I try not to spend too much time watching television, preferring to focus my attention on writing my columns and blogging. However, readers of The Suburban will recall how a year ago I shared my deep regret over the end of my favorite television program Lost. Yes, someone in the family bought me the box set of the final season and I have actually started to watch each episode. However I focused on filling the void and did so with four shows, three of which contained significant Montreal connections.
Here is a look:
Here is a look:
In Hawaii Five-O, Chomedey native Peter Lenkov (left with cast members on the set) is the executive producer of the reboot of the popular 1968-1980 series and broadcast on CBS and Global. I must admit I had my doubts whether the program would succeed upon viewing some of the previews. Yet I watched every episode, some of which were written by Côte Saint-Luc native David Wolkove. I was not alone. Hawaii Five-O was a huge hit, has been renewed for next season and already sold into syndication.
I got in touch with Lenkov last week and asked whether he knew from the scripting of the first episode that the finale would result in killing the Governor and showing her to actually be on the wrong side of the law “When we were shooting the pilot, my partner Alex Kurtzman and I were talking about what we should do in the first season if we were to get picked up,” he said. “One of those ideas was discovering that the Governor was corrupt and the target of McGarrett's father's investigation. Some of the details changed over time, but the core idea remained the same.”
Wolkove wrote four scripts this season, including the penultimate episode which set up the finale. “I did not get to write on the last one, which is too bad because it was awesome,” he said. “I'll be back for next season, and we already have some great stories lined up.”
Shooting for next season resumes during the second week of July, with a premiere in September. Suburban readers can look forward to another exclusive related to this series towards the end of the summer.
The three other news shows on my list were Being Human, Off the Map and The Event.
Being Human is produced by Muse Entertainment and shot entirely here in Montreal, Being Human is the North American version o

Off The Map was an ABC medical series, also shown on Global, which debuted in the winter and starred Montrealers Rachelle Lefevre (pictured below) and Caroline Dhavernas. They were both excellent in this show which evolves around six doctors who have "lost their way" and travel to a remote South American jungle to help those in need and to try to rediscover the reasons why they wa

The Event, on NBC, was supposed to be the new Lost. For me it almost was, with a mysterious stories of life like Aliens who never age taking over the world. It did not gain traction in the fall and returned to sub-par ratings in the spring. The finale tied up a lot of loose ends, but sure made folks like me begging for more. Maybe another network like SyFy (and SPACE) can scoop it up.
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