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Originally published September 12, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified September 12, 2007 at 7:40 AM

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A life-giving pie-maker, "Grey's" spinoff, "Bionic"

We have reality TV about people younger or more beautiful than us ("Kid Nation" and "America's Next Top Model"). Fantasy TV about people...

Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader

We have reality TV about people younger or more beautiful than us ("Kid Nation" and "America's Next Top Model").

Fantasy TV about people smarter, younger and more beautiful ("Gossip Girl" and "Bionic Woman").

What we don't have much of, though, is fantasy TV for pure fancy, for delight.

That alone makes "Pushing Daisies" one of the most unusual shows of the season, a standout among the pack of freshmen comedies and dramas.

It's a fantastic story of a pie-maker with a very special talent for bringing things back to life. That has made life difficult when he brings back the love of his youth, only under the condition that he can never touch her, no matter how much he loves her.

New Wednesday shows

"Pushing Daisies"

ABC: 8 p.m., premieres Oct. 3

What: A pie-maker brings people back to life, including his childhood sweetheart, to solve the mysteries behind their deaths.

Who: Lee Pace, Anna Friel, Chi McBride, Kristin Chenoweth, Swoosie Kurtz, Ellen Greene.

Why: Part mystery, part fantasy, part romance, part comedy, it's like "Six Feet Under" sprinkled with fairy dust.

How: After the sudden death of his dog, young Ned (Pace) discovered that he could bring things back to life. But he soon learns that if those people (or dogs) live for longer than one minute, something else must die in their place. Of course, if he touches the once-dead again within a minute, they'll simply go back to being dead, and no one else suffers. This comes in handy when grown-up Ned, now an expert pie-maker, makes some additional income by tapping murder victims, finding out who killed them, then collecting the reward money after putting them back to sleep. But when the love of his life (Friel) is murdered, Ned brings her to life and keeps her that way, hoping to solve her murder. Despite his continuing love for her, they can't touch, or she goes back to being dead.

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This show is certainly the most unusual among the crop of new shows and deserves a large audience, if only for originality.

"Private Practice"

ABC: 9 p.m., Sept. 26

What: Dr. Addison Montgomery, née Shepherd, moves south to a new clinic with a new drama, away from Seattle Grace.

Who: Kate Walsh, Amy Brenneman, Tim Daly, Taye Diggs, Audra McDonald, Paul Adelstein, KaDee Strickland, Chris Lowell.

Why: Three words: "Grey's Anatomy" spinoff.

How: ABC didn't release a screener of the new show, but we saw the beginning of the drama in last season's extra-long episode of "Grey's." Addison (Walsh) takes up at a clinic run by old med-school buddies. She'll have California sunshine, rewarding work and plenty of sexual tension with new co-worker Pete (Daly). The hype factor for the show is high, but it might be this season's "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" — a quality program with nobody to watch.

"Dirty Sexy Money"

ABC: 10 p.m., Sept. 26

What: A lawyer follows in his father's footsteps to become the attorney-slave to the absurdly wealthy Darling family.

Who: Peter Krause, Donald Sutherland, Jill Clayburgh, William Baldwin, Natalie Zea, Glenn Fitzgerald, Seth Gabel, Samaire Armstrong, Zoe McLellan.

Why: America's fascination with wealth and its owners is made real, but from the eyes of a character we actually like.

How: Nick George (Krause) promised himself he wouldn't be an overworked absentee father like his own, but when his father dies, he inherits the family business: lawyering for the gold-plated Darling family. Not only does it require constant damage control; it also digs out some torrid secrets from both families. And what's at the root of it all? Dirty money. Seductive money. And lots of it.

"Kid Nation"

CBS: 8 p.m., Sept. 19

What: Forty kids have 40 days to build and maintain a functioning economy and society without any adults to guide them.

Who: Kids ages 8 to 15.

Why: It's a new and revealing twist on unscripted shows that boost CBS' ratings.

How: Kids are left in a deserted New Mexico town to make it work. Nobody is voted off, but they can leave if they want. At the end of each episode, the town council chooses one child to receive a reward: a solid-gold star worth $20,000.

Some questions about the kids' safety and working hours have come up since production ended — and whether it was ethical to make the show during the school year.

"Gossip Girl"

CW: 9 p.m., Sept. 19

What: Kids at expensive prep schools lead debaucherous lives; so do their parents. Gossip Girl and her blog watches all of them.

Who: Blake Lively, Chace Crawford, Kelly Rutherford, Leighton Meester, Taylor Momsen, Matthew Settle, Penn Badgley, Ed Westwick, Nicole Fiscella, Nan Zhang.

Why: "The O.C." void must be filled.

How: Serena van der Woodsen (Lively) returns to Manhattan after a year at boarding school. As she tries to re-enter the social scene, her best friend (Meester) decides she hates her, her best friend's boyfriend (Crawford) decides he loves her and the brother-sister duo from the slightly wrong side of the tracks (Badgley and Momsen) fall into her good graces. All of their parents have their own rich-people drama that seems secondary only to their children's drug-, alcohol- and fashion-infused lives.

The show has familiar faces from the teen scene, not to mention the weight of the Gossip Girl book series behind it.

"Back to You"

Fox: 8 p.m., Sept. 19

What: A big-time TV anchor returns to a Pittsburgh station after an embarrassing YouTube-spread blow-up.

Who: Kelsey Grammer, Patricia Heaton, Fred Willard, Ty Burrell, Josh Gad, Ayda Field, Laura Marano.

Why: Because Grammer is funny. Heaton is funny.

How: Chuck Darling (Grammer) worked his way up the TV news ladder to become an anchor in L.A., but an on-air outburst sent him packing. The only station willing to hire him? His old home in Pittsburgh, where, he left a lot of himself behind. His old co-anchor and flame (Heaton) must deal with Chuck's huge ego.

It's an old-school sitcom. The material isn't great, but the two big stars carry it impressively.

"Kitchen Nightmares"

Fox: 9 p.m., Sept. 19

What: Another unscripted series from the unreasonably tempered chef from Hell's Kitchen.

Who: Gordon Ramsay.

Why: Unscripted shows are cheap, and kitchen shows are popular.

How: Ramsay takes his rage-and-fire act on the road, stopping at restaurants in crisis to shape up the kitchen staff.

Some questions have been raised about whether customers who appear in the show are hired actors, another cautionary tale in the reality of reality TV.

"Bionic Woman"

NBC: 9 p.m., Sept. 26

What: A 24-year-old woman is put back together after a not-so-accidental accident. She's saved but is changed into someone, something new.

Who: Michelle Ryan, Miguel Ferrer, Molly Price, Will Yun Lee, Chris Bowers, Lucy Kate Hale, Mark Sheppard.

Why: It's like Alias and Heroes all wrapped into one, plus it has that catchy old name and "Kill Bill"-type moves.

How: Jaime Sommers (Ryan) was a bartender. She took care of her little sister (Hale) and was having a baby with her surgeon-boyfriend (Bowers). When the couple was in a car wreck, the boyfriend took her to his lab to make her whole again. The catch? It gave her superhuman strength. The only other person who'd gotten the same bionic treatment was made into a soldier. Now, the bartender with the sister and the boyfriend has to do her duty, and watch out for that first bionic woman.

If viewers can handle one more sci-fi superhero serial, they'll turn to this one. She's no cheerleader, but you want her to be saved, despite the cheesy monologues.

"Life"

NBC: 10 p.m., Sept. 26

What: A cop served 12 years of a life sentence for murders he didn't commit and returns to the police force with some unorthodox, highly Zen methods and a lot of money.

Who: Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Adam Arkin, Robin Weiger.

Why: It's a new twist on the crime procedural: Let's make the cop a convict and give him a very peaceful spiritual center.

How: Charlie Crews (Lewis) got life for a triple homicide and was exonerated later. He received a big settlement, but he went back to work for the Los Angeles Police Department. We also see documentary-style footage from his old partner, his ex-wife, all those who might have proved him innocent earlier but didn't. And then there's his new partner (Shahi), a woman with a messy past of her own but no settlement like Charlie's. And the lawyer and the financial adviser who keep him and his millions in line.

There's heavy stuff in the background, but it's nice to see a cop show with a light heart.

Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company

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