Babe,
xoxo
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Babe,
xoxo
:claps Walking dead, Fast and Loud Demolition Theater, Graveyard carz
Looking forward to the finale of SOA.
Just started watching Veep with Julia Louis Dreyfus..the show was created by Armando Iannucci who also directed the movie In the Loop. The interesting thing is he's a Brit who created a show about an American vice presidential candidate and her bumbling, incompetent staff. I have no way of knowing if it's realistic, but I think it's hilarious. Highly recommend.
what's a TV show?:o
It does sound somewhat kinky :D
...I would use that word to describe just about every episode of season one of Leftovers...wish I had a dollar for every time I found myself saying WTF is going on here now?
...also awaiting the new season of Ray Donovan, and Game o Thrones, Hell On Wheels and John Oliver and Veep (btw, w/ J Louis D as the actual Vice President, not a candidate as someone said earlier)
....sorry to see Newsroom end (desperately in love w/ Olivia Munn)
...not sorry to see The Dome end, or Utopia...anybody see those train wrecks?
...also, glad to see my favorite of all shows getting mentioned so often: Family Guy...never fails to make me laugh harder than anything else on
...lately, find myself enjoying one o my Mom's favorites...Shark Tank (also desperately in love w/ Lori Grenier)
I've been watching American Horror Story: Freak Show, Psych, Portlandia, and just recently One Piece (The anime). I'm getting psyched for Rick and Morty this year though, I just hope it airs soon :praying:
http://www.bubbleblabber.com/wp-cont...4/12/SP-18.jpg
Lots of references towards transwoman this season!
I know it is no longer on tv, but I have spent the last week watching all 17 episodes of The Prisoner, which aired in the UK between 1967 and 1968. I watched it at the time but probably not every episode. The series was unusual because it was dominated by one set -the resort village on the coast of Wales called Portmeirion- and because every episode concerned an attempt by an unidentified authority -assumed to be the British Government- to find out why its agent, Number 6 resigned suddenly from the service. Every attempt to force him to tell the truth fails until ultimately he succeeds in being released, though as he also appears to be promoted this might all have been a test to see if he was suited for the top job, the show is ambiguous on this and caused much controversy for refusing to offer viewers a simple story with a beginning, a middle and an end that they could easily understand, and which may also be the cause of its 'cult following'.
The Prisoner therefore does something quite different from other comparable tv shows of the era, such as Mission:Impossible, I Spy, The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and The Avengers. 17 episodes is too long, dare one say that 6 would have been enough? The theme seems to revolve around the individual against the machine, individual liberty rather than the collective, eccentricity rather than conformism. There are times when it looks dated, but it has not dated as badly as some shows, and at times is quite intriguing. But I think only nerds and converts are likely to watch all 17 episodes. The man who made it happen, Patrick McGoohan left the UK for Los Angeles after the show and never returned, appearing in some so-so films and some episodes of Colombo.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061287/