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TELEVISION
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July 27, 2005

'Invasion' of the body snatchers


Lisa Sheridan and Eddie Cibrian play two of the humans trying to uncover a sinister alien invasion.    Justin Lubin / ABC

ABC, Day 2: "Invasion" panel. This is teen-idol-turned-TV-creator Shaun Cassidy's show. This is the show that's coming on after "Lost." This is the show that has possibly the single best tagline in the history of television: "Mommy, you smell different."

I take a seat in the back, among several rows of ballroom chairs. I think I'm sitting among half of the television department at CAA or UTA or whatever agency is repping the show. They're dressed high Hollywood casual, future power-agents of America, and they're thinking, or so I'm thinking, about trading in the leased Beemer for the new Range Rover they've heard about; they'll be upgrading from the three-bedroom share house to the West Hollywood bungalow inside of two years.

They are all listening very intently to Cassidy, who is onstage, flanked by his cast, handling this press conference with what I can only think of as Cassidy-like aplomb.

Asked what's made TV more welcoming toward open-ended, otherworldly shows such as "Invasion," Cassidy says, "'Lost,' 'Lost,' and 'Lost.'" "Invasion" is "Lost" in the aftermath of a hurricane, to be reductive about it. But the show has a Hurley, and a Jack, and a Kate, and instead of an island it's got this town hit by a hurricane and some weird kind of presence. Cassidy says the show is about divorce in a family, about survival, about the emotional recovery of a town, about the recovery of a species, about survival, about a father trying to protect his family, a sheriff trying to protect his town.

"Hi, for Mr. Cassidy on your right." "Yes, for Shaun, in the back, straight ahead . . . " When the questions come fast and furious for the show runner and the actors onstage fall to the status of mannequins, you know the pilot's turned on the press. Soon we're onto paranoia in a post-9/11 world.

"We are living in a society where a lot of things are being taken away from us for our own protection," Cassidy says meaningfully. So then, what, he is asked, does the "invasion" of the title actually refer to?

"Who's 'The Godfather'?" Cassidy retorts.

"Invasion" will be a tough act to follow for "The Night Stalker," our next panel.



Posted by Paul Brownfield at July 27, 2005 12:28 PM




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The stars. The suits. The shrimp. Twice a year, TV reporters and critics from around the country come to Los Angeles to get a sneak peek at the new television shows and hear from the people who put them on the air. This summer, home base for the semi-annual convention, sponsored by the Television Critics Assn., is the Beverly Hilton, but parties are taking place around town. The Times' Paul Brownfield is there and weighing in with an online critic's notebook.

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