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May 28, 2012

dylan bruno

Numb3rs: Finders Keepers

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Jan 13th 2007 4:34PM

Rob Morrow(S03E13) Here we go again. Another Deadwood cast member makes an appearance on Numb3rs. I'm not against it -- everyone from the HBO show is a great actor. I just think it's funny how they keep popping up on Numb3rs. It must be a running joke for the producers or something:

"OK, we've landed Calamity Jane and Dan Dority. What are the chances of getting Swearengen to play a rival math professor of Charlie's?"

Add Titus Welliver (a.k.a Silas Adams) to that list. He played a crotchety NSA agent that reluctantly helped out Don and his team. I think they handled that story poorly though. Charlie was helping out the NSA instead of the FBI and that clearly put a strain on the relationship between him and his brother. I wish they had kept that tension going for a few more episodes as opposed to resolving it so quickly. Charlie and Don not getting along would have been an interesting to dynamic to develop.

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Numb3rs: Nine Wives

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Jan 6th 2007 12:34PM

Dylan Bruno and Teri Polo(S03E12) Good start for 2007 here. This is the type of Numb3rs episode I'm talking about when I say this show could easily carry its weight on another weekday night. Edgy topic, great guest casting, and a tense story. It was all there.

It was great to see Deadwood's W. Earl Brown (aka Dan Dority) too. Once again, the cast of Deadwood strikes on a CBS drama. This is maybe the fourth time I think? Beyond that, Joshua Malina reprised his role as U.S. attorney Howard Meeks and Teri Polo guested as another investigator. Nice little West Wing reunion right there. This show is really pulling in some recognizable faces lately, huh? Not too shabby.

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Numb3rs: Killer Chat

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Dec 16th 2006 10:34AM

Larry and his telescope.

(S03E11) This was great Numb3rs episode. It made you think beyond just what was going on with Don and the team, especially since it dealt with such a hot topic: sex offenders. Despite the obviousness of the overall theme for this show being math, I still find it incredibly entertaining when they apply algebraic principles and theories to things that I would never think to apply them to. Credit to the writers and producing team behind Numb3rs, because the amount of research that goes into each episode must be staggering.

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Numb3rs: Brutus

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Nov 26th 2006 6:31PM

Peter MacNicol(S03E10) What a disturbing episode. The whole idea of a government running experiments on it's own citizens is creepy enough and it's made even harder to swallow because there's plenty of truth to it. So I guess it's pretty cool that this show was willing to tackle a taboo topic like that.

So... government ran experiments. People got killed. Don and the team caught the bad guy. Savor that brief episode description because it's all you're going to get out of me. There are tons of other things I want to talk about.

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Numb3rs: Hardball

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Nov 12th 2006 10:33AM

Rob Morrow(S03E08) After I saw the previews for this episode last week, I wasn't too excited about it. Baseball stats just seemed like too easy a topic for this show to cover. But I was pleasantly surprised. It was pretty good actually.

The focus was a has-been player who was trying to make a big league comeback. So naturally he was juicing (it killed him) and there was involvement with a BALCO-type corporation. I loved how at one point there was a built-in PSA during a conversation between David and Colby. They were talking and all of a sudden Colby started listing off all the side-effects of steroid use. It was horribly cheesy and stood out like a sore thumb. Numb3rs -- watching out for America's youth.

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Numb3rs: Longshot

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Oct 28th 2006 10:31AM
David Krumholtz as Charlie Eppes.(S03E06) An epiosde all about horse racing. Makes sense since there's about a million different math related stories that could be pulled from the science of picking the right horse. Some people like Alan "The Rail Bird" Eppes just get it. Charlie, on the other hand, doesn't and when a young man is stabbed to death during a race... I could make a really bad "there's no time for horsing around" or an "all bets are off" comment but I'll restrain myself. Suffice to say that everyone is jockeying to find out whodunnit first. Sorry, couldn't resist.

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Numb3rs: Provenance

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Oct 7th 2006 5:21PM

Numb3rs

(S03E03) I suppose it was only a matter of time before we got this episode. Numb3rs is a cop show and you can't have one of those without the obligatory "priceless art theft" episode. So I suppose "generic" is a suitable word to describe this installment. It was good (Numb3rs always is), but you've seen this one before.

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Numb3rs: Two Daughters

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Sep 30th 2006 6:26PM

Diane Farr as Megan Reeves(S03E02) I don't get why this episode wasn't called "Spree, Part 2." It was, after all, just the continuation of last week's premiere... right? So why confuse viewers into thinking that this episode may be separate from last week's? I would think you'd want to keep the title in the two-part format so that viewers are more apt to tune in for the conclusion. I think that makes sense.

Whatever, I'm rambling because there wasn't much else to talk about in this episode. It was just so-so regarding the way they wrapped up the Crystal and Buck storyline. Obviously Megan made it out alive following her abduction, but you knew that was going to be the case. There is one thing I did want to talk about though. Is it just me, or is this show using less and less math?

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Numb3rs: Spree (season premiere)

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Sep 23rd 2006 4:24PM

Numb3rs: (l - r) David Krumholtz, Navi Rawat, Peter MacNicol

(S03E01) I wasn't all that excited about this episode. Last season ended on an uneventful note so there wasn't much to really look forward to. I mean, I love this show, don't get me wrong. If you ask me, it shouldn't be on Friday nights because it could easily hold it's own in another time slot. So yeah, I wasn't too excited. Well that changed, because five minutes into the episode what did we get? That's right, the triumphant return of Lou Diamond Phillips.

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Numb3rs: Undercurrents

by Jonathan Toomey, posted May 13th 2006 9:11PM

Numb3rs; CBS; David Krumholtz(S02E23) 361 seaports. 16 million containers. 9 H5 sub-types. 1 mutation.

Someone want to explain to me what's with all this bird-flu nonsense all of a sudden? I realize it's out there. I understand the extremely scary threat that it poses. But do we really need all this crazy television coverage? First ABC has that bird-flu TV movie, and now CBS has an entire episode of Numb3rs devoted to it. I guess people just like to be scared.

Fortunately, this episode had a lot of other good stuff happening. Larry is back, and it's a good thing. His comic relief was sorely missed in last week's episode. Plus, the romance between Charlie and Amita has started to heat up... well, sort of.

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Numb3rs: Rampage

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Apr 29th 2006 3:11PM

Numb3rs; CBS; Rampage; Rob Morrow; Judd Hirsch;
David Krumholtz

(S02E21) This was a pretty intricate episode, but it was well done. Because the story itself was so in depth, the romantic storylines that have been developing with Don and Charlie were set aside. They actually talk about those in this article. It makes a good point. The writers have done enough to develop what this show is about, that they can now focus on some of the individual problems that the characters face.

What we did get to see was how Don and Charlie cope with being in a life threatening situation. A gunman made his way into the FBI office and opened fire. A suspect in another crime was killed and two others were injured. A bullet missed Charlie by mere feet and it was interesting to see how he dealt with that.

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Numb3rs: Dark Matter

by Jonathan Toomey, posted Apr 8th 2006 3:45PM

Numb3rs; CBS; Don and Charlie Eppes(S02E19) I don't recall (lately anyway) watching something that so vividly took on the topic of school shootings. I honestly found this episode far more compelling than that film from a couple years back, Elephant.

What struck me the most though was that fact that the story had to be dramatized, in the sense that it had to have a twist. The events that occurred were all placed in motion at the hands of one manipulator. As the show usually does well, I had my mind set on another person the whole time.

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