Big Brother, All-Star superstars replace repeats — Daily Rerun Roundup
The good news: a number of original series populate the schedule, providing a smaller amount of reruns. The bad news: Legally Blonde 3: Blonde Justice will not be shown due to the annual MLB All-Star Game. I know, you can’t stop crying.
- God bless CBS for keeping some scheduling normalcy with their weekly 8 pm repeat of NCIS. In this episode the team investigates a … wait for it … murder. This is not followed by The Mentalist at 9 pm. Instead, that slot is being taken by Big Brother.
- NBC (sixth place out of five networks) begins its schedule with a repeat of last Wednesday’s America’s Got Talent, followed by a new craptastic edition of the variety show. At 10 pm the network repeats the Law & Order: SVU episode guest-starring Carol Burnett. I could swear that I wrote about this repeat a few weeks ago.
- Only one rerun on ABC this week — the 9:30 broadcast of Scrubs. This episode (”My Full Moon”) featured only two of the original cast: Sarah Chalke and Donald Faison. And, according to Jason’s review, was somber, but good. I agree with Jason.
- Over at the CW (which, I believe, they are still considering a network) 90210 continues its repeat run. This week you have your typical ‘fake baby care for class assignment’ plot, your typical ‘friend makes bad choice about other friend’s out-of-control drug use’ plot, and your typical ‘high school collapses down Hellmouth’ plot. Oh, wait, that was from a different (and far more entertaining) show.
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Diary of a Buffy the Vampire Slayer Virgin – Cordelia and Calendar in; Master out

(Season 1, Episodes 9-12)
If the girls in my high school were allowed to wear dresses and skirts anywhere near as short as Buffy’s generally are, I think I might have flunked a few times to stick around longer.
9 – “The Puppet Show”
(Original Air Date: May 5, 1997) Damn, I should have given Whedon more credit. When Sid the ventriloquist’s dummy started talking I was all “Oh great. Another possessed dummy story. I guess it took Buffy awhile to find a unique voice. God, how many times have we seen this.” Heh. Yeah. Well–
What a great twist on the cliche. There was also some brilliant misdirection. Armin Shimmerman will always be Quark (Star Trek: DS9) to me, though I’ve seen this buttoned down side of him on Boston Legal before. Once Sid was cleared, my finger pointed at Quark.
Diary of a Buffy the Vampire Slayer Virgin – Welcome to Sunnydale

(Season 1, Episodes 1-4)
Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and subsequently Angel, are two of those television shows that I never really got the chance to get into. In the college town I lived in when it premiered, the only unaffiliated local station had chosen to align with UPN rather than The WB when the opportunity came. That left me able to watch Star Trek: Voyager from the beginning, but no Buffy.
I’d remembered the original Buffy film with Kristy Swanson in the title role, and had been hearing good things about this new iteration, but by the time I was able to catch it several seasons had past and I couldn’t bring myself to jump on board the show after having missed so much of what had gone before. I have a shamefully long list of series like this. And all of this was before the days of online streaming of episodes and readily available DVD sets.

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