I noticed in last week’s talkback that a few people mused that I was actually enjoying FlashForward, despite its very obvious flaws. Don’t be confused people. What I’m enjoying is that this train wreck of a TV series is finally coming to an end, and like summer recess, school isn’t so bad when you know it can’t go on forever. In Countdown everyone is getting edgy as the clock moves towards the flashforward point, which the creators of this show took as being the signal for them to be even more stupid than normal. First we have Mark Benford being warned of his impending death by Hellinger, who treats that information like he’s just been given advice about buying the best Sudoku puzzle books. And then we have Demetri, who does pretty much the unthinkable by telling Zoey, as they’re about to jet away to the sun, that he slept with Janis! The next character acting stupid we encounter is Olivia, who hasn’t really done anything smart since this show started. She turns up with Charlie at the FBI, because it’s not like Mark is doing anything important, and their little girl has a nightmare. If I’d have been Mark, I’d have said something very rude to her, around the concept of growing a spinal column. She’s made the bed with Lloyd, it’s about time she dealt with that choice, really. Mark get’s to play the caring father, but perhaps his chance of survival might be greater if people didn’t drop by to burden him with their problems every five seconds! Is it me, or is the FBI a really sloppy operation where nobody does anything until it’s absolutely too late? It certainly seems so. But this entire episode is about disappointment, because everyone either says the wrong thing, at the wrong time to the wrong person, or worse. Aaron gets the really unsanitary end of the stick, when, contrary to his vision, Tracey dies. I’m not sure why this was deemed necessary for the story, but it happens. Destiny is down another point on my scoreboard. What I really didn’t get, however, was the idea that flashforward day is greeted by the populace as a reason to party? I mean, we’re told it killed 20 million people, and frankly, most people have no idea what will happen at the allotted time, so the idea that it’s a signal for global celebration makes no sense whatsoever to me. Countdown doesn’t reach the actual flashforward time, which is kept for the finale next week. But what it does is knock a number of existing flash experiences on the head, leaving an increasingly smaller choice of ones that might happen. Read our review of episode 20 here.