The new television season has arrived! Many of our favorite programs have returned, so Amber West and I decided to share a few more Why It’s Worth a Watch Wednesday reviews to check out two additional CBS hit series – The Good Wife and Criminal Minds.
First up – Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds follows a team of highly trained FBI agents who profile criminal behaviors for the Behavioral Analysis Unit (BAU). There are tons of police procedural programs on TV today, but none like this.
The BAU team’s home base is at the famous Quantico, Virginia location; however, they travel around the United States once a city’s local authorities request their presence at the scene of a crime. The unit studies the unsubs, or unidentified suspects, instead of the crime itself.
The team is led by Unit Chief Aaron “Hotch” Hotchner (Thomas Gibson, Darma & Greg). Hotch’s dedication to his job cost him his marriage. After his ex-wife Haley (played by Meredith Monroe) was murdered by serial killer “The Reaper” (C. Thomas Howell), Hotch gained custody of his son, Jack. Hotch attempts to make amends by being the best father he possibly can; he even coaches the little guy’s soccer team.
Due to the graphic nature of his job, Hotch rarely smiles and carries the weight of the world on his shoulders; but, despite the difficulty, he will do everything in his power to protect his team.
Next in line is Senior Supervisory Special Agent Derek Morgan (Shemar Moore, The Young and the Restless). Excelling at his job, Morgan has been named Acting Unit Chief when Hotch is out. He was in line to be the next Unit Chief of the New York field office, but he declined the position. He is strong and fast, and is by far the most physical on the BAU team (he’s pretty to look at too).
Morgan had a difficult childhood: he witnessed his father’s murder and he was sexually abused by the local boys’ club caretaker. As an adult, Morgan was framed for murdering a few of his hometown’s local boys, but was later proven innocent by his team.
Also serving the BAU as a Senior Supervisory Special Agent is David Rossi, played by Joe Mantegna (Joan of Arcadia). Rossi is credited as one of the founding members of the BAU, but he retired to write books and lecture on criminal analysis. He returned to the team after Gideon’s untimely departure (see below), and seized the opportunity to solve a cold case that had haunted him for decades.
Rossi has been married and divorced multiple times, and often jokes that divorce lawyers are the only people in his personal life that he can make happy.
Special Agent Emily Prentiss (Paget Brewster, Friends – remember Kathy? She dated Joey and Chandler….) joined the team after Elle walked away (see below). Early on, Prentiss felt she had something to prove being that Hotch and Gideon suspected her mother’s position as a U.S. Ambassador had something to do with her joining the BAU team.
Prentiss served Interpol for years, where she worked undercover hunting international arms dealer, Ian Doyle. This past year, Doyle killed her Interpol colleagues one-by-one, blaming them for the death of his only son. Doyle finally found Emily, hunted her, and killed her. Or did he?
Special Agent Dr. Spencer Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler, Alvin and the Chipmunks motion picture franchise) is probably my favorite member of the team. Reid is a genius; he graduated high school before he was a teenager; he has a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and Sociology; he has a Ph.D in Mathematics, Chemistry, and Engineering; and he has an insanely high IQ – all courtesy of his eidetic memory. Reid reads faster than anyone on the planet (he scans the page with his finger and remembers it verbatim), he remembers everything he sees, but he struggles with certain things that he hears.
Reid suffers from inexplicable headaches and fears that he has inherited his mother’s schizophrenia. He is not as physically fit as the rest of his team, which probably led to his being held hostage twice (once by a character portrayal by Luke Perry and another time by James Van Der Beek).
Special Agent Jenifer “JJ” Jareau, (AJ Cook, Tru Calling) also serves the team as the media liaison. JJ joined the FBI after attending one of Rossi’s lectures, and she is the only non-profiler on the team. Because she isn’t a profiler, JJ has a hard time understanding how people can commit such horrible crimes, but she remains professional and battles through each case.
JJ recently returned to the team after she was forced to take a position at the Pentagon. Besides Hotch, JJ is the only BAU team member with a child.
Technical Analyst Penelope Garcia, played by Kirsten Vangsness, serves the team from Quantico. Garcia joined the team after the FBI caught her hacking into their systems. Rarely does she accompany the team to crime scenes; instead, she prefers to stay locked inside her computer lair wearing bright eye shadows and lipsticks while frantically surfing the internet and databases for information to assist the team.
Garcia is one of the only BAU team members to have an actual romantic relationship (fellow FBI analyst, Kevin Lynch, played by Nicholas Brendon from Buffy the Vampire Slayer).
The BAU team has suffered its share of casualites over the years. Previous team members include: Jason Gideon (Mandy Patinkin, Chicago Hope) silently walked away without telling anyone after his former girlfriend was murdered by a serial killer; Elle Greenaway (Lola Glaudini, The Sopranos) left the team after she was shot following an undercover assignment; and Ashley Seaver (Rachel Nichols, Alias) was transferred out to another department, explained by Strauss downsizing the BAU team.
Recurring characters include: Reid’s schizophrenic mother, Diana Reid (Jane Lynch, Glee); former New Orleans police liaison and father of JJ’s son, William “Will” LaMontagne (Josh Stewart, No Ordinary Family); and BAU Unit Direct Supervisor, Erin Strauss (Jayne Atkinson, 24).
The Criminal Minds franchise took an unfavorable dip last year with the one-season-and-done spinoff, Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior starring Forest Whitaker and Janeane Garofalo. I have to admit that the story improved as the season moved forward, and unfortunately it ended with a cliff hanger. Maybe the Criminal Minds team will do another cross over episode and close out that story line for us?
Regardless, the original remains strong airing new episodes every Wednesday night on CBS and in syndication on A&E and ION. At almost any given time, one can find an episode of Criminal Minds to enjoy.

As if my love for the characters isn’t evident by the length of my post, I must give Criminal Minds a GTV rating: it has everything we want and more, especially for this fiction writer. Criminal Minds is an excellent source of research for understanding a potential protagonist’s actions in murder mysteries. That’s my excuse for watching so much of it, anyway. Yes, I’m going to keep telling myself that…
What do you think? Have you watched Criminal Minds? Who’s your favorite BAU team member? Were you disappointed with the cancellation of Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior? I’d love to hear from you!
Now click over to Amber’s blog and check out her review of The Good Wife. Amber was very adamant during the Tambery Awards production that Julianna Margulies win best actress – and she did! Congrats, Julianna.
Come back next week when Amber and I click over to NBC and review two of the channel’s hit programs – Harry’s Law and Law & Order: SVU.
Remember to stop by the #watchwed hashtag in Twitter to discuss any of today’s reviews, or to mention any television programs that you’d like to see on Why It’s Worth a Watch Wednesday in the future. We’re currently working on our September schedule and would love to chat with you!
A Recap of The WatchWed Review System:
GTV (Gourmet TV): Everything we want and more
MacTV (MacNCheese TV): Guilty pleasure. Not perfect, but is satisfies
JFTV (Junk food TV): It’s not great for us, but we’ll go back for seconds
SSTV (Still Simmering TV): It has potential, but the jury is still out
NIV (Nyquil Induced Viewing): Perfect for that late night television sleep timer
LOTV (Liver&Onions TV): Do we really have to explain? Blech
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