Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.
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TV's Search for Truth Touch Finds the Meaning of Life in the Number 318 TV by DEAN ROBBINS If you love TV, you have to love its grand follies. These are the shows that throw caution to the wind to make REALLY IMPORTANT STATEMENTS ABOUT HUMANITY. Touch is one of those shows. Kiefer Sutherland plays the father of a mute boy who sees the connectedness of all things, somehow involving the number 318. (5,227 also seems significant. Who knew?) Needless to say, an evil corporation wants to harness the boy's powers to end life as we know it. At the start of season two (Friday, 8 p.m., Fox), Sutherland meets a woman (Maria Bello) searching for her own mystical child, who's also in grave danger. The two parents agree that "we cannot go to the police." No, that would be too sensible. It would also prevent Sutherland from conking bad guys over the head, kicking in doors, and sneaking into corporate headquarters all on his own. Touch is utterly convinced of its profundity, and that makes it irresistible for aficionados of bad TV. The child actors strive to look cosmic, and the script throws around concepts like destiny and mortal sin. The dialogue sounds less like human speech than a New Age bumper sticker: "No matter how we try to control it, nothing is as it appears to be." Well, with one exception. Touch appears to be as nutty as a fruitcake, and I think it really is. Shakespeare Uncovered Friday, 10 pm (PBS) Actor David Tennant conducts an inquiry into Hamlet, seeking to understand why Shakespeare's tragedy has made such a primal connection with audiences for more than 400 years. Tennant takes us chronologically through the story, making detours to speak with scholars and fellow actors who've performed the title role. The actors testify to the difficulty of incarnating a character so obsessed with conscience and mortality: "This is a sharing of one's soul," confides Jude Law. The scholars offer interpretations of key scenes, which we experience in excerpts from movies and stage productions. I'm here to tell you that, even in snippets, Hamlet works its magic. This is the first time I've ever experienced pity and terror in an educational program. Grammy Awards Sunday, 8 pm (CBS) "American Music Awards draw lowest ratings ever despite a performance by Justin Bieber," read the headline after last fall's telecast. I think a more accurate headline would have been "American Music Awards draw lowest ratings ever because of a performance by Justin Bieber." Bieber was an embarrassment as he sat on a stool in a tank top and backwards baseball cap, accompanied by guitar. He scrunched up his face to sing faux-soulful bubblegum lyrics, straining for the high notes. His attempts to mimic African American inflections caused me — and apparently millions of other viewers — to flee the room in horror. Wisely, the Grammys have made this year's ceremony a Bieber-free zone. The singer's camp was stunned to find him shut out of every category, despite the platinum success of his album Believe. Now that viewers can feel safe, I predict the Grammys will have the highest-rated broadcast in its history. INVENTORY SALE 50% Off Select Sports Gear! 50% Off Select Sports Gear! Baseball Football Soccer Baseball •• Football •• Soccer Two Great Businesses Under One Roof! Hours: 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. M-F 3006 Bragg Blvd. 910.323.1791 www.trophyhouseinc.com 20 UCW FEBRUARY 6-12, 2013 WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM