This midseason, watch TV change before your eyes

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LOS ANGELES (MCT) — Human beings are such gorgeously contradictory creatures — we demand variety (it’s the spice of life!) and hate change. Nowhere is that more pronounced than in our attitude toward television; we regularly decry the monotony of the standard formats and then yelp when someone messes with them.

“Rubicon” was too slow and complicated, “Men of a Certain Age” too insular and morose, “The Killing” was a rip-off (because it didn’t conclusively reveal the murderer) and “American Horror Story” is way over the top. Well, quit whining and get used to it because (a) it’s a wonderful thing and (b) the midseason shows go even further.

You think you’ve seen slow? Wait till you take a gander at HBO’s “Luck.” Hard to follow? Check out NBC’s “Awake,” due out in spring. Over the top? ABC’s upcoming “The River” revels in voodoo on the Amazon, and NBC’s “Smash” isn’t content to simply follow the making of a musical, it has to be a musical about Marilyn Monroe.

The fact is that while everyone’s been wringing their hands over TV’s ever-shifting delivery system, its rules and regulations regarding character, tone and narrative form have been morphing even faster. After turning the nature of the hero inside out with characters like Gregory House, Dexter Morgan and Patty Hewes and blurring the line between comedy and drama with shows like “Nurse Jackie” and “Parenthood,” television writers — fired up by the success of such diversely nonconformist shows as “Lost” and “Mad Men” — are pushing at the floorboards and roof beams of story.

Even those insiders who hail “Luck” as a masterpiece concede it takes five episodes to get going. Meanwhile, “Awake’s” conceit is quite simply that no one is quite sure which version of events is real. Taken together, they make Fox’s “Fringe,” in which the existence of two parallel universes has become so mundane that it now serves as backdrop, seem positively parochial.

Progress does not equal perfection, but it is fascinating to watch, even — and maybe especially — the failures. Not the shows that bomb because they’re cheesy knockoffs, but the ones that close their eyes and take the leap. They may not stick their landing, but there is beauty in those few frenzied minutes of flight.

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