I have some mild reservations about where Riggins’ storyline is going, but no matter what, I’m really looking forward to seeing Taylor Kitsch step up as an actor.
After being MIA for two weeks, Jason Street returns with what may very well be the dumbest plot point the show has ever asked the audience to swallow.
As the title suggests, this week’s episode is all about the relationships, a focus that’s established before the end of the teaser.
This is a perfectly servicable episode of Friday Night Lights, accompanied though it may be by a faint whiff of filler.
The more I write about this episode, the more impressed I am with the amount of characterization that was packed in.
With Coach Taylor back where he belongs, at home with Tami and at the helm of the Panthers, the show serves up its most season one-line season two episode yet.
It’s rare to see a Panther game at the top of an episode, and perhaps rarer still for one to take up so little screen time.
The divisive Landry-Tyra plotline recedes into the background for a week as the Panthers take to the gridiron at last for their first game of the 2007 season.
The Tyra/Landry scenes, I’m pleased to report, are about as good as they could be.
I’m a little divided about the new credits sequence, which adds a more explicitly jubilant note but also seems just a little too energetic.
I bet I know why you’re not watching, and I hope I can convince you to at least give it a shot.
It’s easy to see why Friday Night Lights would make someone nervous.
I’m still unconvinced by Heroes, but the series certainly knows how to construct a cliffhanger.
Friday Night Lights is the most honest portrayal of contemporary small town life in the small screen’s history.