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Friday, May 13, 2005 - Page updated at 12:00 a.m.

TV's big climax: Must-see season, series finales

Knight Ridder Newspapers

Enlarge this photo CBS

"Everybody Loves Raymond's" Ray Romano and Patricia Heaton bid farewell Monday in a no-hype, "regular" episode.

It's prime time's annual spring fling, the mad dash through May days of big finales as another TV season rolls to a climax.

Sentimental farewells, cliffhangers, emotional moments, mysteries solved — and Jack Bauer saves the world again! They're all here this month. So pass the remote. It's time to get clicking with our eye-candy sampler of season and series finales.

"Everybody Loves Raymond" (9 p.m. Monday, CBS/KIRO): Buh-bye, bickering Barones. After nine seasons of big laughs and bigger ratings, Ray Romano's rambunctiously fractious, sarcastic family sitcom pulls the plug. Reasons to watch: They didn't bury us in endless farewell hype like "Friends." It's just a sweet, simple, regular half-hour series finale. Awright.

"Lost" (8 p.m. Wednesday and May 25, ABC/KOMO): The producers are promising a cosmic cliffhanger as the first season of the beguiling suspense thriller rolls to a finish. What's up? The spooky Frenchwoman returns with a dire warning. So does the monster. And some of the castaways try to split on a raft. Reasons to watch: Great characters, cool flashbacks and that cliffhanger, of course.


Quentin Tarantino directs the "CSI" finale.

"CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" (8 p.m. Thursday, CBS/KIRO): Blood feast? It could happen with that crazy Hollywood action auteur Quentin Tarantino ("Kill Bill") directing the two-hour season finale as the CSIs rush to save an imperiled colleague. Then again, it's network TV and not the R-rated multiplex. But "CSI" has grown ever more grisly and gory. Reason to watch: To see if Tarantino can put his own audacious cinematic stamp on "CSI."

"The O.C." (8 p.m. Thursday, Fox/KCPQ): You booze, you lose. Kirsten's (Kelly Rowan) been hitting the bottle and Sandy (Peter Gallagher) makes a life-altering decision to save their marriage on the stylish California soap. Meanwhile, sardonic teenyboppers Seth, Summer, Ryan and Marissa are caught in the crossfire down at the Bait Shop. Reasons to watch: "The O.C." is that rare guilty pleasure with a brain. Plus, the adults are just as cool as the kids.

"ER" (10 p.m. Thursday, NBC/KING): Will the last original cast member to leave the hospital please turn out the lights? Not gonna happen. Noah Wyle is shedding his scrubs after 11 seasons as Dr. John Carter works his last shift at County General. But "ER" hasn't flatlined in the ratings yet and returns for at least two more years. Reason to watch: Prepare tear ducts. Sentimental goodbyes are nice.


DANNY FELD / ABC

Someone will die in the season-ender of "Desperate Housewives," but surely not one of the stars. They include, from left: Marcia Cross, Teri Hatcher, Eva Longoria and Felicity Huffman.

"Desperate Housewives" (9 p.m. Sunday, May 22, ABC/KOMO): Wisteria Lane is hoppin' as the sublimely wack soap-opera satire rolls to the conclusion of its smash opening season. Somebody dies. There are answers to the mystery surrounding Mary Alice's demise. And Betty Applewhite (new series regular Alfre Woodard) moves into the neighborhood. Reasons to watch: The most divine female ensemble on television. And to find out who dies, of course.

"Deadwood" (9 p.m. Sunday, May 22, HBO): Heart of hilarious darkness. The saving grace of David Milch's profane, malignant masterpiece — a voyage to the dark side of the human condition on the lawless, untamed frontier — is its unfailing sense of twisted humor. But hark, who's coming to town? We finally get a look at scheming tycoon George Hearst (Gerald McRaney). Reasons to watch: The Western noir's deliciously ornate, neo-Shakespearean dialogue, and Ian McShane's wickedly inspired performance as volatile saloon owner Al Swearengen.

"24" (8 p.m. Monday, May 23, Fox/KCPQ): The digital clock is ticking. And Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) rides the high-tension roller coaster for 120 minutes in a two-hour season finale. A terrorist strike is still imminent? Check. Chloe O'Brian (Mary Lynn Rajskub) is still cool? Check. The nuclear apocalypse is gonna be stopped? Geez, we sure hope so. Reason to watch: After staying tuned for 22 hours, it's silly to stop before Jack saves the world again.


Paula Abdul dithers on "American Idol."

"American Idol" (8 p.m. Tuesday-Wednesday, May 24-25, Fox/KCPQ): If by some perverse twist of fate, snide Pillsbury Dough Boy crooner Scott Savol is still in the running on the final two nights, I'll keep my rubber brick handy. Though it's a certified ratings blockbuster, this has been the lamest "Idol" yet. Reason to watch: To see what ridiculous things dithering diva Paula Abdul might say. The show jumps the shark every time she opens her yakkety yap.

"House" (9 p.m. Tuesday, May 24, Fox/KCPQ): It's been a magical-medical-mystery tour for the quirky new hospital drama. The disease-of-the-week whatdunit is anchored in the vivid performance of Hugh Laurie as Dr. Gregory House, a brilliant medical diagnostician with a painkiller addiction and a sourpuss personality. Sela Ward ("Once and Again") guest stars as a woman from Dr. House's past, stirring up old feelings. Reason to watch: Hugh Laurie, Hugh Laurie, Hugh Laurie.

Best of the rest

Some other notable May finales:

"Star Trek: Enterprise" (8 p.m. tonight, UPN/KSTW): Spaced out. After four generally forgettable seasons, what is supposedly the final installment in the "Star Trek" family of TV series signs off.

"Survivor: Palau" (8 p.m. Sunday, CBS/KIRO): We are Koror, hear us roar. They banged the gong on the entire Ulong tribe — the first tribe to go extinct on "Survivor" — leaving only Koror members to battle for $1 million as ultimate survivor.

"Gilmore Girls" (8 p.m. Tuesday, The WB/KTWNB): Upon rescuing Rory after a night of reckless behavior with boyfriend Logan, frantic antic Lorelai is shocked by her daughter's plans for the future.

"Smallville" (8 p.m. Wednesday, The WB/KTWB): Pomp and superhero circumstance. It's high-school graduation for Clark Kent and his classmates as something wicked comes Smallville's way.

"Revelations" (9 p.m. Wednesday, NBC/KING): Sister Jo and Dr. Massey arrive in Galilee, hoping to prevent the impending birth of the Antichrist, stop the apocalypse and get renewed for the fall season.

"The Apprentice" (9 p.m. Thursday, NBC/KING): Is the Donald wearing out his welcome? The ratings are down and the show has lost all its early buzz. Maybe greed isn't so good.

"Without a Trace" (10 p.m. Thursday, CBS/KIRO): While agent Vivian Johnson undergoes open-heart surgery, her FBI colleagues desperately search for a missing woman who is part of an identity-theft ring and may have ties to international terrorism.

"Grey's Anatomy" (10:02 p.m. Sunday, May 22, ABC/KOMO): It's the surprise hit of spring. And the slick, sexy medical soap opera bumps into its own raging hormones when a sexually transmitted disease affects several hospital staffers.

"Everwood" (9 p.m. Monday, May 23, The WB/KTWB): Rocky Mountain bye-bye? Dr. Andy Brown contemplates packing up and leaving Everwood for a job in Chicago.

"CSI: Miami" (10 p.m. Monday, May 23, CBS/KIRO): All aboard the emotional roller coaster. After four years, moody CSI Horatio Caine finally discovers what happened to his brother Raymond.

"Alias" (9 p.m. Wednesday, May 25, ABC/KOMO): She's baaaack! Lena Olin returns from the dead as Sydney's lethal mommy, as the spooky Rambaldi prophecy edges closer to reality. Yikes.

Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company


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