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What was the last TV show you watched?

Ernest P Shackleton

One Too Many
Messages
1,220
Location
Midwest
Euphoria. HBO. I still don't know what this story is telling. I'm wondering how much the movie Less Than Zero influenced the original idea. For me, the biggest problem isn't necessarily the weak story, but that it feels like some executives and marketing people got in a room and made a list of Millennial stereotypes to gather in a single high school and went from there. It's obviously not the first time Hollywood filled demographic slots to gain audience, but it feels like that process is nearly the entire reason for the existence of this series. "We need a trans girl." "Oh, and we need a plus size sex symbol for a camming arc." "And a prescription pill addict." "Don't forget the rich guy with deviant sexual behaviors." The high school football star failing at the college level. The interracial couple. The physically and emotionally abused high school sweetheart of the high school football captain. You get the idea. They hit just about every popular culture war and social ill. I have no issue with any of those things, but the idea that they collected them rather than creating a story is a little suspect.
 
Messages
10,381
Location
vancouver, canada
Finished episode 10 of Season 4 Animal Kingdom. I loved the first two seasons, Season 3 slipped a bit and now reluctantly I have to admit it has jumped the shark. The addition of the actress from 'Bones" was a real misstep. While the cast has been stellar even while the plots lines become more unbelievable she stands out as being a not very good actor. Why oh why with all the great actors in the biz did she get chosen? Niece or somesuch relation? I will finish this season out of curiosity but I am done.
 
Messages
10,381
Location
vancouver, canada
A bit late to the game but started to watch 'Rectify' on Netflix. Finished Season 1 and so far so good. Not sure how they will extend the plot to fill 4 seasons worth but we shall see.
 
Messages
16,861
Location
New York City
Yankees - Diamondbacks game yesterday - a 1:05 start
  • Completely screwed up a busy work day as I lacked the discipline to keep it on only in the background and kept stopping to watch / that said, weekday day games are part of what makes baseball special despite it wreaking havoc on my day
  • I live 5 miles south of the stadium and the thunderstorm that caused a game delay blew through my neighborhood about 15 minutes before it hit Yankee stadium, it provided an odd "connect" for me to the game
  • Until the Yankees have a few starters who can make it through six (heck, five) innings without giving up several runs and being pulled with batters lined up on the bases, all the homers they hit are just a distraction from its won't-win-in-the-playoffs starting rotation
  • Watching the Diamondback's Zach Greinke mow down Yankee batters and overcome a two-run second to pitch three subsequent shutout innings made me think "the Yankees should trade for him," but alas, off to the Astro he went :(
 
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MisterCairo

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,005
Location
Gads Hill, Ontario
Have finally finished off the latest (and last) season of Into the Badlands. Really enjoyed this season, I felt it improved on the last. Too bad it had to end, it was a fun and different diversion. Here's to more Daniel Wu in the future!

And Emily Beecham....
 

Ernest P Shackleton

One Too Many
Messages
1,220
Location
Midwest
Preacher. AMC. season 4 opening 2 episodes. I'm not sure what these two episodes were supposed to tell us. It's been losing its mojo for a while, but I felt these were a mess and didn't really do much for me or the story.

City on a Hill. Showtime. I wouldn't say this series is great. One or two of the subplots are boring and of little interest to me.
 

Bushman

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,138
Location
Joliet
Episode 6 of "The Loudest Voice." We're just about caught up to current events now.
 
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Messages
10,381
Location
vancouver, canada
About to watch some of the Toronto BlueJays game today as I do most days. It is disappointing as they are in the passed number of seasons out of the playoff race by mid April. But they are fielding a team of young pups that def show promise...now they are the second youngest team in the majors.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,779
Location
London, UK
I've been binge-watching the fourth or fifth series of Fear the Walking Dead alongside Vikings. Enjoying both, though Vikings has particularly fascinated me with Athelstan's story arc. The relationship between Athelstan and Ragnar has been wonderfully worked through.

Also last week caught the last two episodes of Gotham; I like what they did with it, and the ending was perfect, exactly what it needed.

The Handmaid's Tale continues to horrify and impress. The latter with how well the tale is told, the former with how plausible it all is.


Have finally finished off the latest (and last) season of Into the Badlands. Really enjoyed this season, I felt it improved on the last. Too bad it had to end, it was a fun and different diversion. Here's to more Daniel Wu in the future!

And Emily Beecham....

WAtched that a few months ago. It was indeed a lot of fun. The one thing I felt lacking was the backstory; I'd love to have seen a few flashbacks showing how the feudal system came into being and how they managed to ban firearms to the point they were unknown in that world.


The BBC show? Very good.
 

Seb Lucas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,562
Location
Australia
I've been binge-watching the fourth or fifth series of Fear the Walking Dead alongside Vikings. Enjoying both, though Vikings has particularly fascinated me with Athelstan's story arc. The relationship between Athelstan and Ragnar has been wonderfully worked through.

Also last week caught the last two episodes of Gotham; I like what they did with it, and the ending was perfect, exactly what it needed.

The Handmaid's Tale continues to horrify and impress. The latter with how well the tale is told, the former with how plausible it all is.




WAtched that a few months ago. It was indeed a lot of fun. The one thing I felt lacking was the backstory; I'd love to have seen a few flashbacks showing how the feudal system came into being and how they managed to ban firearms to the point they were unknown in that world.



The BBC show? Very good.

Edward, How do you find time to watch all this stuff?
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,779
Location
London, UK
Edward, How do you find time to watch all this stuff?

I've just coem to the end of two weeks' annual leave. We didn't have a holiday away this year (haven't really since 2017, as it's getting harder and harder between my increased admin burden and central admin's refusal to give us dates for graduation ceremonies anything like far enough in advance to actually book time off in time sowe can realistically book a holiday), so we spent it around home instead. Partly we've been clearing up and doing a bit of redecorating ahead of putting the flat on the market, but as we had the bad luck for my leave to coincide with a heatwave, we spent much of it lying around whimpering at home, fit for no more than to sit with tablets and Netflix.

That and, as we're planning a housemove, we don't go out much in the evenings currently.
 

Julian Shellhammer

Practically Family
Messages
858
An episode of Love and Marriage from 1959 with William Demarest and Jeanne Bal. He's a crusty widower with lifetime roots in Tin Pan Alley music publishing, and she's his up-to-date daughter. She invites him to live with her and her husband and two daughters (in a set reminiscent of Make Room for Daddy). Stubby Kaye is gopher-assistant-something who gets to sing some standards, as does Kay Armen as wise-cracking secretary.
Demarest is the consummate professional, with perfect delivery no matter what role he's playing.

Also an episode of Texaco Star Theatre with host Milton Berle from March of 1949. Fast-paced tv version of vaudeville, with Uncle Miltie letting fly with cornball jokes, with breaks for gymnasts, Guest Ethel Merman solos with I Get a Kick Out of You, and I Got Rhythm, then teams up with Berle in comedy bit. Warning: a skit with Keye Luke is heavy on ethnic stereotyping; and Berle introduces a dancer he discovered in a Greenwich Village nightclub as "this boy," making me think it was a child prodigy, but the dancer is African-American.
A unique portion of the show was a trip down memory lane with several different songwriters or teams performing their compositions. Highlight was Maud Nugent singing "Sweet Rosie O'Grady," which she wrote in 1896.
 

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