For a long while, I believed that my neighbor had ghosted me. This was the neighbor who recently vacationed on "Pig Island." We had a stretch where we regularly dined together--then the text messages became terse and un-encouraging. As a conspiracy theorist, I imagined that I had done something outrageous and offensive (and I'd never learn the truth). But my neighbor *does* continue to narrate his life for me. The narration remains breathless (and it happens whenever we pass each other on the sidewalk). "I'm hosting 25 guests for a Golden Globes watch party and sleepover--then I'm off to Manila for a month." "I said that my boss runs a toxic workplace, and he retaliated by reporting me to Child Protective Services." "My meeting with CPS caused me to have a heart attack--I was briefly, officially dead--but now I'm back on track and working full-time in a Kindergarten classroom." Once, I tried to rehearse for a brief encounter. I ...
This has been a dream season of SVU, and March 5th gave us another standout episode. Granted, SVU is so predictable that you can anticipate--with certainty--exactly when the "false starts" will end and the third act will begin. Last night, my spouse turned to me at the thirty-five minute mark and said, "This is the bad guy. It's THAT time in the storyline...." But--within that framework--you can still improvise. I really liked the opening scene, in which a tired person tries to find creative reasons to skip marital sex. The little exchange between Rollins and a nervous child-patient--"I'm here for New York's best lollipops!"--was also interesting. Finally, the observations about ASD--about stimming, loud noises, and nonverbal communication--lifted this script above the "average-effort" level. The villain was not a top-tier monster--so I'm subtracting a few points. Still: four stars.