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coaching certification programs was just another NBA baller blip on the radar of replacement hostess Carmen Electra.) Can The Nerdist plausibly be indexed under "supernatural" fare? Probably not, but the dons of geek that host it and the audience that hungers for it, or at least has made the podcast a hit certainly put supernatural leaning narratives high on their list of concerns. The premiere episode aims to hit that sweet spot by scooching Doctor Who's Eleventh Time Lord Matt Smith and Lost's Dominic Monaghan onto the talk couch.That's cross promotional savvy, for sure. (Monaghan hosts another BBC America show, creepy crawly travel doc Wild Things, that I would probably watch if there weren't so many goddamned snakes slithering around the promo materials.) Also riding shotgun in The Nerdist's maiden voyage: Tatiana Maslany of new show Orphan Black, which also debuts Saturday in the nicely nestled hour between Doctor Who and the The Nerdist.Orphan Black is a BBC America original series (read: not sloppy seconds from over the pond). It doesn't at all square with the "supernatural" motif, but that's not a bad thing: Orphan Black is an intriguing new entry in the undernourished but creatively fertile "futurescape slash we're all fucked" genre, of which Battlestar Galactica is still the standard bearer.Without preawareness of Orphan Black's twist, you might even confuse it for a workaday crime procedural con artist Sarah (Maslany) adopts the identity of a lookalike, who just happens to be a cop with a long game mystery built into the plot. Promotional materials have plainly divulged what that twist is, but the series