Laffy Taffy: Molly Shannon Heads to "Pushing Daisies"

Pushing Daisies has been on a roll these past few months. Besides for being the most eagerly anticipated new series this fall, the drama has had two of the highest-profile guest star casting announcements so far.

In addition to the previously announced Paul Reubens (who'll play homeopathic anti-depressant salesman Alfredo Aldarisio), TV Guide's Michael Ausiello has revealed that Pushing Daisies has secured former SNL cast member Molly Shannon for a multiple-episode arc this fall.

Shannon, who guest starred on 30 Rock last season and starred in NBC's pilot for The Mastersons of Manhattan, will play Dilly Balsam, the proprietor of a saltwater taffy shop across the street from our hero Ned's Pie Hole. (The restaurant, I mean, not his, er, actual pie hole.)

Shannon's first appearance is scheduled for November sweeps and she'll appear in an as-yet-undetermined amount of episodes of Pushing Daisies' first season. Teehee. I'm laughing out loud already.

Pushing Daisies premieres Wednesday, October 4th, at 8 pm ET/PT on ABC.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: Survivor: China (CBS); My Name is Earl (NBC); Beauty & the Geek (CW; 8-10 pm); Ugly Betty (ABC); Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? (FOX)

9 pm: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (CBS); The Office (NBC); Grey's Anatomy (ABC); Don't Forget the Lyrics (FOX)

10 pm: Without a Trace (CBS); Dateline (NBC); Men in Trees (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

9 pm: The Office.

On tonight's repeat episode of The Office ("The Job"), Michael is up for a promotion at Dunder-Mifflin Corporate and decides to hold a day of Survivor-inspired challenges at the beach as a means of choosing his successor, leading a jealous Pam to watch Jim and Karen from the sidelines.

10-11 pm: It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia on FX.

FX's hilariously subversive comedy It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia continues tonight with two back-to-back episodes. On the first ("Dennis and Dee's Mom is Dead"), Dennis and Dee's caustic mother has died but the bad news is that she gave all of her money to a do-gooder ex-lover (guest star Stephen Collins) while Dennis turns her former home into a party mansion. On the second ("The Gang Gets Held Hostage"), the bar is invaded by the McPoyles and the gang taken hostage (with hilarious results) while Frank attempts to find his hidden will.

10 pm: Tim Gunn's Guide to Style on Bravo.

See the style maven make it work on his own fashion series, where he and supermodel Veronica Webb take on one hapless fashion victim and make them over into a sartorial superstar. On tonight's episode, Tim and Veronica take on the challenge of remolding a former prom queen who is about to turn 30.

Casting Couch: Pee-Wee to Guest Star on "Pushing Daisies"?

With Pee-Wee Herman making another rare TV guest appearance can former comrade-in-arms Chairy be far behind? (God, let's hope not.)

Paul Reubens, who memorably guest starred on 30 Rock last season (and had a multiple episode arc on FX's Dirt) is set to guest star on ABC's new fall drama (and Televisionary favorite) Pushing Daisies in a role that could potentially become recurring.

Reubens is a lock to play "Alfredo Aldarisio, a traveling homeopathic antidepressant representative/salesman," according to TV Guide's Michael Ausiello.

Hmmm, given what Pushing Daisies creator Bryan Fuller told me in my exclusive interview last month at Comic-Con, look for Reubens to appear in Episode Three in which (SPOILER ALERT) Fuller says, "the aunts [played by Swoosie Kurtz and Ellen Greene] will be folded back into the story. Chuck holds true to the threat she made in the pilot by baking anti-depressants into her aunt's food--in the form of Ned's pies. Olive delivers one to them and stumbles onto Chuck's secret. "

Looks like this pie-laced forensic fairy tale has become even more delicious.

Catch a Sneak Peak of "Pushing Daisies" ... in a Cemetery

Still haven't seen the highly anticipated fall series Pushing Daisies?

If you haven't and live in LA (or are conveniently situated to drive to said locale), ABC is hosting a sneak preview screening of the pilot for forensic fairy tale Pushing Daisies next week.

Fittingly, the Pushing Daisies event will take place at Hollywood Forever cemetery, which--if you've never been there--is the perfect place for a late night summer film. Select members of the cast and crew will be hand to introduce the event, which promises to be highly entertaining.

Details below for the Pushing Daisies screening.

What: Pushing Daisies Sneak Peek

When: Thursday, August 16th at 8 pm

Where: Hollywood Forever Cemetery
6000 Santa Monica Blvd.
Hollywood, CA 90038

Trust me, this is one event you don't want to miss. And, if that weren't enough incentive, ABC promises "special treats" for some attendees. Hmmm, pie perhaps?

Shut Your Pie Hole: Televisionary Sits Down with "Pushing Daisies" Creator Bryan Fuller

Can I just say how huge a fan I am of writer/producer Bryan Fuller?

After all, he's the creative genius behind such groundbreaking and original series as Dead Like Me and Wonderfalls. Next season, he's giving the American public a chance to fall in love with the breathtaking, resplendent, and whimsical drama series Pushing Daisies, which ABC describes as a "forensic fairy tale."

Following my Q&A sessions with Pushing Daisies' adorable and talented cast, I rendezvoused with creator Bryan Fuller in an extremely rickety private room, perched high atop the Warner Bros. Television booth, minutes after the mass hysteria that was the cast signing.

I was armed with a few questions and intended to catch up with Fuller, a quick witted writer whom I consider to be the next Joss Whedon. (Yes, there, I've just said it.) High praise indeed, but if you've seen the gorgeous and touching pilot for Pushing Daisies, you know exactly what I mean.

Q: How is Pushing Daisies different than your previous series, Wonderfalls and Dead Like Me?

Fuller: It's a more romantic story. Both Wonderfalls and Dead Like Me had protagonists running from romance and engaging life in that way. Here, there are characters willing to take that leap into a more romantic life.

Q: You told me last time I saw you that you wrote the character of Ned with Lee Pace in mind. Can you talk a little about why you were thinking about him for Pushing Daisies?

Fuller: Lee was so great on Wonderfalls and had this amazing cadence in his dialogue. He gets the cadence and gets me; I naturally go back to people who get me. In my head, when I was writing the script, I imagined Ned as Lee. The same was true for Chuck, who I imagined being played by Caroline Dhavernas [who starred in Fuller's Wonderfalls]. I have to have an archetype in my head when I write. I got Lee. Originally, his manager said no, that Lee wasn't doing TV anymore. I sent him the script and called him and told him that I wrote it with him in mind. He is Ned.

Q: So any chance then of Caroline Dhavernas turning up on Pushing Daisies?

Fuller: I'd love to work together with Caroline and any chance to do so would be fantastic. I was worried about the practicality of casting two people as lovers who had played--and will always be in my mind--siblings. But Anna [Friel] literally just fell into our laps.

Q: I'm hoping Pushing Daisies stays with us for a long time. What do you envision for the second season of the series?

Fuller: The story arcs for Season One and Season Two are in my head. Hopefully the storyline for Season Three will come to me sometime during Season Two. At the heart of the show is Chuck and Ned's relationship, which informs Emerson and the aunts' characters. The Season One arc deals with Ned's secrets: What happens with Chuck realizes that Ned caused someone to die for her to come back to life? Or when she learns that he killed her father? Or when Olive discovers that Chuck is supposed to be dead? Will she rat Chuck out to her aunts? Season Two will be about the threats to Chuck and Ned's relationship and Ned's abilities as he deals with the consequences of being exposed.

Q: How many episodes will you take the lead in writing? And who else have you hired on the writing staff?

Fuller: I'll probably write two to three [of the initial 13-episode order] but we break all the scripts together as a team and they all come through my computer. My work's been greatly reduced by the amazing staff I've assembled. Pete Ocko, who created 3 Lbs., is on board, as is Rina Mimoun [from Gilmore Girls]; they're my right and left hands. Also, Jack Monaco, who did Amazing Screw-On Head with me, and Kath Lingenfelter, who I hired based on this amazing script she wrote about a man with pork chops for hands, but it was still completely grounded. I like to find people who go outside the box (yes, it's a cliché but I just said it) and aren't afraid to take some risks.

Q: While much of the plot twists are obviously firmly under wraps, what tidbits can you give the Televisionary readers about what's coming up on Pushing Daisies?

Fuller: In Episode Three, the aunts [played by Swoosie Kurtz and Ellen Greene] will be folded back into the story. Chuck holds true to the threat she made in the pilot by baking anti-depressants into her aunt's food--in the form of Ned's pies. Olive delivers one to them and stumbles onto Chuck's secret. Now that she has dirt on Chuck--that her aunts think she's dead--will Olive use it against her to get Ned?

Olive and Chuck will form both a grudging friendship AND become adversaries. Both of them have learned from their pasts and have more in common than they realize as they're pushed into this love triangle.

Q: So what's with the monkeys, which pop up both in Wonderfalls and here in Pushing Daisies?

Fuller: I love monkeys. They are cute and fun. Monkeys just give me endless fun.

Q: Hmmm. What can you say to people who are on the fence about tuning in to Pushing Daisies this fall?

Fuller: Embrace the fun for a few episodes. We just want to take people on a ride that doesn't force them to worry about things. It's all about having fun.

And there you have it. Tune in, have fun, and fall in love with what I believe to be the most unique television series in recent memory. You'll thank me in the morning.

Pushing Daisies airs Wednesday nights at 8 pm, beginning October 3rd, on ABC.

Digging Up Dirt: Televisionary Sits Down with the Cast of "Pushing Daisies"

Day Two of Comic-Con is finally at a close and, while I am ready to collapse from the sheer breakneck pace of today's events, there's so much to recount, not the least of which was the face time I got with the cast of ABC's new fall series Pushing Daisies.

It was with great excitement that I sat down with the gorgeous cast of Pushing Daisies, which longtime readers of this site will recall I pegged as my favorite new fall series back in May when I first reviewed the pilot. Like the whimsical nature of the series, from the fertile mind of Bryan Fuller (Heroes, Wonderfalls, Dead Like Me), the cast proved to be absolutely charming. Joining me for a series of one-on-one interviews, following the pilot screening and panel, were series regulars Lee Pace, Anna Friel, Chi McBride, and Kristin Chenoweth.

First up: series lead Lee Pace (Wonderfalls). Pace plays the pie maker Ned, gifted (or cursed) with the ability to bring people back from the dead who re-discovers his childhood crush (Anna Friel) when she is murdered and resurrected.

Q: How did you get involved with Pushing Daisies?

Pace: Bryan [Fuller] created the part with me in mind. I was not looking to do TV this year but asked my manager for a copy of the script and called Bryan up, who said, "I wrote it with you in mind." I really wanted to work with Barry [Sonnenfeld, who directed the pilot]. While the pilot is great, it just keeps getting better and better with the episodes I've read already.

Q: What excites you most about the series?

Pace: Really, the character's relationship with Chuck and the psychology of the character. Getting to mine life and death in a profound way. Also, with the show's procedural element, every eight days, you dive into a new world. The episode we're shooting right now is a total caper with a Scooby-Doo feel.

Q: What are the challenges of playing a semi-comedic character?

Pace: Basic acting works. Ned doesn't think he's funny so it's about playing the reality of the character. He's not cracking jokes. It's about the pathos of the moment and the idea that it's the reality of being able to touch something and bring it back to life. There are moral obligations with Ned's condition, an appetite for life and death. Chuck makes him feel like life is good, especially because we only have one life.

Q: Do you view Ned's gift as a blessing or a curse?

Pace: It is what it is. With bringing people back to life, it's a blessing but Ned is killing people. The more people he brings back (his mother, Chuck), the more people he kills and this will take its toll on Ned as the season progresses.

Next up: British actress Anna Friel, who makes her American television acting debut with Pushing Daisies (though I fell utterly under her spell when I saw her years ago in BBC's Our Mutual Friend). Friel plays Charlotte "Chuck" Charles, the childhood sweetheart of Ned who is murdered aboard a cruise ship and brought back to life by Ned. Anna is just as beautiful is life as she is on screen and showed up wearing a very fitting dress covered with daisies ("vintage," Anna explained).

Q: Why did you decide to make the leap to American television?

Friel: I had sixteen movies under my belt, Broadway, and the West End and wanted to broaden my palette of work. I came over to LA to change agents and it happened to be pilot season. I read the pilot script and was struck by how joyful and playful Chuck was. I didn't want to play the girl on the arm of some guy and US television creates the best hooks for its characters.

Q: How similar or dissimilar to your character Chuck are you?

Friel: I'm much more anxious than Chuck. I worry about things and certainly don't wake up every day feeling that it's a fresh start and a beautiful day. (Though I should.) Unlike most of the roles I've played in the past, I wasn't able to channel that mood and anxiety into the character and had to get into a different frame of mind. As for similarities, Chuck lets me express the fun, quirky side of my personality. But there is one big thing that's not similar. Unlike Chuck, I'm not American.

Q: What's it like working with Lee Pace?

Friel: We've become great friends and he's become a part of the family. He's a wonderful, thoughtful, thinking actor.

Q: What can you tell us about Chuck's backstory?

Friel: For one thing, they are going to start each episode with a flashback to Ned and Chuck as kids so we'll see a lot of her backstory unfold that way. Chuck has lead a sheltered life without being tainted. Because of her upbringing, she's become a very learned person. For the next episode, I have to learn a page of Japanese by Thursday. I'll be speaking in Japanese, German, Swedish, and French [in that episode]. She doesn't do it to show off, it's just what she's done, learning things and reading. I want to give Chuck as many layers as possible, peeling away the layers like an orange peel, under which is this very juicy fruit.

Q: What's coming up for Chuck?

Friel: Chuck and Olive will become friends, which is so nice as most shows would have had these two women fighting each other constantly. Obviously, there's stuff going on between Ned and [Chuck] while things are not good between Chuck and Emerson, who does not like having another meddling partner. We're filming an episode with a bulimic girl that is just incredible. It's like a cartoon coming to life with these fully formed characters.

Q: How you maintain the magic of the pilot episode?

Friel: It's an incredible first episode but I am amazed by the constant imagination of the writers, [giving us] cars that run on dandelions and windmills.

Chi McBride (The Nine) plays private investigator Emerson Cod, Ned's partner in crime and the side business he runs with resurrecting murdered people, discovering their killer, and then collecting the reward money after returning them to death.

Q: You've become known for your dramatic work in such series as Boston Public and The Nine, so what is it like playing a more comedic character?

McBride: I actually started out in comedy in series like The John Larroquette Show and Married with Children and didn't get to do drama until [David E.] Kelley. In this business, you get pigeonholed and have to educate and re-educate people about what you can do. I went out for a part in Undercover Brother and had people say that Chi's not funny. What drew me to [Pushing Daisies] was a single line of Emerson's: "You couldn't have just scooted back?" The part is closer to me, he's always got a smart line. I read a lot of mindless, vacuous scripts and wanted to do a smart TV comedy like Seinfeld or Frasier. It's a no-brainer opportunity to show another side of you.

Q: What excites you most about the series?

McBride: I really love the cast; I couldn't pick a favorite. I have great chemistry with Lee [Pace] and love the chemistry we share. Emerson is a guy with questionable morals. His main goals are to make money and go home. Lee's character is more empathetic but distant due to his power to bring the dead back to life; he's damaged and looks to Emerson as a father figure. I really like the way [Bryan Fuller] juxtaposes the way Emerson looks at life with the way Ned does. I knew what this series could be when I read the script and, as soon as I saw Barry [Sonnenfeld] in the room, I knew what it would become. It turned out even better than I imagined.

Q: What's Emerson's back story?

McBride: I had lunch with Bryan [Fuller] and pitched an idea of why Emerson became a private investigator. All of the elements of Emerson's dark/sardonic nature are a cover for something. I told Bryan why I thought Emerson was the way he was and Bryan loved it. The [Pushing Daisies] comic actually deals a little bit with Emerson's story.

Finally, rounding out my Q&A with the cast of Pushing Daisies, it's the gorgeous (and pocket sized) Kristin Chenoweth (The West Wing). Chenoweth, who has a huge following from her numerous Broadway roles, plays Olive, Ned's neighbor and pie shop employee who sublimates her desire for Ned by lavishing love on his pooch, Digby.

Q: Will you be singing on Pushing Daisies?

Chenoweth: I don't want to sing just because it's gratuitous and expected. But I WILL be singing. It's a sad moment and it involves the dog. Olive just can't understand why she can't get the guy and she's a girl who always gets the guy.

Q: What's it like working with the rest of the cast?

Chenoweth: The dynamic between Anna and Lee is awesome. Usually there's a sour grape in the bunch but there just isn't here.

Q: Do you feel that ABC is behind the series?

Chenoweth: We're very nervous about being the prom queen, we all just want to do our thing. We're very excited about the show. I've been the recipient of when the network really is behind the show and when they're not and ABC is definitely behind this show. I did a show a few years ago called Kristin on NBC and they canceled it after four episodes and replaced it with Fear Factor. At the time I said that Fear Factor would never last. Shows what I know.

Q: Have the writers explained where the character of Olive, a series regular, will be going?

Chenoweth: Olive is an ex-jockey. I read a bunch of pilots this year but wasn't planning on doing television. The I read the script and thought to myself, "what is this odd, most fantastically weird, incredible thing?" I knew it was special. Bryan flew to New York City and explained what they had in store for Olive. I was getting ready to do Young Frankenstein on Broadway and the rest was good karma.

Q: So, what would you like to see happen to Olive over the course of the season?

Chenoweth: I'd like her to have a relationship with Ned. She actually could have a relationship with him while Ned and Chuck can't touch. So Olive represents this constant temptation for Ned. I also would like to get in on the crime-solving and have Olive add her own expertise. Also, as much horse-racing as possible. And for Chuck and Olive to become friends.

And there you have it: the cast of my favorite new series, Pushing Daisies. Be sure to also check out my clandestine Q&A with Pushing Daisies creator Bryan Fuller in a rickety private room atop the Warner Bros. booth.

Sneak Peek: "Pushing Daisies" Comic

Pie and a comic book?

Only a few more days to go to Comic-Con and, while I've already seen the pilot for ABC's Pushing Daisies about a zillion times (check out a new promo here), I cannot wait to attend the Q&A panel after the pilot screening with the cast and crew of Warner Bros. Television's new drama.

Along with giving out pie to the first 300 attendees (the pie is an in-joke that those of you familiar with the series will already get), Warner Bros. has unveiled the cover (shown left, thanks to the good folks at Warner Bros. Television) for the comic book companion to Bryan Fuller's super-saturated supernatural drama Pushing Daisies.

It's a Comic-Con exclusive, which means you can only get the Pushing Daisies comic book next week in San Diego at the Warner Bros.' booth.

Supplies, as they say, will be extremely limited so be sure to drop by and get your Pushing Daisies comic before they're gone!

Catch ABC's "Pushing Daisies" at San Diego; New Promo Unveiled

Yes, I've already seen the pilot for Pushing Daisies a zillion times. (Come on, where were you when I published my advanced review of the pilot--the first one on the Internet, mind you--way back when in May?)

All joking aside, the fact that I've seen the pilot hasn't stopped my eagerness to catch the cast and crew of Pushing Daisies at Comic-Con San Diego at the end of the month for a sneak peek and Q&A panel on Saturday, July 28th at 9:15 am.

So, if you're going to be in SD for the con, I strongly urge you to drop by the screening and try to figure out which gushing fanboy I am.

If that's not enough incentive, how about this brand-spanking-new promo for Pushing Daisies, courtesy of the wonderful folks at Warner Bros. Television?



Come on, aren't you just dying to see the series right now?

What's Up, Chuck?

Looking at this year's slate of ordered series, there are definitely a few trends that emerge, like an emphasis on dramedies (Dirty Sexy Money, Big Shots, Reaper) or a pre-occupation with just what the geek half of the beauty and the geek paradigm gets up to (shown in no less than The Big Bang Theory, Chuck, Aliens in America, The IT Crowd).

But one of the strangest trends has got to be next season's series creators' absolute obsession with the name Chuck, which pops up in no less than three fall series, including Chuck (duh), Pushing Daisies, and Gossip Girl.

So, how to keep each of these Chucks straight? Below is a handy guide to doing just that.

Name: Chuck (Chuck)
Actor: Zachary Levi
Occupation: Nerd Herd/Buy More employee; living intelligence database; Zork memoralist
Likes: Video games, hot blondes, hiding in his bedroom with best friend Morgan.
Dislikes: Being forced to talk to women about things other than his college girlfriend; shifty and aggressive co-workers; Captain Awesome (well, sort of)
Love Interest: Sexy intelligence agent Sarah; however, she's way out of his league.
Nerd Alert?: Defcon 5. There's a reason he's the leader of the Nerd Herd.

Name: Chuck (Pushing Daisies)
Actor: Anna Friel
Occupation: Caregiver to her aunts, the mentally unbalanced Darling Mermaid Darling synchronized swimmers; organizer of charity Honey for the Homeless. Currently assumed to be dead.
Likes: Exotic cruises; homemade honey; Play-Doh; last wishes.
Dislikes: Being murdered and thrown off a cruise ship; betrayal by travel boutique owners.
Love Interest: Ned; though with the whole no-touching thing, it's gonna be a star-crossed romance.
Nerd Alert?: Hardly. She's a quirky beauty who happens to have been resurrected by her childhood sweetheart.

Name: Chuck (Gossip Girl)
Actor: Ed Westwick
Occupation: Bon vivant; high school student; sociopath-in-training.
Likes: Naive freshman girls; emotional blackmail; underage drinking; truffled grilled cheese; date rape.
Dislikes: Serena van der Woodsen; the word no meaning no; getting punched in the face.
Love Interest: Any girl foolish enough to agree to go somewhere private to "talk."
Nerd Alert?: Nah. If you discount the haircut, he's not a nerd but a stylish and evil member of the glitterati.

In any event, I'll most likely be watching all three Chucks duke it out for the title this fall as Pushing Daisies, Chuck, and Gossip Girl (okay, the latter slightly less so) were among my favorite viewed pilots for this fall.

So, who do you predict will be your favorite Chuck and why?

What's On Tonight

8 pm: The King of Queens/The King of Queens (CBS); Hidden Palms (CW); The Next Best Thing: Who is the Greatest Celebrity Impersonator? (ABC); So You Think You Can Dance (FOX)

9 pm: Criminal Minds (CBS); Dateline (NBC; 9-11 pm); One Tree Hill (CW); American Inventor (ABC); So You Think You Can Dance (FOX)

10 pm: CSI: New York (CBS); Traveler (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

8 pm: Hidden Palms.

On the second episode of this eight-episode teen thriller/relationship drama ("Ghosts"), Johnny is reunited with a former friend from rehab (Tessa Thompson, who joins the cast tonight) now living in Palm Springs, while Cliff sets out to rid himself of Tess' new boyfriend.

10 pm: Top Chef on Bravo.

On tonight's Top Chef special, cast members from the first two seasons of Top Chef compete for charity money. As long as Sam's given the opportunity to compete (and an apology from the show's producers for not making it into the final two), I'm happy.

10 pm: Traveler.

On tonight's episode ("New Haven"), Tyler and Jay return to New Haven in order to get their hands on some items that may exonerate them, while Carlton arranges a press conference.

Pilot Inspektor: ABC's "Pushing Daisies"

Every once in a while a pilot comes along that completely shocks and surprises you with its dazzling beauty, pitch perfect cast, and its casual ability to create a whole world that you never want to leave.

I'm talking, gentle readers, about Pushing Daisies, which ABC recently ordered to series for the fall season. From the fertile mind of Bryan Fuller (Wonderfalls, Heroes), it's unlike anything you've ever seen on television, a Burtonesque vision of mortality, morality, and, er, pies that sucks you in from the very opening scene and never lets go.

Directed by Barry Sonnenfeld (The Addams Family), Pushing Daisies has a super-saturated color palette that jars sharply (and intentionally) with its life-and-death theme: Lee Pace (Wonderfalls) plays Ned, a lonely pie maker who, as a child, discovers that he has the ability to bring dead things back to life, a gift he uses to full effect, when his beloved dog Dibney is hit by a truck in the pilot's beautiful and brutal opening. But this new gift has a few caveats: he can bring something back to life but if he ever touches them again, they die instantly and can't be resurrected again; additionally, if he keeps them alive for more than a minute, someone else in proximity will die. Think of it as the law of conservation: if someone lives, someone else has to die.

Just that happens when his mother suffers a fatal aneurysm whilst baking a pie one afternoon. As she falls to the floor, Ned revives her and she pops back to life as though she had been taking a nap. But when Ned keeps her alive, the father of his beloved girl-next-door Chuck (a.k.a. Charlotte) drops dead watering the lawn. As if that weren't enough psychic trauma, Ned's mother kisses him goodnight and then she too kicks the proverbial bucket. What is a resurrecting lad to do?

It's a concept with a few inherent problems for Ned. For one, he can't ever touch Dibney again (he pets his beloved pooch with a hand on a stick) and it's made him reluctant to share any human contact with anyone, especially wanton waitress Olive (Kristin Chenoweth). But Ned doesn't have any qualms entering some morally grey areas to exploit his gift with his business partner, an ex-cop named Emerson (Chi McBride). Their business model? They follow the news for any suspicious deaths, with reward money attached, then animate the corpse to learn who killed them, pocket the cash, and go on their merry way.

It's a plan that's helped pay for Ned's true passion: baking pies (not too Freudian, huh?) at his own little slice of heaven, The Pie Hole. And everything would have been fine if the latest murder victim hadn't been his loved-and-lost Charlotte "Chuck" Charles, now an adult (Our Mutual Friend's Anna Friel) who has gotten herself murdered on a cruise. Ned and Emerson head back to Ned's daisy-laden childhood home of Coeur d' Coeur to revive Charlotte but Ned finds himself in a bit of a Sleeping Beauty quandary and he can't bear to let Charlotte die again, especially as she never saw who her killer was.

What happens next? You'll have to wait until this fall to find out, but let me just say that it's incredibly worth the wait and involves a Fuller favorite (monkeys), a murder mystery, a pair of over-the-hill synchronized swimmers, and a shady travel boutique called, well, Boutique Travel Travel Boutique. It's a mystery, a love story, a quirky comedy, and a drama about morality rolled into one and lovingly filled with a delicious cherry pie filling that's sweet but never saccharine.

Pushing Daisies, in short, is the rare television show that actually changes the way you look at television, a dazzlingly lush production that seems more at home as a big budget feature film (think Big Fish and you've approximated the look) filled with charmingly eccentric folk whom you can't wait to meet up with again. (Watch the scenes in which Ned and Chuck nearly touch hands from opposite sides of a wall--or pretend to hold hands by holding their own--and if your heart doesn't break, you're made of ice.)

The series' casting is inventive and spot on. Star Lee Pace perfectly captures the pathos of a man unable to touch anything but who channels his love into his pies (we should hook him up with Waitress' Keri Russell); it's a star turn that makes me scratch my head as I wonder why Pace isn't yet a household name. Anna Friel, whom I've adored since I first saw her in the British mini-series Our Mutual Friend, simply lights up every scene from inside herself; she's adorable but also displays a grace and maturity beyond her years, deftly juggling being the lead's object of affection with being a wry modern woman (think Nora Charles) as well as a sensitive soul. It's her Chuck, as the series' moral compass, that comes up with the thought that none of the other characters do: why not ask the deceased for any final words or thoughts? It's an altruistic spin on the crime-solving, reward-collecting business that Ned and Emerson have created. (FYI, the British actor's American accent is absolutely and astoundingly flawless.)

Meanwhile, Chi McBride brings a comedic gruffness (and moral ambiguity) to a role that's vastly different than his normal fare and it's wonderful to see him in a more comedic role for a change. Likewise, as Charlotte's reclusive maiden aunts, the former Darling Mermaid Darlings synchronized swimming duo, Swoosie Kurtz (here in a delightfully neurotic role as a one-eyed woman) and Ellen Greene (yes, Little Shop of Horror's Audrey) are endearingly out there. Additionally, Jim Dale (yes, he of the Harry Potter books-on-tape fame) exudes an enchanting blend of gravitas and humor as the story's narrator; in a development season where 95 percent of the pilots had voiceover, this is the rare bird that makes it work.

If I have one complaint, it's that I'm not in love with Kristin Chenoweth, who seems an odd choice for the vixen-like role of Pie Hole waitress (and Ned's neighbor) Olive; there's just something... off about her performance that's the sole detraction from an otherwise perfect pilot.

Ultimately, I was completely smitten with Pushing Daisies and it's set an impossibly high bar for the rest of this year's freshman drama series to meet. But if there's one thing for certain, it's that I'm already dying with anticipation to see what happens to Ned, Charlotte, and Emerson next.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: How I Met Your Mother/Two and a Half Men (CBS); Deal or No Deal (NBC); Everybody Hates Chris/All of Us (CW); Dancing with the Stars (ABC; 8-9:30 pm); House (FOX)

9 pm: The King of Queens (CBS); Heroes (NBC); The Game (CW); The Bachelor (ABC; 9:30-11 pm); 24 (FOX)

10 pm: CSI: Miami (CBS); Law & Order: Criminal Intent (NBC)

What I'll Be Watching

8 pm: Waking the Dead on BBC America.

It's the return of the stylish smart UK murder investigation series. On tonight's episode, Boyd and his team investigate the case of James Jenson, a criminally insane man who is released from a psychiatric unit; only thing is two days after his release, the wallets of his victims turn up at their relatives' homes. Creepy.

8 pm: Everybody Hates Chris.

On tonight's episode ("Everybody Hates the Last Day"), with the end of the school year nigh, Chris enacts his revenge on Caruso for making his life miserable for the past year, while Drew becomes so obsessed with his graduation cap and gown that he begins wearing it around the house.

9 pm: 24.

It's Day Six of 24. While FOX doesn't give us much in the way of previews, here's what we do know: CTU reels from the death of Milo while the hostage crisis continues, Jack's dad makes his move, and Jack, well, he's still trying to protect the country from the zillionth international crisis that day. Yawn. I wonder what Bill Buchanan and Karen Hayes are doing.

10 pm: The Riches on FX.

Is anyone else watching new drama The Riches on FX? On tonight's episode ("This is Your Brain on Drugs"), Wayne attempts a drug intervention to help Dahlia, while Dale shows up in Eden Falls.