User blog comment:SibunaSeason34/Anubis Fanatics Questionnaire: What's your favorite TV show?/@comment-4741712-20140916222213

1.  I have a lot, but I must say my favorite shows always get cancelled!!! (Yes, HOA is included in that)  Anyways, I like(d) "Touch" on Fox, and "Twisted" on ABC Family (Part of the Facebook group hoping Netflix will pick up Twisted for a Season 2). Furthermore, Nostalgia-wise, I enjoy older PBS shows like Zoom and Ghostwriter (and I am working on a Ghostwriter-HOA crossover fanfic). And Corbierr, don't let this boy upset you over the word "girl" in the title. Mainly because I must admit the only show I'm currently following whole-heartedly on Disney Channel is Girl Meets World!!

2.  Just clicked on this blog because I felt like sharing my opinion of my favorite shows on here outside of HOA. TBH I haven't checked out your blog... yet!

3.  Touch has some supernatural elements in it, like HOA, but they're not as mythological or fantasy-like. As the show develops into the second season, a girl named Amelia has parallels to Joy in HOA season 1, and Calvin Norberg, like Rufus Zeno, goes to show once again that the enemy of my enemy is not necessarily my friend. Twisted is, from what I hear, similar to Pretty Little Liars. It has a murder-mystery storyline to it, where our teenage protagonist was someone who was convicted of murdering his aunt when he was 12 and is now the prime suspect of a murder of a fellow peer on the night after his release from Juvy. I have no doubt in my mind that if you liked HOA and/or PLL, you'll enjoy Twisted. Ghostwriter was a show that introduced me to the serial format, but not quite like HOA or other dramas because it took 4-5 half hour episodes to get the complete story. Ghostwriter features a group of kid detectives who solve mysteries in their neighborhood in Brooklyn, NY with the help of their friend Ghostwriter. Ghostwriter is a ghost who can't hear or talk, but can read and write, and communicates with the kids through reading and writing. Produced by the same company as Sesame Street, it was a good 90's show that taught kids literacy. Zoom was another PBS show, but unlike the other shows, aren't a mystery series or even have a storyline for that matter. It was mostly unscripted. Based on the 1970s show with the same name, Zoom starred 7 kids who did crafts, played games, made recipes, performed science experiments, and did skits, just to name a few things, all sent in by the viewers. Zoom will always hold a spot in my heart as my favorite childhood show, and it's a shame WGBH didn't put it on DVD.

And Corbierr, I do enjoy Girl Meets World simply because I like the coming-of-age aspect, and because of it being a spinoff of Boy Meets World!!