FX. Over-the-top, insane and illogical, this legal drama pitting devious shark attorney Glenn Close against unethical CEO Ted Danson didn't give us too many people to root for, and it killed off so many characters it's a surprise it can come back for a second season. But it managed to be positively addictive in spite of its myriad flaws. Can't wait for that second season. On DVD Jan. 29.

10. "The Closer," TNT. Not so much because of Kyra Sedgwick's performance but because of creator James Duff and his writing team's ability to yank you from broad comedy in one episode to draining tragedy in the next. And the backup cast is the biggest bunch of misfits this side of "The Office," but they get the job done.

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