Season 10 *Spoiler Lab* Discussion P2

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The issue isn't that Ray is smart. We know he is and where he comes from. The part that is irritating is that everyone else got stupider. Ray is telling Cath and Nick, who have been CSIs for over a decade, how to think and how to do things. He's giving direction to Greg, who has been employed at the lab for almost as long as Cath and Nick.

I'm glad Ray is smart. He fits in nice with everyone else who are equally as intelligent, only in different avenues. But they need to let the others shine and remind us that they are just as smart.

Having Ray take up a point of view that is different from the others is perfectly fine. A fresh face offers a fresh perspective. He just needs to stop being the wunderkind and automatically come up with a theory that is correct while everyone else is wrong. That isn't going to endear him to people.

I hope I'm making sense :)

I completely agree. Tptb don't need to make the other characters look stupid to make Ray look good. Why can't they all be equally smart? It's totally dumb to make any of them look stupid, but especially Greg when they spent so much time in earlier seasons talking about how smart Greg was. I'd wager to say he's very close to being a genius (IQ wise), if he's not actually a genius. He went to Standford (I think it was Standford) after all. :lol: He's definitely not dumb.

I mean for once it would be nice for someone to say "I don't know what that is but I'll spend the next three weeks finding out what it is cause that's my job." :rolleyes:

Well to be fair, in Working Stiffs when Hodges asked Ray a question about the evidence, Ray did say "I don't know". :lol:
 
I think Ray has said many times he "didn't know" to all of them and was appreciative of their help, he doesn't come across as conceited or a 'know-it-all' at all. I like everything about him, and find no fault with his portrayal of Dr. Langston, and he's got another side the fans have yet to see. And on the seminars he's an older guy, and probably has been to many, that's how he's learned what he has to contribute to the team~ so did Grissom, just my observation~

Here's profile of Enrique Murciano that joins the CSI cast ..soon~

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0006663/
 
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I think Ray has said many times he "didn't know" to all of them and was appreciative of their help, he doesn't come across as conceited or a 'know-it-all' at all. I like everything about him, and find no fault with his portrayal of Dr. Langston, and he's got another side the fans have yet to see. And on the seminars he's an older guy, and probably has been to many, that's how he's learned what he has to contribute to the team~ so did Grissom, just my observation~

Here's profile of Enrique Murciano that joins the CSI cast ..soon~

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0006663/


I'm a huge Ray fan and I don't think he is trying to be conceited. But the fact is that many feel that he IS "knowing" a bit too much over the rest of the team. Many professions require you to clock in so many hours for continuing education and we learned in Blood Lust from Sara that CSI's have a continuing education program. So while Ray is taking his seminars, so must the others(like the bug one Nicky took in the season finale). They've got a good thing going this season thus far and I would hate to have it start to be ruined for people because Ray seemed to get to say all the punchlines so to speak...
 
There were a few lines that I know I didn't really appreciate, one was to Nick at the beginning when they were discussing the soil being wet....Nick said it could be a cooler, kids used the area as a place to drink beer and shoot off a few rounds, Ray came back with a smarty pants answer, "He wasn't shot." Well, Nick never said he was. That did stick under my crawl.
 
There were a few lines that I know I didn't really appreciate, one was to Nick at the beginning when they were discussing the soil being wet....Nick said it could be a cooler, kids used the area as a place to drink beer and shoot off a few rounds, Ray came back with a smarty pants answer, "He wasn't shot." Well, Nick never said he was. That did stick under my crawl.

I feel aas if the writers have completely wiped the experiences of Catherine, Nick, Greg and Sara out of their collective minds. They are no longer able to think for themselves as now Ray does all the thinking for them.

Grissom was more of a Socrates type of teacher, he asked leading questions and the others filled in the gaps. Not only did the others answer them, but so did we. That was the beauty of Gil Grissom, sometime he'd be spouting logical facts and other times he was tickling withour brains to encourage the others and us to answer the questions with what we learned.

Now don't get me wrong, I like Ray, but I think his know-it-all is causing resentment among us. I don't know how the writers can fix this. They've tried the newbie approach, which was fine, but I guess they didn't anticipate we'd resent the hell out of their trying to dumb down our long-time favourites for the sake of showing out smart he is.
 
Why can't they do it more like this:

Nick/Greg/Cath/Sara/whoever: It's possible that our victim was stabbed with a cylinderical object. Some sort of pipe maybe?

Ray: I agree, the mark does appear to be from something cylinderical, but something possibly with jagged or worn edges judging by these marks around the outer edges of the wound.

See? They can make Ray look smart without writing it where everyone else is wrong all of the time and Ray's the only one who is right. Why can't they all be right and come to the same conclusion and just have Ray add a bit more information (based on his skills as a doctor)? Why is that so hard? I don't get it. I like Ray, I do... however, I have issues with the way the writers pen the character's interactions with the rest of the team. It isn't necessary to make the other characters look like they just fell off the turnip truck in order to make Ray look smart.
 
Celebrities Ask Keck
by William Keck October 12, 2009 11:03 AM EST


Q “On CSI, when they go into the morgue, it’s so bloody that I have to tell myself, ‘Don’t get sick. It’s just paint!’ So I’d like to know, what do they use for blood?” —Liza Minnelli

A You’re right about the paint. “Like the CSI [team’s work], creating blood is a mixture of science, art and failed experiments,” exec producer Carol Mendelsohn says. “If there’s a bloodstain on the ground that’s been there for a serious amount of time, it’s most likely brown paint. But if the dead body has been there for moments, we use flow blood, a mixture of dyes and thickening agents. There’s also jell blood, which is a high-viscosity mixture used around wounds—like a scab.” And there’s edible blood when it’s in the mouth. “It tastes like real blood!” says Mendelsohn, apparently a practicing vampire. Liza, watch out for the October 29 episode, “Bloodsport,” about the demise of a high-school coach, in one of CSI’s bloodiest deaths ever!

Source
 
:guffaw::guffaw::guffaw:

I followed the link...it really was Liza Minnelli that asked that question! :lol: Too funny!
 
Details on the crossover:

CBS is planning a "CSI" extravaganza for November sweeps -- star Laurence Fishburne (Dr. Raymond Langston) will appear in all three scene-of-the-crime shows in one week, and the whole thing wraps up on the flagship "CSI" on Nov. 12. Mild spoilers about the episodes follow.

Langston will first visit "CSI: Miami" on Nov. 9; he travels south in an episode titled "Bone Voyage" to investigate a case with ties to Las Vegas. Fishburne and "CSI: Miami" star David Caruso are pictured at left; perhaps Langston and Horatio Caine are talking about cool sunglasses, which Langston is still sporting when he arrives in New York on Nov. 11 (Fishburne and "CSI: NY" star Gary Sinise are pictured at right).

In that "CSI: NY" episode, "Hammer Down," according to CBS, "a big-rig accident results in the discovery of an interstate trucking ring that specializes in human cargo and black-market organ harvesting, and sets off a race against time to save a hostage."

The three-part crossover concludes on Nov. 12 on "CSI." In that episode, viewers will learn more about what Langston is investigating: "a nationwide human trafficking network that abducts young girls forces them into prostitution," according to David Weddle, who penned the episode with his writing partner, Bradley Thompson.

Ubiquitious guest star Mark Sheppard, who played Romo Lampkin on "Battlestar Galactica" (a character who knew a thing or two about shades), has a guest role in that Nov. 12 "CSI" episode. Sheppard, who has a credit list as long as your arm and apparently by law must appear on every scripted show in existence, also appears on USA's new show "White Collar" Oct. 23 and "Supernatural" on Nov. 19

Chicago Tribune
 
~Sorry to Double Post~ but here is the Press Release for "Bloodsport"

THE CSI TEAM INVESTIGATES THE MURDER OF A POPULAR COLLEGE FOOTBALL COACH WHOSE DEATH MAY BE LINKED TO AN EARLIER UNSOLVED CRIME, ON "CSI: CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATION," THURSDAY, OCT. 29

"Bloodsport" - An entire college football team comes under investigation when their beloved coach is found murdered in his home, on CSI: CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATION, Thursday, Oct. 29 (9:00-10:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.

RECURRING CAST:
Sara Sidle......................................... Jorja Fox
Mandy Webster.................... Sheeri Rappaport

GUEST CAST:
Buddy Arnold..................... John Carroll Lynch
Calvin Crook.......................... Josh Henderson
Coach Jimmy Miller............... Christopher Rich
Julian Bristol.................................. Mike Erwin
Margaret Finn.............................. Palmer Davis


WRITTEN BY: Allen MacDonald
DIRECTED BY: Jeffrey Hunt


GENRE: CRIME DRAMA, MYSTERY, SUSPENSE
RATING: To Be Announced
 
~Sorry to Double Post~ but here is the Press Release for "Bloodsport"

THE CSI TEAM INVESTIGATES THE MURDER OF A POPULAR COLLEGE FOOTBALL COACH WHOSE DEATH MAY BE LINKED TO AN EARLIER UNSOLVED CRIME, ON "CSI: CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATION," THURSDAY, OCT. 29

"Bloodsport" - An entire college football team comes under investigation when their beloved coach is found murdered in his home, on CSI: CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATION, Thursday, Oct. 29 (9:00-10:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.

RECURRING CAST:
Sara Sidle......................................... Jorja Fox
Mandy Webster.................... Sheeri Rappaport

GUEST CAST:
Buddy Arnold..................... John Carroll Lynch
Calvin Crook.......................... Josh Henderson
Coach Jimmy Miller............... Christopher Rich
Julian Bristol.................................. Mike Erwin
Margaret Finn.............................. Palmer Davis


WRITTEN BY: Allen MacDonald
DIRECTED BY: Jeffrey Hunt


GENRE: CRIME DRAMA, MYSTERY, SUSPENSE
RATING: To Be Announced

:thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup:Maaandy!! Hopefully she gets a few scenes with Nicky..except he's going to be with the social worker..:scream: Aww..well. there's always fanficion:lol:
 
I found this article on Comcast.net and thought I'd share it, well part of it.

The last paragraph is very telling.

‘CSI’ Announces First Trilogy Crossover Stunt
by Tracy Phillips
Oct 13th, 2009 | 1:35 PM4 4
Onetime ratings powerhouse ‘CSI: Crime Scene Investigation‘ is pulling out all the stops to reinvigorate the series.

The network announced a move that marks a first in franchise history: One character will appear in all of the ‘CSI’ shows for a three-part trilogy crossover.

Look for Dr. Raymond Langston (Laurence Fishburne) to hopscotch from Las Vegas to New York to Miami while investigating a gruesome case in a November sweeps episode.

.....

The stunt is producers’ latest attempt to rejuvinate the franchise, after the return of original cast member Jorja Fox failed to boost the Thursday drama, which experienced a ‘devastating’ drop in ratings for the season premiere–down 44% percent from last year’s opener.

Bolding is mine. Here's the link if you want to read the whole thing.
 
I don't really see that the trilogy cross-over has anything to do with Jorja. The episodes were planned and written way before the premiere aired, so as the "latest attempt,"--I don't really believe that's the case. Try to help? Yes. All Jorja's fault? No, not at all.
 
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