• OT: The Top 100 Best TV Shows of All Time

    From grif@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 26 23:01:52 2023
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 01:18:32 2023
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 26 19:54:22 2023
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 3:18:36 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:

    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.

    I'm not sure how far back you are going in assessing "modern" TV. I never watched "Buffy." Some of Whedon's other work I like a lot, such as "Firefly" and "Dollhouse." Shows like "Breaking Bad" and "Mad Men" could be classified as modern. IMO the quality
    stayed very high throughout their run. I still love the classics and like newer shows too. But obviously they have become fewer and further between since the woke era started.

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  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Tue Sep 26 19:54:48 2023
    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> writes:

    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:






    I'm not sure how far back you are going in assessing "modern" TV. I
    never watched "Buffy." Some of Whedon's other work I like a lot, such
    as "Firefly" and "Dollhouse." Shows like "Breaking Bad" and "Mad Men"
    could be classified as modern. IMO the quality stayed very high
    throughout their run. I still love the classics and like newer shows
    too. But obviously they have become fewer and further between since
    the woke era started.

    I recently "rewatched" Buffy (more like we had it on in the
    background). Well, I'd say it could be considered "woke" for a number
    of reasons, with some notable exceptions.

    I noticed there was a new warning before one of the episodes, a
    "sensitivity warning" about the episode's depiction of native
    americans. The storyline featured the revenging spirit of a native
    american tribe during Thanksgiving. The depiction was pretty
    ridiculously stereotyped, I'd agree, but still I was surprised they
    actually put a warning on it (long after the fact of course).
    Especially for a show that's at least outwardly in the horror genre
    and is filled with (pretty tame) death and destruction.

    Actually, I am a little surprised they didn't have a warning that
    Joss was a big meany on set and has been canceled.

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  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Tue Sep 26 19:50:01 2023
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:






    I'm not sure how far back you are going in assessing "modern" TV. I
    never watched "Buffy." Some of Whedon's other work I like a lot, such
    as "Firefly" and "Dollhouse." Shows like "Breaking Bad" and "Mad Men"
    could be classified as modern. IMO the quality stayed very high
    throughout their run. I still love the classics and like newer shows
    too. But obviously they have become fewer and further between since
    the woke era started.

    I recently "rewatched" Buffy (more like we had it on in the background).
    Well, I'd say it could be considered "woke" for a number of reasons,
    with some notable exceptions.

    I noticed there was a new warning before one of the episodes, a
    "sensitivity warning" about the episode's depiction of native americans.
    The storyline featured the revenging spirit of a native american tribe
    during Thanksgiving. The depiction was pretty ridiculously stereotyped,
    I'd agree, but still I was surprised they actually put a warning on it
    (long after the fact of course). Especially for a show that's at least outwardly in the horror genre and is filled with (pretty tame) death and destruction.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Tue Sep 26 21:20:46 2023
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 8:54:56 PM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    jdeluise <jdel...@gmail.com> writes:

    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:






    I'm not sure how far back you are going in assessing "modern" TV. I
    never watched "Buffy." Some of Whedon's other work I like a lot, such
    as "Firefly" and "Dollhouse." Shows like "Breaking Bad" and "Mad Men"
    could be classified as modern. IMO the quality stayed very high
    throughout their run. I still love the classics and like newer shows
    too. But obviously they have become fewer and further between since
    the woke era started.

    I recently "rewatched" Buffy (more like we had it on in the
    background). Well, I'd say it could be considered "woke" for a number
    of reasons, with some notable exceptions.

    I noticed there was a new warning before one of the episodes, a "sensitivity warning" about the episode's depiction of native
    americans. The storyline featured the revenging spirit of a native american tribe during Thanksgiving. The depiction was pretty
    ridiculously stereotyped, I'd agree, but still I was surprised they actually put a warning on it (long after the fact of course).
    Especially for a show that's at least outwardly in the horror genre
    and is filled with (pretty tame) death and destruction.

    Actually, I am a little surprised they didn't have a warning that
    Joss was a big meany on set and has been canceled.

    Monstrous indeed. He expected his female action stars to be in shape and actually told them this. I think Joss may get himself uncancelled in time. All it will take is a groveling interview where he shoulders all the blame and pleads forgiveness.

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  • From grif@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 11:25:24 2023
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.

    🙄

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 05:18:39 2023
    On Tuesday, 26 September 2023 at 23:18:36 UTC+1, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.

    HAAHHAHA ridiculous, they've got Buffy above Cheers even! at least #3 Breaking Bad was very good, but better than Star Trek mmm no way.

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  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Sep 27 05:15:40 2023
    On Wednesday, 27 September 2023 at 04:50:07 UTC+1, jdeluise wrote:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:






    I'm not sure how far back you are going in assessing "modern" TV. I
    never watched "Buffy." Some of Whedon's other work I like a lot, such
    as "Firefly" and "Dollhouse." Shows like "Breaking Bad" and "Mad Men"
    could be classified as modern. IMO the quality stayed very high
    throughout their run. I still love the classics and like newer shows
    too. But obviously they have become fewer and further between since
    the woke era started.
    I recently "rewatched" Buffy (more like we had it on in the background). Well, I'd say it could be considered "woke" for a number of reasons,
    with some notable exceptions.

    I noticed there was a new warning before one of the episodes, a
    "sensitivity warning" about the episode's depiction of native americans.
    The storyline featured the revenging spirit of a native american tribe
    during Thanksgiving. The depiction was pretty ridiculously stereotyped,
    I'd agree, but still I was surprised they actually put a warning on it
    (long after the fact of course). Especially for a show that's at least outwardly in the horror genre and is filled with (pretty tame) death and destruction.

    all these dumb woke sensitivity warnings need to be banned.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to grif on Wed Sep 27 09:01:33 2023
    On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.

    🙄

    Deadwood?

    --
    "It is Pointless, and endless Trouble, to cast a stone at every dog
    that barks at you."

    --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Wed Sep 27 09:08:13 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure. >>
    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.

    🙄

    Deadwood?

    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Sep 27 09:37:02 2023
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure. >>>>
    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.
    🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "I only trust statistics that I have falsified, myself."

    --Winston Churchill ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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  • From grif@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Wed Sep 27 20:29:38 2023
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure. >>>>>
    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it. >>>> 🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...


    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Pushing Daisies
    Six Feet Under
    Schitt's Creek
    Firefly
    Barry
    The Shield
    The Good Place
    The Americans
    Deadwood
    Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Battlestar Galactica
    Community
    Fleabag
    Lost
    Twin Peaks

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 23:33:18 2023
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 22.29:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). >>>>>> Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of >>>>>> it.
    🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of
    "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...


    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of shows
    that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Pushing Daisies
    Six Feet Under
    Schitt's Creek
    Firefly
    Barry
    The Shield
    The Good Place
    The Americans
    Deadwood
    Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Battlestar Galactica
    Community
    Fleabag
    Lost
    Twin Peaks



    Oh no, it's the Battlestar Galactica remake. I can see from the pic
    alone that it's terrible.

    https://assets-prd.ignimgs.com/2023/09/22/battlestar-galactica-1695394547619.jpg

    What a bunch of edgy posers. And yes, I'm wearing a suit and a tie in
    space. lol

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to grif on Wed Sep 27 13:39:12 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:42 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it. >>>> 🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...

    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Six Feet Under

    You should watch it. It's an excellent show. One of my faves for sure.


    The Americans

    It was fantastic for the first four seasons and then it became ridiculous for the last two seasons and I stopped watching.

    Curb Your Enthusiasm

    So funny.

    Twin Peaks

    The original Twin Peaks tv series was fun.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From grif@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 21:48:40 2023
    On 27/09/2023 21:39, Court_1 wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:42 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it. >>>>>> 🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...

    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Six Feet Under

    You should watch it. It's an excellent show. One of my faves for sure.


    The Americans

    It was fantastic for the first four seasons and then it became ridiculous for the last two seasons and I stopped watching.

    Curb Your Enthusiasm

    So funny.

    Twin Peaks

    The original Twin Peaks tv series was fun.

    Yeah, I've seen the movie but never got around to watching the show.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From grif@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 21:53:54 2023
    On 27/09/2023 21:33, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 22.29:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it. >>>>>> 🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...


    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Pushing Daisies
    Six Feet Under
    Schitt's Creek
    Firefly
    Barry
    The Shield
    The Good Place
    The Americans
    Deadwood
    Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Battlestar Galactica
    Community
    Fleabag
    Lost
    Twin Peaks



    Oh no, it's the Battlestar Galactica remake. I can see from the pic alone that it's terrible.

    https://assets-prd.ignimgs.com/2023/09/22/battlestar-galactica-1695394547619.jpg

    What a bunch of edgy posers. And yes, I'm wearing a suit and a tie in space. lol

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VBTcDF1eVQ
    Pog.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to grif on Wed Sep 27 13:56:18 2023
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows though(which is different than detective shows.)

    Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Twilight Zone--both great.

    Dexter. Good show but it got tiresome towards the end.

    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.

    I despised Johnny Carson. I don't get his appeal at all.

    I watched My So Called Life and The Wonder Years back in the day. The Wonder Years in particular was well-done.

    Six Feet Under--I've already commented about it. Fantastic show.

    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I don't know if I could sit through it today though.

    ER--LOL, I can't believe I watched that dreck. I could never watch it today.

    Game of Thrones, The Wire, Breaking Bad--I've never watched a minute of any of them despite the furor.

    Mad Men--good at first but went downhill.

    The X-Files--one of my all time favorite shows.

    All in the Family. Superb comedy. It wouldn't last two seconds on the air today though(sadly.)

    Chernobyl was truly excellent. Everybody should watch it.

    Columbo--terrific.

    Hannibal--I tried to watch it but couldn't get into it. Don't like the lead actor.

    Curb Your Enthusiasm and Seinfeld. I love them both but I know people either love them or hate them.

    I Love Lucy. Hard to go wrong with that show.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to grif on Wed Sep 27 14:09:00 2023
    On 9/27/23 12:29 PM, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days
    (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All
    of it.
    🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of
    "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...


    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of
    shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Pushing Daisies

    One of the very few I really enjoyed. Very mannered and quirky, even in
    the sets.

    The show was a victim of a writers' strike, like is going on now.

    Six Feet Under
    Schitt's Creek
    Firefly
    Barry
    The Shield
    The Good Place
    The Americans
    Deadwood
    Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Battlestar Galactica
    Community
    Fleabag
    Lost
    Twin Peaks



    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Shit <-----------------------------------------------------> Shinola
    "Which is which?" --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to grif on Wed Sep 27 14:11:06 2023
    On 9/27/23 1:48 PM, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 21:39, Court_1 wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:42 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days
    (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All >>>>>>>> of it.
    🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of
    "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...

    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of
    shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Six Feet Under

    You should watch it. It's an excellent show.  One of my faves for sure.


    The Americans

    It was fantastic for the first four seasons and then it became
    ridiculous for the last two seasons and I stopped watching.
    Curb Your Enthusiasm

    So funny.

    Twin Peaks

    The original Twin Peaks tv series was fun.

    Yeah, I've seen the movie but never got around to watching the show.

    Peaky Blinders

    Berlin Babylon

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Doncha know,
    That it's a shame and a pity
    You were raised
    Up in the city
    And you never learned nothin'
    'bout country ways."


    --Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 00:20:32 2023
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.53:
    On 27/09/2023 21:33, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 22.29:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days
    (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All >>>>>>>> of it.
    🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of
    "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...


    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of
    shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Pushing Daisies
    Six Feet Under
    Schitt's Creek
    Firefly
    Barry
    The Shield
    The Good Place
    The Americans
    Deadwood
    Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Battlestar Galactica
    Community
    Fleabag
    Lost
    Twin Peaks



    Oh no, it's the Battlestar Galactica remake. I can see from the pic
    alone that it's terrible.

    https://assets-prd.ignimgs.com/2023/09/22/battlestar-galactica-1695394547619.jpg

    What a bunch of edgy posers. And yes, I'm wearing a suit and a tie in
    space. lol

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VBTcDF1eVQ
    Pog.


    Yeah, looks somewhat promising start. But watched couple more random
    clips too... these don't seem characters I would get attached to.

    Also, Starbuck is now a woman. Edward James Olmos belongs to Miami Vice,
    not Galactica.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 00:47:26 2023
    Court_1 kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.56:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?


    I think its place at 100 is rewarded. Could be higher too.

    Certainly legendary at the time. Maybe wouldn't fit modern taste? But it
    was still great.

    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows though(which is different than detective shows.)


    Annoyed me too, mainly because the lead was Dennis Franz which was my
    least liked character from Hill Street Blues, my all-time favourite
    series. It was like much worse version of HSB.

    Hill Street Blues of course wasn't even on the list...

    Neither was btw Dallas. One can be of many opinions on the series but it
    was legendary and should be on the list.


    Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Twilight Zone--both great.


    Yes.

    Dexter. Good show but it got tiresome towards the end.

    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.


    Ok-ish. Frasier shouldn't be on the list. At least very high.

    I despised Johnny Carson. I don't get his appeal at all.


    Never saw it.

    I watched My So Called Life and The Wonder Years back in the day. The Wonder Years in particular was well-done.


    I think they showed "The Wonder Years" here. Made no impression at all.

    Six Feet Under--I've already commented about it. Fantastic show.

    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I don't know if I could sit through it today though.


    Top 100? Surely not.

    ER--LOL, I can't believe I watched that dreck. I could never watch it today.

    Game of Thrones, The Wire, Breaking Bad--I've never watched a minute of any of them despite the furor.


    I watched some of Breaking Bad. Good cinematography, passable series.
    Big hype.

    I think has one of the top spots. But imo it's not something one thinks
    about longingly few years from now. So it shouldn't be on the list at all.

    Mad Men--good at first but went downhill.

    The X-Files--one of my all time favorite shows.


    Good. Not sure if top 100 though, there was lots of filler material there.

    Dana Scully was a walking encyclopedia. Did it empower you?

    All in the Family. Superb comedy. It wouldn't last two seconds on the air today though(sadly.)


    Very funny & memorable. Definitely in top 100.

    Chernobyl was truly excellent. Everybody should watch it.

    Columbo--terrific.


    Yes. Falk was great.

    Hannibal--I tried to watch it but couldn't get into it. Don't like the lead actor.

    Curb Your Enthusiasm and Seinfeld. I love them both but I know people either love them or hate them.


    Seinfeld was watchable. Must be a US thing, wasn't such a huge hit here.

    I Love Lucy. Hard to go wrong with that show.


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 14:50:50 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 1:56:20 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows though(which is different than detective shows.)

    I didn't like it either for some of the same reason I didn't like "Hill Street Blues." Squad rooms full of overlapping dialogue and half-eaten sandwiches. They tried a little too hard to feel authentic and gritty. But most of all, these weren't
    characters I could care about.

    Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Twilight Zone--both great.

    Yep. Great.

    Dexter. Good show but it got tiresome towards the end.

    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.

    Yes, except they went on too many years and weren't so funny by the end.

    I despised Johnny Carson. I don't get his appeal at all.

    He was kind of a knob, wasn't he? I thought he was OK when I was growing up, but when I eventually saw earlier "Tonight Show" eps with Jack Paar, he made Carson look like a lightweight.

    I watched My So Called Life and The Wonder Years back in the day. The Wonder Years in particular was well-done.

    Six Feet Under--I've already commented about it. Fantastic show.

    It was. And final ep was fantastic. Alan Ball of course had to insert his signature gay storylines, but not enough to wreck the quality.

    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I don't know if I could sit through it today though.

    ER--LOL, I can't believe I watched that dreck. I could never watch it today.

    Game of Thrones, The Wire, Breaking Bad--I've never watched a minute of any of them despite the furor.

    It's hard to imagine you watching any of them. :) I tired of "Game of Thrones" after a couple seasons. "The Wire" and "Breaking Bad" were first rate IMO.

    Mad Men--good at first but went downhill.

    Yes, it sagged in the last season--and maybe before that. I thought the first 3-4 seasons were brilliant.

    The X-Files--one of my all time favorite shows.

    Umm.....

    All in the Family. Superb comedy. It wouldn't last two seconds on the air today though(sadly.)

    Norman Lear tried to revive it in a modern setting with Woody Harrelson a few years ago. It was terrible--partly due to an inferior cast and writing; mostly because it was meant for an earlier era. Setting it in the 2020s was weird and jarring.

    Chernobyl was truly excellent. Everybody should watch it.

    Well damn it, I'm not going to.

    Columbo--terrific.

    In its original run, yes. Episodes from the 1980s-90s don't count.

    Hannibal--I tried to watch it but couldn't get into it. Don't like the lead actor.

    Curb Your Enthusiasm and Seinfeld. I love them both but I know people either love them or hate them.

    Yes, we discussed "Seinfeld" at length once. I hate it. We didn't discuss "Curb Your Enthusiasm." I hate that too.

    I Love Lucy. Hard to go wrong with that show.

    Yep, that and "The Honeymooners" are evergreen.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 14:57:11 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 2:47:30 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:

    I watched some of Breaking Bad. Good cinematography, passable series.

    Big hype.

    I think has one of the top spots. But imo it's not something one thinks about longingly few years from now. So it shouldn't be on the list at all.

    Yes it should. Because it was great. Sounds like you made your judgement after a handful of episodes, missing the whole arc.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 01:10:36 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 0.57:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 2:47:30 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:

    I watched some of Breaking Bad. Good cinematography, passable series.

    Big hype.

    I think has one of the top spots. But imo it's not something one thinks
    about longingly few years from now. So it shouldn't be on the list at all.

    Yes it should. Because it was great. Sounds like you made your judgement after a handful of episodes, missing the whole arc.


    The arc was closing quite slowly... and could see it coming miles away.
    I don't think I would have been awed even if looking the entire thing.
    For one, the main character didn't intrigue me.

    Maybe I'm just too picky.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to olympia0000@yahoo.com on Wed Sep 27 23:29:29 2023
    Court_1 <olympia0000@yahoo.com> Wrote in message:
    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows though (which is different than detective shows.)


    LOL


    --




    ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 15:25:29 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:10:39 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 0.57:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 2:47:30 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:

    I watched some of Breaking Bad. Good cinematography, passable series.

    Big hype.

    I think has one of the top spots. But imo it's not something one thinks >> about longingly few years from now. So it shouldn't be on the list at all.

    Yes it should. Because it was great. Sounds like you made your judgement after a handful of episodes, missing the whole arc.

    The arc was closing quite slowly... and could see it coming miles away.
    I don't think I would have been awed even if looking the entire thing.

    You figured out all five seasons that fast, hmm? OK. :)

    For one, the main character didn't intrigue me.

    Maybe I'm just too picky.

    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry Seinfeld.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 01:29:30 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:10:39 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 0.57:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 2:47:30 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:

    I watched some of Breaking Bad. Good cinematography, passable series.

    Big hype.

    I think has one of the top spots. But imo it's not something one thinks >>>> about longingly few years from now. So it shouldn't be on the list at all. >>>
    Yes it should. Because it was great. Sounds like you made your judgement after a handful of episodes, missing the whole arc.

    The arc was closing quite slowly... and could see it coming miles away.
    I don't think I would have been awed even if looking the entire thing.

    You figured out all five seasons that fast, hmm? OK. :)


    Yep. I'm blessed that way.

    For one, the main character didn't intrigue me.

    Maybe I'm just too picky.

    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.

    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 15:33:55 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:

    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.

    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.

    I don't even remember a boss.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 01:48:21 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.33:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:

    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.

    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.

    I don't even remember a boss.

    I meant him:

    https://breakingbad.fandom.com/wiki/Gustavo_Fring

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From grif@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 00:06:12 2023
    On 27/09/2023 22:20, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.53:
    On 27/09/2023 21:33, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 22.29:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.
    🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...


    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Pushing Daisies
    Six Feet Under
    Schitt's Creek
    Firefly
    Barry
    The Shield
    The Good Place
    The Americans
    Deadwood
    Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Battlestar Galactica
    Community
    Fleabag
    Lost
    Twin Peaks



    Oh no, it's the Battlestar Galactica remake. I can see from the pic alone that it's terrible.

    https://assets-prd.ignimgs.com/2023/09/22/battlestar-galactica-1695394547619.jpg

    What a bunch of edgy posers. And yes, I'm wearing a suit and a tie in space. lol

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VBTcDF1eVQ
    Pog.


    Yeah, looks somewhat promising start. But watched couple more random clips too... these don't seem characters I would get attached to.

    Also, Starbuck is now a woman. Edward James Olmos belongs to Miami Vice, not Galactica.

    Speaking of Vice
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-8EORB783c&t=2576s

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 16:04:27 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 5:47:30 PM UTC-4, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.56:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    I think its place at 100 is rewarded. Could be higher too.

    Certainly legendary at the time. Maybe wouldn't fit modern taste? But it
    was still great.

    It was. I had a Fonzie t-shirt! :)

    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows though(which is different than detective shows.)

    Annoyed me too, mainly because the lead was Dennis Franz which was my
    least liked character from Hill Street Blues, my all-time favourite
    series. It was like much worse version of HSB.

    I couldn't stand Dennis Franz either. He looked like a greaseball and acted like he was the only actor to play a cop before.

    I didn't like Hill Street Blues either. I just hate the cop mentality centered shows.


    Hill Street Blues of course wasn't even on the list...

    Neither was btw Dallas. One can be of many opinions on the series but it
    was legendary and should be on the list...

    Dallas? I watched it when I was younger but that's another show I couldn't sit through for a minute today. Tastes sure do change as one ages and matures. Maybe not in your case though? ;)

    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.

    Ok-ish. Frasier shouldn't be on the list. At least very high.

    Really? I think it should be on the list for sure. I found it funny, well-written, etc., and I find that it stands up well. I caught an episode a few weeks ago as I was flipping through the channels and started watching it. It cracked me up.

    Six Feet Under--I've already commented about it. Fantastic show.

    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I don't know if I could sit through it today though.

    Top 100? Surely not.

    For what? SATC or Six Feet Under?


    Dana Scully was a walking encyclopedia. Did it empower you?

    She(Gillian Anderson) was good on that show! ;)

    All in the Family. Superb comedy. It wouldn't last two seconds on the air today though(sadly.)

    Very funny & memorable. Definitely in top 100.
    Chernobyl was truly excellent. Everybody should watch it.

    Columbo--terrific.

    Yes. Falk was great.

    I saw Peter Falk and his his much younger wife in a restaurant called Dan Tana's in Los Angeles about 35 years ago! I was with my father. Falk looked exactly the same as he did on tv.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 02:19:04 2023
    Court_1 kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 2.04:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 5:47:30 PM UTC-4, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.56:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    I think its place at 100 is rewarded. Could be higher too.

    Certainly legendary at the time. Maybe wouldn't fit modern taste? But it
    was still great.

    It was. I had a Fonzie t-shirt! :)


    Pics or it didn't happen! :))


    Hill Street Blues of course wasn't even on the list...

    Neither was btw Dallas. One can be of many opinions on the series but it
    was legendary and should be on the list...

    Dallas? I watched it when I was younger but that's another show I couldn't sit through for a minute today. Tastes sure do change as one ages and matures. Maybe not in your case though? ;)


    Why change excellent taste...



    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I don't know if I could sit through it today though.

    Top 100? Surely not.

    For what? SATC or Six Feet Under?



    SATC

    Yes. Falk was great.

    I saw Peter Falk and his his much younger wife in a restaurant called Dan Tana's in Los Angeles about 35 years ago! I was with my father. Falk looked exactly the same as he did on tv.


    Poor guy. I hope he didn't wear the same trench coat too.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Sep 27 16:22:54 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 5:50:52 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 1:56:20 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows though(which is different than detective shows.)

    I didn't like it either for some of the same reason I didn't like "Hill Street Blues." Squad rooms full of overlapping dialogue and half-eaten sandwiches. They tried a little too hard to feel authentic and gritty. But most of all, these weren't
    characters I could care about.

    Exactly! I hated the dialogue.

    Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Twilight Zone--both great.
    Yep. Great.
    Dexter. Good show but it got tiresome towards the end.

    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.
    Yes, except they went on too many years and weren't so funny by the end.

    Like most shows but both of those shows were so well-done IMO and stand the test of time.

    I despised Johnny Carson. I don't get his appeal at all.
    He was kind of a knob, wasn't he? I thought he was OK when I was growing up, but when I eventually saw earlier "Tonight Show" eps with Jack Paar, he made Carson look like a lightweight.

    Kind of? He was supposed to be a real arsehole too. I never saw his appeal or his show's appeal. Give me almost any talk show host to watch over Carson, i.e. Conan, Letterman, Leno, Rivers, Kimmel, etc.

    I've seen snippets of the Jack Paar shows but that's it. My parents liked him though along with Ed Sullivan.

    I watched My So Called Life and The Wonder Years back in the day. The Wonder Years in particular was well-done.

    Six Feet Under--I've already commented about it. Fantastic show.
    It was. And final ep was fantastic. Alan Ball of course had to insert his signature gay storylines, but not enough to wreck the quality.

    :) Yes, those gay storylines were a little much. My least favorite storyline on Six Feet Under was the David Fisher/Keith Charles one. I much preferred the other storylines.

    Game of Thrones, The Wire, Breaking Bad--I've never watched a minute of any of them despite the furor.
    It's hard to imagine you watching any of them. :) I tired of "Game of Thrones" after a couple seasons. "The Wire" and "Breaking Bad" were first rate IMO.

    I think one day I'll try watching Breaking Bad. So many people I know love it.

    Mad Men--good at first but went downhill.
    Yes, it sagged in the last season--and maybe before that. I thought the first 3-4 seasons were brilliant.

    It was a great and original concept for a show.

    The X-Files--one of my all time favorite shows.
    Umm.....

    Oh, you're one of "those", huh? People either love or hate The X-Files. I got into it late in the game but really enjoyed it.

    All in the Family. Superb comedy. It wouldn't last two seconds on the air today though(sadly.)
    Norman Lear tried to revive it in a modern setting with Woody Harrelson a few years ago. It was terrible--partly due to an inferior cast and writing; mostly because it was meant for an earlier era. Setting it in the 2020s was weird and jarring.

    I never saw the modern one. I can't imagine anybody could ever duplicate that show successfully. It was perfect for the time, the cast was ideal, etc.

    Chernobyl was truly excellent. Everybody should watch it.
    Well damn it, I'm not going to.

    Why?

    Columbo--terrific.

    In its original run, yes. Episodes from the 1980s-90s don't count.

    Yes, I mean the original run.

    Hannibal--I tried to watch it but couldn't get into it. Don't like the lead actor.

    Curb Your Enthusiasm and Seinfeld. I love them both but I know people either love them or hate them.
    Yes, we discussed "Seinfeld" at length once. I hate it. We didn't discuss "Curb Your Enthusiasm." I hate that too.

    :)

    I Love Lucy. Hard to go wrong with that show.
    Yep, that and "The Honeymooners" are evergreen.

    The Andy Griffith show was golden too.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Sep 27 16:40:06 2023
    On 9/27/23 3:33 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.
    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.
    I don't even remember a boss.

    Me, too.

    There was the high school chemistry teacher (main character) and his
    unlikely partner/runner.

    --
    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The big print gives it to you; the small print takes it away."

    Andy, from Amos 'n' Andy, on legal contracts... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 16:37:41 2023
    On 9/27/23 2:47 PM, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.56:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would
    stand up today?


    I think its place at 100 is rewarded. Could be higher too.

    Certainly legendary at the time. Maybe wouldn't fit modern taste? But
    it was still great.
    It paled when one compared it to its source concept: American Graffiti.

    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows
    though(which is different than detective shows.)


    Annoyed me too, mainly because the lead was Dennis Franz which was my
    least liked character from Hill Street Blues, my all-time favourite
    series. It was like much worse version of HSB.
    Never saw it.

    Hill Street Blues of course wasn't even on the list...
    Ditto.

    Neither was btw Dallas. One can be of many opinions on the series but
    it was legendary and should be on the list.
    Ditto.


    Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Twilight Zone--both great.


    Yes.
    Agreed.

    Dexter. Good show but it got tiresome towards the end.

    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.


    Ok-ish. Frasier shouldn't be on the list. At least very high.
    Never saw any of them.

    I despised Johnny Carson. I don't get his appeal at all.


    Never saw it.

    He was the ultimate unofficial extension of the Rat Pack model.

    Did not watch the show, however.


    I watched My So Called Life and The Wonder Years back in the day. The
    Wonder Years in particular was well-done.


    I think they showed "The Wonder Years" here. Made no impression at all.
    Never saw it.

    Six Feet Under--I've already commented about it. Fantastic show.
    Did not see it.

    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I
    don't know if I could sit through it today though.


    Top 100? Surely not.
    Never saw it.

    ER--LOL, I can't believe I watched that dreck. I could never watch it
    today.

    Game of Thrones, The Wire, Breaking Bad--I've never watched a minute
    of any of them despite the furor.


    I watched some of Breaking Bad. Good cinematography, passable series.
    Big hype.
    Saw the first few, but lost interest because I could not believe that
    the main character would ever have anything to do, at all, with his
    principal sales guy.

    I think has one of the top spots. But imo it's not something one
    thinks about longingly few years from now. So it shouldn't be on the
    list at all.
    Never saw the rest.

    Mad Men--good at first but went downhill.
    Never saw it.

    The X-Files--one of my all time favorite shows.


    Good. Not sure if top 100 though, there was lots of filler material
    there.

    Dana Scully was a walking encyclopedia. Did it empower you?
    Sometimes OK.

    All in the Family. Superb comedy. It wouldn't last two seconds on the
    air today though(sadly.)


    Very funny & memorable. Definitely in top 100.

    Saw it regularly, as a right of passage.

    It really was one of the last cultural touchstones, when you could be reasonably assured that *everyone* you knew also saw it, and on the same
    night, making an instant topic of conversation.

    But it was cartoonish as hell.


    Chernobyl was truly excellent. Everybody should watch it.

    Columbo--terrific.


    Yes. Falk was great.
    Saw neither.

    Hannibal--I tried to watch it but couldn't get into it. Don't like
    the lead actor.
    Never saw it.

    Curb Your Enthusiasm
    Never saw it.
    and Seinfeld. I love them both but I know people either love them or
    hate them.
    Watched it and liked the laughs.


    Seinfeld was watchable. Must be a US thing, wasn't such a huge hit here.

    I Love Lucy. Hard to go wrong with that show.

    The era of the female top banana with her hubby as straight man.

    Too much like the Honeymooners, which I did not like, either, and so
    seldom watched.

    Now, Amos 'n' Andy was funnier than Honeymooners or Lucy.

    The confident explanation by the Kingfish  that the person who was
    charged, or alleged to have done something, in a legal action was the "allegatee", while the party making the claim, or alleging the fact, was
    the "allegator"...




    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Shit <-----------------------------------------------------> Shinola
    "Which is which?" --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 27 16:59:24 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 7:19:06 PM UTC-4, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 2.04:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 5:47:30 PM UTC-4, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.56:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    I think its place at 100 is rewarded. Could be higher too.

    Certainly legendary at the time. Maybe wouldn't fit modern taste? But it >> was still great.

    It was. I had a Fonzie t-shirt! :)

    Pics or it didn't happen! :))

    I wish I still had it. I don't know where it ended up.


    Hill Street Blues of course wasn't even on the list...

    Neither was btw Dallas. One can be of many opinions on the series but it >> was legendary and should be on the list...

    Dallas? I watched it when I was younger but that's another show I couldn't sit through for a minute today. Tastes sure do change as one ages and matures. Maybe not in your case though? ;)

    Why change excellent taste...

    :)


    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I don't know if I could sit through it today though.

    Top 100? Surely not.

    For what? SATC or Six Feet Under?


    SATC

    It was iconic in certain ways. No doubt about it.

    Yes. Falk was great.

    I saw Peter Falk and his his much younger wife in a restaurant called Dan Tana's in Los Angeles about 35 years ago! I was with my father. Falk looked exactly the same as he did on tv.

    Poor guy. I hope he didn't wear the same trench coat too.

    I can't remember what he was wearing but he looked a little rumpled like his Columbo character. I recognized him instantly before my dad did!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 03:41:40 2023
    On Wednesday, 27 September 2023 at 21:56:20 UTC+1, Court_1 wrote:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows though(which is different than detective shows.)

    Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Twilight Zone--both great.

    Dexter. Good show but it got tiresome towards the end.

    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.

    I despised Johnny Carson. I don't get his appeal at all.

    I watched My So Called Life and The Wonder Years back in the day. The Wonder Years in particular was well-done.

    Six Feet Under--I've already commented about it. Fantastic show.

    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I don't know if I could sit through it today though.

    ER--LOL, I can't believe I watched that dreck. I could never watch it today.

    Game of Thrones, The Wire, Breaking Bad--I've never watched a minute of any of them despite the furor.

    Mad Men--good at first but went downhill.

    The X-Files--one of my all time favorite shows.

    All in the Family. Superb comedy. It wouldn't last two seconds on the air today though(sadly.)

    Chernobyl was truly excellent. Everybody should watch it.

    Columbo--terrific.

    Hannibal--I tried to watch it but couldn't get into it. Don't like the lead actor.

    Curb Your Enthusiasm and Seinfeld. I love them both but I know people either love them or hate them.

    I Love Lucy. Hard to go wrong with that show.

    Chernobyl was very good but it's a 3 part film, it's not a TV series.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 07:43:40 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:48:25 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.33:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:

    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.

    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.

    I don't even remember a boss.
    I meant him:

    https://breakingbad.fandom.com/wiki/Gustavo_Fring

    Fring was a character who didn't show up until the third season IIRC. So it appears you tuned in well into the series' run, watched a few episodes, and judged it on that basis. Hmm...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Sep 28 07:48:47 2023
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 4:40:10 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:33 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.
    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.

    I don't even remember a boss.

    Me, too.

    There was the high school chemistry teacher (main character) and his unlikely partner/runner.

    He clarified and it was a later character. It appears neither of you guys saw how the series started. Sometimes that isn't important. In this case, it is.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 18:19:06 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 17.48:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 4:40:10 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:33 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.
    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.

    I don't even remember a boss.

    Me, too.

    There was the high school chemistry teacher (main character) and his
    unlikely partner/runner.

    He clarified and it was a later character. It appears neither of you guys saw how the series started. Sometimes that isn't important. In this case, it is.


    No worries... watched it with a lady friend and she put me up to speed
    what had happened. Ummm...kinda. :))

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 09:17:37 2023
    On Thursday, September 28, 2023 at 8:19:13 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 17.48:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 4:40:10 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:33 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.
    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly >>>> what kept me watching a few episodes.

    I don't even remember a boss.

    Me, too.

    There was the high school chemistry teacher (main character) and his
    unlikely partner/runner.

    He clarified and it was a later character. It appears neither of you guys saw how the series started. Sometimes that isn't important. In this case, it is.

    No worries... watched it with a lady friend and she put me up to speed
    what had happened. Ummm...kinda. :))

    That is helpful....but of course not the same as watching events and character changes transpire in "real time" over multiple seasons. I've tuned into shows mid-series as well, and sometimes felt similarly put-off and not inclined to watch more, so I get
    that. IMO it just isn't fair to rate a series as "hyped" based on what amounts to a glimpse of the series run grabbed from the middle.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 11:14:16 2023
    On Thursday, 28 September 2023 at 00:59:26 UTC+1, Court_1 wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 7:19:06 PM UTC-4, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 2.04:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 5:47:30 PM UTC-4, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.56:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    I think its place at 100 is rewarded. Could be higher too.

    Certainly legendary at the time. Maybe wouldn't fit modern taste? But it
    was still great.

    It was. I had a Fonzie t-shirt! :)

    Pics or it didn't happen! :))
    I wish I still had it. I don't know where it ended up.
    Hill Street Blues of course wasn't even on the list...

    Neither was btw Dallas. One can be of many opinions on the series but it
    was legendary and should be on the list...

    Dallas? I watched it when I was younger but that's another show I couldn't sit through for a minute today. Tastes sure do change as one ages and matures. Maybe not in your case though? ;)

    Why change excellent taste...
    :)

    Sex and the City. Yes, I admit I watched it and used to enjoy it. I don't know if I could sit through it today though.

    Top 100? Surely not.

    For what? SATC or Six Feet Under?


    SATC
    It was iconic in certain ways. No doubt about it.

    it was iconic in showing women shouldn't try to be men!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 28 11:16:33 2023
    On Thursday, 28 September 2023 at 00:04:29 UTC+1, Court_1 wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 5:47:30 PM UTC-4, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 23.56:
    On Tuesday, September 26, 2023 at 6:01:56 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows

    Some comments about the list.

    Happy Days was good back in the day but I'm not sure how it would stand up today?

    I think its place at 100 is rewarded. Could be higher too.

    Certainly legendary at the time. Maybe wouldn't fit modern taste? But it was still great.
    It was. I had a Fonzie t-shirt! :)
    NYPD Blue annoyed me. I don't like most cop-centered shows though(which is different than detective shows.)

    Annoyed me too, mainly because the lead was Dennis Franz which was my least liked character from Hill Street Blues, my all-time favourite series. It was like much worse version of HSB.
    I couldn't stand Dennis Franz either. He looked like a greaseball and acted like he was the only actor to play a cop before.

    I didn't like Hill Street Blues either. I just hate the cop mentality centered shows.
    Hill Street Blues of course wasn't even on the list...

    Neither was btw Dallas. One can be of many opinions on the series but it was legendary and should be on the list...

    Dallas? I watched it when I was younger but that's another show I couldn't sit through for a minute today. Tastes sure do change as one ages and matures. Maybe not in your case though? ;)
    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.

    Ok-ish. Frasier shouldn't be on the list. At least very high.
    Really? I think it should be on the list for sure. I found it funny, well-written, etc., and I find that it stands up well. I caught an episode a few weeks ago as I was flipping through the channels and started watching it. It cracked me up.

    yes it should be on the list but it good Cheers so far ahead of it, yes yes know all you career office types reckon Frasier is better but that cos you never understood Cheers.
    My tip is should definitely watch Breaking Bad, as Gracchus says you need to take the trouble to watch a few seasons of it, pref all 8 of them :D it the USA TV series have ever seen the whole series, out partying too much usually, only saw 80% of the X-
    Files, it that good. Liked Hill St Blues so why on earth that not on the list but NYPD Blue is nuts.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Thu Sep 28 11:17:12 2023
    On 9/28/23 7:48 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 4:40:10 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:33 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.
    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.
    I don't even remember a boss.
    Me, too.
    There was the high school chemistry teacher (main character) and his
    unlikely partner/runner.
    He clarified and it was a later character. It appears neither of you guys saw how the series started.
    I did. That was all that I saw. I believe I may have made it to episode
    5 or 6.

    The guy I'm objecting to was I believe a former student of his. Up to
    the point I quit watching, I can see no reason that the teacher would
    have anything to do, at all, with the former student, least of all in a risk-taking illegal venture.

    I gave up after the former student showed up and I could see this
    disconnect.

    Sometimes that isn't important. In this case, it is.

    What did you make of the Sopranos?

    I never connected with it, either. Not sure why.



    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Favorite tattoo:

    BORN TOULOUSE


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Thu Sep 28 11:18:40 2023
    On Thursday, 28 September 2023 at 17:17:39 UTC+1, Gracchus wrote:
    On Thursday, September 28, 2023 at 8:19:13 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 17.48:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 4:40:10 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:33 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love
    Jerry Seinfeld.
    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly >>>> what kept me watching a few episodes.

    I don't even remember a boss.

    Me, too.

    There was the high school chemistry teacher (main character) and his
    unlikely partner/runner.

    He clarified and it was a later character. It appears neither of you guys saw how the series started. Sometimes that isn't important. In this case, it is.

    No worries... watched it with a lady friend and she put me up to speed what had happened. Ummm...kinda. :))
    That is helpful....but of course not the same as watching events and character changes transpire in "real time" over multiple seasons. I've tuned into shows mid-series as well, and sometimes felt similarly put-off and not inclined to watch more, so I
    get that. IMO it just isn't fair to rate a series as "hyped" based on what amounts to a glimpse of the series run grabbed from the middle.

    well it usually is eg. saw a bit of the Wire and got bored, but not case with Breaking Bad. Fring was a great bad guy too, as well as Mr.Doorbell :D

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Sep 28 12:30:00 2023
    On Thursday, September 28, 2023 at 11:17:16 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/28/23 7:48 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 4:40:10 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:33 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love Jerry
    Seinfeld.
    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly >>>> what kept me watching a few episodes.
    I don't even remember a boss.
    Me, too.
    There was the high school chemistry teacher (main character) and his
    unlikely partner/runner.
    He clarified and it was a later character. It appears neither of you guys saw how the series started.
    I did. That was all that I saw. I believe I may have made it to episode
    5 or 6.

    The guy I'm objecting to was I believe a former student of his. Up to
    the point I quit watching, I can see no reason that the teacher would
    have anything to do, at all, with the former student, least of all in a risk-taking illegal venture.

    I saw very good reasons. WW was a high school chemistry teacher and family man. He had no previous associations with manufacturers, sellers, or users of illegal drugs, nor the means to connect with them. The first episode established that he literally "
    had no time" in his life to cultivate those connections if he was to achieve his initial goal of generating quick money for his family. His former student Jesse bridged this problem for him. Neither one of them were looking for a long-term association.

    I gave up after the former student showed up and I could see this disconnect.

    Sometimes that isn't important. In this case, it is.

    What did you make of the Sopranos?

    I never connected with it, either. Not sure why.

    I loved "The Sopranos" through much of its run. It was a very different show than "Breaking Bad." Most characters in the first show were married to "the life" they were born into or chose while still young. You virtually had to root for the "less bad"
    characters in order to stay engaged with the show. BB was as much a character study of its protagonist/antihero as it was a plot-driven show.

    Too bad you didn't like either, but "different strokes." Same as my distaste for "Deadwood" despite loving westerns in general.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Thu Sep 28 12:35:44 2023
    On Thursday, September 28, 2023 at 11:18:42 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 28 September 2023 at 17:17:39 UTC+1, Gracchus wrote:
    On Thursday, September 28, 2023 at 8:19:13 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 17.48:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 4:40:10 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 3:33 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:34 PM UTC-7, TT wrote: >>>> Gracchus kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 1.25:
    If the main character doesn't pull you into the story within a few episodes, it's not likely to happen. Different shows resonate with different people. I couldn't talk you into liking "Breaking Bad" any more than Court 1 could make me love
    Jerry Seinfeld.
    That's about it. His boss was somewhat interesting, and that's mainly
    what kept me watching a few episodes.

    I don't even remember a boss.

    Me, too.

    There was the high school chemistry teacher (main character) and his >> unlikely partner/runner.

    He clarified and it was a later character. It appears neither of you guys saw how the series started. Sometimes that isn't important. In this case, it is.

    No worries... watched it with a lady friend and she put me up to speed what had happened. Ummm...kinda. :))

    That is helpful....but of course not the same as watching events and character changes transpire in "real time" over multiple seasons. I've tuned into shows mid-series as well, and sometimes felt similarly put-off and not inclined to watch more, so I
    get that. IMO it just isn't fair to rate a series as "hyped" based on what amounts to a glimpse of the series run grabbed from the middle.

    well it usually is eg. saw a bit of the Wire and got bored, but not case with Breaking Bad. Fring was a great bad guy too, as well as Mr.Doorbell :D

    Yeah, Fring was an awesome and worthy foil for WW. I think "The Wire" was great too IMO. Different show, though, more of a slow-burn and often damn depressing. Top-notch writing and acting. I liked Simon's other show, "The Deuce" as well.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 29 00:20:43 2023
    The Iceberg kirjoitti 28.9.2023 klo 21.16:
    Liked Hill St Blues so why on earth that not on the list but NYPD Blue is nuts.

    Agreed...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From MBDunc@21:1/5 to All on Sat Sep 30 06:20:36 2023
    Pretty obvious list.

    But some surprises: Simpson #2 - this has superb impact to Culture (bigger than Friends?) but #2?
    then Fleabag #12!!! What a nice surprise. Especially the 1st season is superb.

    My own list would start with Futurama as #1.

    .mikko

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?Pelle_Svansl=c3=b6s?=@21:1/5 to MBDunc on Sat Sep 30 16:33:03 2023
    On 30.9.2023 16.20, MBDunc wrote:
    Pretty obvious list.

    But some surprises: Simpson #2 - this has superb impact to Culture (bigger than Friends?) but #2?

    At some point the Simpsons went lame. I don't know why. They were great
    for 5-10 years or so.

    then Fleabag #12!!! What a nice surprise. Especially the 1st season is superb.

    My own list would start with Futurama as #1.
    I would put it in the top 2 with GoT.

    --
    "And off they went, from here to there,
    The bear, the bear, and the maiden fair"
    -- Traditional

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From grif@21:1/5 to grif on Mon Oct 2 16:36:58 2023
    On 27/09/2023 21:48, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 21:39, Court_1 wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:42 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it. >>>>>>> 🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...

    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Six Feet Under

    You should watch it. It's an excellent show.  One of my faves for sure.


    The Americans

    It was fantastic for the first four seasons and then it became ridiculous for the last two seasons and I stopped watching.
    Curb Your Enthusiasm

    So funny.

    Twin Peaks

    The original Twin Peaks tv series was fun.

    Yeah, I've seen the movie but never got around to watching the show.

    I'm definitely struggling with season 2 after its ninth episode. https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to grif on Mon Oct 2 17:58:59 2023
    On 10/2/23 8:36 AM, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 21:48, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 21:39, Court_1 wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:42 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days
    (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage.
    All of it.
    🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of
    "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...

    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of
    shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Six Feet Under

    You should watch it. It's an excellent show.  One of my faves for sure. >>>

    The Americans

    It was fantastic for the first four seasons and then it became
    ridiculous for the last two seasons and I stopped watching.
    Curb Your Enthusiasm

    So funny.

    Twin Peaks

    The original Twin Peaks tv series was fun.

    Yeah, I've seen the movie but never got around to watching the show.

    I'm definitely struggling with season 2 after its ninth episode. https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch,
    and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I
    kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed
    it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "It was public knowledge that Sawfish was a loner with strong
    misanthropic tendencies: it was rare for him to even say a word to his dog." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Mon Oct 2 22:24:42 2023
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch,
    and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I
    kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed
    it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.

    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made the
    quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Tue Oct 3 07:18:26 2023
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch,
    and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I
    kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed
    it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made the
    quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.

    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience,
    and having them watch it, absorb it.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral, non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great master
    of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my
    head, The Straight Story.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The difference between a democracy and a dictatorship is that in a democracy you vote first and take orders later; in a dictatorship you don’t have to waste your time voting."

    --Charles Bukowski ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Tue Oct 3 08:27:13 2023
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch,
    and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I
    kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed
    it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made
    the quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.

    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience,
    and having them watch it, absorb it.

    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I guess that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral, non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great master
    of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my
    head, The Straight Story.

    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he is "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a a particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the
    indie film "Lost in Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.

    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved into "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in 2016 (?). Couldn't get through the first episode because I no longer have patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit through
    long scenes of someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running machinery in the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive" are master works IMO. Few directors tap into the language of the unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying, "see, I can paint by numbers too." Might as well have been a
    Ron Howard project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds worthwhile.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From grif@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Tue Oct 3 17:18:36 2023
    On 03/10/2023 01:58, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 8:36 AM, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 21:48, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 21:39, Court_1 wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 3:29:42 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    On 27/09/2023 17:37, Sawfish wrote:
    On 9/27/23 9:08 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 9:01:37 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>>> On 9/27/23 3:25 AM, grif wrote:
    On 26/09/2023 23:18, TT wrote:
    grif kirjoitti 27.9.2023 klo 1.01:
    https://www.ign.com/articles/best-tv-shows
    Ok. Buffy the vampire slayer (16) is better than Happy Days (100). Sure.

    Bullshit list with contemporary bias. Modern TV is garbage. All of it.
    🙄

    Deadwood?
    It distinguished itself by setting the record for most uses of "cocksucker" in one season, didn't it?

    Fuckin' A...

    Looking at that list, and reading the synopses, there are a lot of shows that look like they might catch my fancy if I had time:

    Six Feet Under

    You should watch it. It's an excellent show.  One of my faves for sure. >>>>

    The Americans

    It was fantastic for the first four seasons and then it became ridiculous for the last two seasons and I stopped watching.
    Curb Your Enthusiasm

    So funny.

    Twin Peaks

    The original Twin Peaks tv series was fun.

    Yeah, I've seen the movie but never got around to watching the show.

    I'm definitely struggling with season 2 after its ninth episode.
    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two

    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch, and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of unsuspecting people were going to find out about
    Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.



    https://i.imgur.com/svKGAsb.png

    The actress who plays Shelly is extremely attractive. Lynch must have put a specific scene in one of the episodes just so he could kiss her.

    I saw "Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me" ages ago. I liked it at the time but was aware that it wasn't as well received as the show. I hadn't seen the series back then so wasn't really sure why there was negativity for the film. Coming into the show, I
    might have been expecting it to be more like the film. What I was not expecting was it to be a campy soap opera in large parts. They tried for a lot more humour than I was expecting, so much so that I wondered if "Twin Peaks" influenced "Northern
    Exposure".

    I would have preferred the show to be more focused on the Lara Palmer case, but they probably didn't have enough material. I don't know why they stretched it out to 22 episodes for season 2. I just didn't really care for the other soap opera storylines
    as I'm not really into soaps in general. But the last episode of season 2 was one of the best episodes for sure. It felt really fucked up and this was more of what I was expecting from the series. Overall, I have mixed feelings, but I think its influence
    is undeniable. https://www.pastemagazine.com/games/twin-peaks/9-games-to-play-if-you-loved-twin-peaks

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 3 20:22:44 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 18.27:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch, >>>> and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I
    kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed >>>> it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made
    the quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.

    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience,
    and having them watch it, absorb it.

    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I guess that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral,
    non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great master
    of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my
    head, The Straight Story.

    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he is "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a a particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the
    indie film "Lost in Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.

    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved into "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in 2016 (?). Couldn't get through the first episode because I no longer have patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit
    through long scenes of someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running machinery in the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive" are master works IMO. Few directors tap into the language of the unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying, "see, I can paint by numbers too." Might as well have been a
    Ron Howard project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds worthwhile.


    Incorrect.

    8 The Straight Story (1999)
    7 Blue Velvet (1986)
    7 Lost Highway (1997)
    7 The Elephant Man (1980)

    6 Mulholland Drive (2001)
    6 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)

    5 Dune
    4 Wild at Heart (1990)
    4 Eraserhead (1977)
    3 Inland Empire (2006)

    I would say that top 4 are "worthwhile". Maybe next two as well.

    But yes, I don't like pseudo-intellectual pretentious nonsense. If it
    has to be artistic then I often prefer hard core... say Bela Tarr... or
    even better films where art serves the story... such as 2001, Repulsion
    etc. With Lynch his "art" feels like serving his own ambitions only,
    sort of like many of Tarkovsky's films (who made quite gorgeous films
    really).

    I never got into Twin Peaks TV series... watched a bit at the time but I couldn't care less who killed Laura Palmer, while everyone else was
    talking about it endlessly.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 3 10:46:22 2023
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 10:22:47 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 18.27:

    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved into "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in 2016 (?). Couldn't get through the first episode because I no longer have patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit
    through long scenes of someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running machinery in the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive" are master works IMO. Few directors tap into the language of the unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying, "see, I can paint by numbers too." Might as well have been a
    Ron Howard project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds worthwhile.

    Incorrect.

    My "corrections" follow... :)

    8 The Straight Story (1999) [4]*
    7 Blue Velvet (1986) [9]*
    7 Lost Highway (1997) [7]*
    7 The Elephant Man (1980) [7]*

    6 Mulholland Drive (2001) [10]*
    6 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992) [never saw it]*

    5 Dune [3]*
    4 Wild at Heart (1990) [6]*
    4 Eraserhead (1977) [5]*
    3 Inland Empire (2006) [3]*

    I would say that top 4 are "worthwhile". Maybe next two as well.

    But yes, I don't like pseudo-intellectual pretentious nonsense. If it
    has to be artistic then I often prefer hard core... say Bela Tarr... or
    even better films where art serves the story... such as 2001, Repulsion
    etc. With Lynch his "art" feels like serving his own ambitions only,
    sort of like many of Tarkovsky's films (who made quite gorgeous films really).


    I never got into Twin Peaks TV series... watched a bit at the time but I couldn't care less who killed Laura Palmer, while everyone else was
    talking about it endlessly.

    IIRC, Lynch considered the Laura Palmer murder mystery the least of it. He was surprised at the audience reaction when the first season ended with no "reveal." I thought the series was meant to be no more than fun, spoofing "Peyton Place" style soap
    opera in Lynchian fashion. I enjoyed the first season, quickly got sick of the second because it felt like deliberate self-sabotage.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Tue Oct 3 11:07:54 2023
    On 10/3/23 8:27 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch, >>>> and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I
    kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed >>>> it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made
    the quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.
    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience,
    and having them watch it, absorb it.
    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I guess that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral,
    non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great master
    of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my
    head, The Straight Story.
    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he is "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a a particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the
    indie film "Lost in Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.

    Fine. Then let's agree on his best stuff. To show my good intent, I'll
    roll over and show my belly first:

    Mulholland Drive
    ...
    ...
    Blue Velvet -- and he was goddamn lucky to have Hopper in there, huh?

    That's about it. I personally liked Dune ("flying fat man", indeed...),
    it was the reliable Lynch freakshow.

    For the others, you got a nekkid Patricia Arquette, and not a lot *over
    and above* dwarves and apples.

    I'd have to see Elephant Man again to judge what he actually achieved
    with it--but the story is incredibly repugnant--and in a way, denatured repugnance forms a good deal of his later work.



    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved into "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in 2016 (?). Couldn't get through the first episode because I no longer have patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit
    through long scenes of someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running machinery in the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive" are master works IMO.

    The former is quite good, but the latter in mental dynamite if you are
    the sort who likes to unraveling the essence from obscure hints.

    I am, and so this is one of my favorite movies of all time. Probably
    have seen it 5 times and will see it again.

    Few directors tap into the language of the unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.
    I think he does tap into a part if the unconscious, but that much of it
    is simply poking around for effect. It might be that Elephant Man is an
    attempt to extent the effect to an entire theme.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying, "see, I can paint by numbers too." Might as well have been a
    Ron Howard project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds worthwhile.

    It's not a memorable film, except for one scene. Where the character
    played by Farnsworth is sitting around that campfire with those young
    college types, and someone asks him what the worst thing about being old
    is, and he answers:

    "Remembering being young."

    At 76, you do not want to think about that one too long, I assure you...



    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "He who talks the talk must also walk the walk."

    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Tue Oct 3 11:16:24 2023
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 11:08:00 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/3/23 8:27 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch, >>>> and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I >>>> kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed >>>> it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made
    the quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.
    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience,
    and having them watch it, absorb it.
    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I guess that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral,
    non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great master >> of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my
    head, The Straight Story.
    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he is "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a a particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the
    indie film "Lost in Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.
    Fine. Then let's agree on his best stuff. To show my good intent, I'll
    roll over and show my belly first:

    Mulholland Drive
    ...
    ...
    Blue Velvet -- and he was goddamn lucky to have Hopper in there, huh?

    That's about it. I personally liked Dune ("flying fat man", indeed...),
    it was the reliable Lynch freakshow.

    For the others, you got a nekkid Patricia Arquette, and not a lot *over
    and above* dwarves and apples.

    I'd have to see Elephant Man again to judge what he actually achieved
    with it--but the story is incredibly repugnant--and in a way, denatured repugnance forms a good deal of his later work.

    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved into "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in 2016 (?). Couldn't get through the first episode because I no longer have patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit
    through long scenes of someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running machinery in the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive" are master works IMO.
    The former is quite good, but the latter in mental dynamite if you are
    the sort who likes to unraveling the essence from obscure hints.

    I am, and so this is one of my favorite movies of all time. Probably
    have seen it 5 times and will see it again.
    Few directors tap into the language of the unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.
    I think he does tap into a part if the unconscious, but that much of it
    is simply poking around for effect. It might be that Elephant Man is an attempt to extent the effect to an entire theme.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying, "see, I can paint by numbers too." Might as well have been a
    Ron Howard project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds worthwhile.

    It's not a memorable film, except for one scene. Where the character
    played by Farnsworth is sitting around that campfire with those young college types, and someone asks him what the worst thing about being old
    is, and he answers:

    "Remembering being young."

    At 76, you do not want to think about that one too long, I assure you...

    LOL. It is a great line, for sure. I didn't remember that.

    Looking at your comments, it seems we aren't at odds so much on his films. Two outstanding ones, a number of somewhat interesting ones, and some throwaways. Other than that, I liked half of "Twin Peaks" and you didn't like it much at all.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 3 11:19:35 2023
    On 10/3/23 10:22 AM, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 18.27:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two



    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with
    Lynch,
    and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I
    kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch
    viewed
    it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive
    actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but
    cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it
    became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the
    remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made the quality
    very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about.
    Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to
    television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.

    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience,
    and having them watch it, absorb it.

    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I guess
    that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral,
    non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great
    master
    of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my
    head, The Straight Story.

    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he is
    "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a a
    particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING
    Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the indie film "Lost in
    Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.

    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved into
    "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in 2016 (?).
    Couldn't get through the first episode because I no longer have
    patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit through long scenes of
    someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running machinery in
    the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive"
    are master works IMO. Few directors tap into the language of the
    unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary
    directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average
    story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying, "see,
    I can paint by numbers too."  Might as well have been a Ron Howard
    project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds worthwhile.


    Incorrect.

    8 The Straight Story (1999)
    7 Blue Velvet (1986)
    7 Lost Highway (1997)
    7 The Elephant Man (1980)

    6 Mulholland Drive (2001)
    6 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)

    5 Dune
    4 Wild at Heart (1990)
    4 Eraserhead (1977)
    3 Inland Empire (2006)

    I would say that top 4 are "worthwhile". Maybe next two as well.
    Curious about why you liked Lost Highway. I *did* like it (saw it maybe
    three times--mostly to eyeball the nude Arquette), but I do not expect
    others to like it.

    But yes, I don't like pseudo-intellectual pretentious nonsense. If it
    has to be artistic then I often prefer hard core... say Bela Tarr...
    I'm unfamiliar with this person...
    or even better films where art serves the story... such as 2001,

    I think this has got to be right up there with the most over-rated films
    of all time. Only the apes and the monolith, and Dave killing HAL are worthwhile, in my opinion. Both of these are good.

    Huh. You know, in a way Lynch and Kubrick were similar in that each had
    an intuitive feeling for the "weird" impression that can be made on an audience, and neither was in complete control. Lynch is constantly
    amused by this, but I don't see where Kubrick had a single funny bone in
    his body.

    Lessee...so far as control vs organic development, on the control end is Hitchcock (although I could be convinced by other examples) and at the
    other end, maybe Cimino.

    Certainly there are less prominent guys, but I may not know them off the
    top of my head.

    Repulsion
    Now you're talking, bro!
    etc. With Lynch his "art" feels like serving his own ambitions only,
    sort of like many of Tarkovsky's films (who made quite gorgeous films really).
    Maybe only saw Solaris, which has stuck with me.

    I never got into Twin Peaks TV series... watched a bit at the time but
    I couldn't care less who killed Laura Palmer, while everyone else was
    talking about it endlessly.
    "Donuts, donuts, donuts..."


    --
    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The Ayatolla of Rock and Rolla!" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 3 21:57:50 2023
    Sawfish kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 21.19:
    On 10/3/23 10:22 AM, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 18.27:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with
    Lynch,
    and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I >>>>>> kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch
    viewed
    it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive
    actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but
    cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it
    became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the
    remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made the quality
    very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about.
    Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to
    television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.

    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience,
    and having them watch it, absorb it.

    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I guess
    that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral,
    non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great
    master
    of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my
    head, The Straight Story.

    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he is
    "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a a
    particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING
    Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the indie film "Lost in
    Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.

    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved into
    "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in 2016 (?).
    Couldn't get through the first episode because I no longer have
    patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit through long scenes of
    someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running machinery in
    the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive"
    are master works IMO. Few directors tap into the language of the
    unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary
    directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average
    story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying, "see,
    I can paint by numbers too."  Might as well have been a Ron Howard
    project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds worthwhile.


    Incorrect.

    8 The Straight Story (1999)
    7 Blue Velvet (1986)
    7 Lost Highway (1997)
    7 The Elephant Man (1980)

    6 Mulholland Drive (2001)
    6 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)

    5 Dune
    4 Wild at Heart (1990)
    4 Eraserhead (1977)
    3 Inland Empire (2006)

    I would say that top 4 are "worthwhile". Maybe next two as well.
    Curious about why you liked Lost Highway. I *did* like it (saw it maybe
    three times--mostly to eyeball the nude Arquette), but I do not expect
    others to like it.

    This is what I have previously written about Lost Highway...

    Lost Highway (1997)
    ...Really good and atmospheric Lynch film. The story is rather weird
    about a man who wakes up as another man (or same man) and their fates
    are somehow connected - I have to admit I did not understand the plot
    fully... and after some consideration I came to conclusion that the
    story actually didn't make sense in end, things didn't really tie up
    together. Anyway it held my interest and sure got me thinking and
    guessing what's happening & was very well filmed and atmospheric... 7/10

    Huh. You know, in a way Lynch and Kubrick were similar in that each had
    an intuitive feeling for the "weird" impression that can be made on an audience, and neither was in complete control. Lynch is constantly
    amused by this, but I don't see where Kubrick had a single funny bone in
    his body.
    Not quite sure what you mean here.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Tue Oct 3 12:07:51 2023
    On 10/3/23 11:16 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 11:08:00 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/3/23 8:27 AM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with Lynch, >>>>>> and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I >>>>>> kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch viewed >>>>>> it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made
    the quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to last.
    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience,
    and having them watch it, absorb it.
    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I guess that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral,
    non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great master >>>> of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my
    head, The Straight Story.
    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he is "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a a particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the
    indie film "Lost in Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.
    Fine. Then let's agree on his best stuff. To show my good intent, I'll
    roll over and show my belly first:

    Mulholland Drive
    ...
    ...
    Blue Velvet -- and he was goddamn lucky to have Hopper in there, huh?

    That's about it. I personally liked Dune ("flying fat man", indeed...),
    it was the reliable Lynch freakshow.

    For the others, you got a nekkid Patricia Arquette, and not a lot *over
    and above* dwarves and apples.

    I'd have to see Elephant Man again to judge what he actually achieved
    with it--but the story is incredibly repugnant--and in a way, denatured
    repugnance forms a good deal of his later work.
    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved into "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in 2016 (?). Couldn't get through the first episode because I no longer have patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit
    through long scenes of someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running machinery in the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive" are master works IMO.
    The former is quite good, but the latter in mental dynamite if you are
    the sort who likes to unraveling the essence from obscure hints.

    I am, and so this is one of my favorite movies of all time. Probably
    have seen it 5 times and will see it again.
    Few directors tap into the language of the unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.
    I think he does tap into a part if the unconscious, but that much of it
    is simply poking around for effect. It might be that Elephant Man is an
    attempt to extent the effect to an entire theme.
    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying, "see, I can paint by numbers too." Might as well have been a
    Ron Howard project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds worthwhile.
    It's not a memorable film, except for one scene. Where the character
    played by Farnsworth is sitting around that campfire with those young
    college types, and someone asks him what the worst thing about being old
    is, and he answers:
    "Remembering being young."
    At 76, you do not want to think about that one too long, I assure you...
    LOL. It is a great line, for sure. I didn't remember that.

    Looking at your comments, it seems we aren't at odds so much on his films. Two outstanding ones, a number of somewhat interesting ones, and some throwaways. Other than that, I liked half of "Twin Peaks" and you didn't like it much at all.

    Sounds right...

    Hey, here's a part of a scene that is the exemplar of what Lynch really
    likes to do: take a fairly normal exchange and out of left field, inject
    a sort of non-specific threat...

    It's from MD, where the director meets "the Cowboy" up one of the
    Hollywood Hills canyons, at a sort of horse corral, and after a polite
    opening, the cowboy expresses a sort of philosophical conclusion (that
    really has nothing to do with why they are meeting) and the director,
    eager to get to the point agrees.

    The cowboy then says:

    "Now, did you agree with what I said because you truly believe it to be
    true, or did you agree just because you think that's what I want to hear?"

    and the director says (he's getting a bit tight by now):

    "I truly believe it."

    ...and the cowboy says:

    "What did I say?"

    This was fuckin' GREAT!!!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fd5HEJdcBwM


    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Give me Dadaism, or give me nothing!"
    --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 3 12:19:37 2023
    On 10/3/23 11:57 AM, TT wrote:
    Sawfish kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 21.19:
    On 10/3/23 10:22 AM, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 18.27:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:

    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two



    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with
    Lynch,
    and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I >>>>>>> kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of
    unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch
    viewed
    it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive >>>>>>> actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but
    cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it
    became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the
    remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made the
    quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're
    talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his
    films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to
    last.

    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any
    meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience, >>>>> and having them watch it, absorb it.

    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I
    guess that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about
    showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral,
    non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great
    master
    of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my >>>>> head, The Straight Story.

    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he
    is "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a
    a particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING
    Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the indie film "Lost
    in Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.

    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved
    into "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in
    2016 (?). Couldn't get through the first episode because I no
    longer have patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit through long
    scenes of someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running
    machinery in the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive"
    are master works IMO. Few directors tap into the language of the
    unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary
    directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average
    story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying,
    "see, I can paint by numbers too."  Might as well have been a Ron
    Howard project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds
    worthwhile.


    Incorrect.

    8 The Straight Story (1999)
    7 Blue Velvet (1986)
    7 Lost Highway (1997)
    7 The Elephant Man (1980)

    6 Mulholland Drive (2001)
    6 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)

    5 Dune
    4 Wild at Heart (1990)
    4 Eraserhead (1977)
    3 Inland Empire (2006)

    I would say that top 4 are "worthwhile". Maybe next two as well.
    Curious about why you liked Lost Highway. I *did* like it (saw it
    maybe three times--mostly to eyeball the nude Arquette), but I do not
    expect others to like it.

    This is what I have previously written about Lost Highway...

    Lost Highway (1997)
    ...Really good and atmospheric Lynch film. The story is rather weird
    about a man who wakes up as another man (or same man) and their fates
    are somehow connected - I have to admit I did not understand the plot fully... and after some consideration I came to conclusion that the
    story actually didn't make sense in end, things didn't really tie up together. Anyway it held my interest and sure got me thinking and

    Good, TT, but one might question the honesty of the review, since it
    makes no positive mention of Arquette's nudity...

    :^)

    guessing what's happening & was very well filmed and atmospheric... 7/10

    Huh. You know, in a way Lynch and Kubrick were similar in that each
    had an intuitive feeling for the "weird" impression that can be made
    on an audience, and neither was in complete control. Lynch is
    constantly amused by this, but I don't see where Kubrick had a single
    funny bone in his body.
    Not quite sure what you mean here.

    I think they had a gut feeling of what might *score* in an emotional,
    rather than intellectual, level and found away to include it. It may or
    may not fit, but to to them that visceral audience response was paramount.

    The rape scene at the beginning of Clockwork Orange, the nudes at the
    ceremony in Eyes Wide Shut, the entity in the black, steampunk-like
    device in Dune, the bug-infested ear on the lawn in Blue Velvet, etc...


    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "If we use Occam's Razor, whose razor will *he* use?" --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 3 22:45:39 2023
    Sawfish kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 22.19:
    On 10/3/23 11:57 AM, TT wrote:
    Sawfish kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 21.19:
    On 10/3/23 10:22 AM, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 3.10.2023 klo 18.27:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:18:29 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/2/23 10:24 PM, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 2, 2023 at 5:59:02 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>>
    https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/05/david-lynch-twin-peaks-season-two


    I never thought much of it. It seemed to me to be a gimmick.

    At the time it came out--late 80s?--I was already familiar with >>>>>>>> Lynch,
    and knew him to be a quirky auteur, probably not for everyone. So I >>>>>>>> kinda got off on the idea that all of a sudden, a whole lot of >>>>>>>> unsuspecting people were going to find out about Lynch.

    https://youtu.be/N755jvOUCNI?t=7

    But basically, I believe this is probably pretty much how Lynch >>>>>>>> viewed
    it, too: plus a chance to make some money and to meet attractive >>>>>>>> actresses.
    My take is that Lynch didn't want a long series commitment, but
    cared about the first season of TP and took pride in it. When it >>>>>>> became a surprise success, he lost interest and outsourced the
    remainder to Mark Frost and others. Naturally this made the
    quality very uneven. I don't get the "gimmick" thing you're
    talking about. Seemed to me he merely carried the style of his
    films to television, minus the profanity. It just wasn't built to >>>>>>> last.

    The "gimmick" was tossing Lynch's (an "auteur", if the term has any >>>>>> meaning) stuff before an uninitiated, undifferentiated mass audience, >>>>>> and having them watch it, absorb it.

    If airing a TV show unlike other TV shows is a gimmick, then I
    guess that would make TP one.

    Lynch is not all about making profound statements. He is all about >>>>>> showing you something familiar, and planting a degree of visceral, >>>>>> non-intellectual discomfort--something kinda creepy. He's a great
    master
    of this, with the one noted exception I can recall off the top of my >>>>>> head, The Straight Story.

    IMO you are describing elements of his style that are only what he
    is "all about" in his very worst stuff. Or as one critic said of a
    a particular film (probably "Inland Empire"), this is "Lynch DOING
    Lynch." Tom DeCillo references this aspect in the indie film "Lost
    in Oblivion." Dwarfs and apples.

    I thought the first season of TP was quality Lynch that devolved
    into "Lynch doing Lynch." I tried to watch the resurrected TP in
    2016 (?). Couldn't get through the first episode because I no
    longer have patience to look for "Easter eggs" or sit through long
    scenes of someone sitting alone in a room with the hum of running
    machinery in the background.

    On the other hand, films like "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive"
    are master works IMO. Few directors tap into the language of the
    unconscious so well, and there is nothing haphazard about it.

    As for "The Straight Story," this is the inverse of ordinary
    directors getting "experimental." To me it feels like an average
    story done in an average Hollywood way, as if Lynch was saying,
    "see, I can paint by numbers too."  Might as well have been a Ron
    Howard project. And to think this is the one Lynch film TJT finds
    worthwhile.


    Incorrect.

    8 The Straight Story (1999)
    7 Blue Velvet (1986)
    7 Lost Highway (1997)
    7 The Elephant Man (1980)

    6 Mulholland Drive (2001)
    6 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)

    5 Dune
    4 Wild at Heart (1990)
    4 Eraserhead (1977)
    3 Inland Empire (2006)

    I would say that top 4 are "worthwhile". Maybe next two as well.
    Curious about why you liked Lost Highway. I *did* like it (saw it
    maybe three times--mostly to eyeball the nude Arquette), but I do not
    expect others to like it.

    This is what I have previously written about Lost Highway...

    Lost Highway (1997)
    ...Really good and atmospheric Lynch film. The story is rather weird
    about a man who wakes up as another man (or same man) and their fates
    are somehow connected - I have to admit I did not understand the plot
    fully... and after some consideration I came to conclusion that the
    story actually didn't make sense in end, things didn't really tie up
    together. Anyway it held my interest and sure got me thinking and

    Good, TT, but one might question the honesty of the review, since it
    makes no positive mention of Arquette's nudity...

    :^)

    guessing what's happening & was very well filmed and atmospheric... 7/10

    Huh. You know, in a way Lynch and Kubrick were similar in that each
    had an intuitive feeling for the "weird" impression that can be made
    on an audience, and neither was in complete control. Lynch is
    constantly amused by this, but I don't see where Kubrick had a single
    funny bone in his body.
    Not quite sure what you mean here.

    I think they had a gut feeling of what might *score* in an emotional,
    rather than intellectual, level and found away to include it. It may or
    may not fit, but to to them that visceral audience response was paramount.

    The rape scene at the beginning of Clockwork Orange, the nudes at the ceremony in Eyes Wide Shut, the entity in the black, steampunk-like
    device in Dune, the bug-infested ear on the lawn in Blue Velvet, etc...



    Ok.

    I'd say that Lynch tried many things and waited to see what stuck, as in Eraserhead which had lots of random stuff.
    Kubrik's big scenes in general seem imo quite deliberate... as in 2001 &
    say candle scene in Barry Lyndon that had lots of production in them. Of
    course some could be as you say... lots of stuff in Shining for example,
    and yes Clockwork. And there sure was lots that did (stick/work) in the
    latter two..

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to grif on Thu Oct 5 19:14:44 2023
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 12:18:41 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:

    https://i.imgur.com/svKGAsb.png

    The actress who plays Shelly is extremely attractive. Lynch must have put a specific scene in one of the episodes just so he could kiss her.

    There were three very pretty women/actresses in that show: Sherilynn Fenn, Lara Flynn Boyle, Madchen Amick. They didn't all age well but they sure were lovely at the time they did that tv show IMO.

    I saw "Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me" ages ago. I liked it at the time but was aware that it wasn't as well received as the show. I hadn't seen the series back then so wasn't really sure why there was negativity for the film. Coming into the show, I
    might have been expecting it to be more like the film. What I was not expecting was it to be a campy soap opera in large parts. They tried for a lot more humour than I was expecting, so much so that I wondered if "Twin Peaks" influenced "Northern
    Exposure".

    There's another great tv show---Northern Exposure. I really enjoyed it.


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From grif@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 6 16:16:35 2023
    On 06/10/2023 03:14, Court_1 wrote:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 12:18:41 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:

    https://i.imgur.com/svKGAsb.png

    The actress who plays Shelly is extremely attractive. Lynch must have put a specific scene in one of the episodes just so he could kiss her.

    There were three very pretty women/actresses in that show: Sherilynn Fenn, Lara Flynn Boyle, Madchen Amick. They didn't all age well but they sure were lovely at the time they did that tv show IMO.

    I saw "Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me" ages ago. I liked it at the time but was aware that it wasn't as well received as the show. I hadn't seen the series back then so wasn't really sure why there was negativity for the film. Coming into the show, I
    might have been expecting it to be more like the film. What I was not expecting was it to be a campy soap opera in large parts. They tried for a lot more humour than I was expecting, so much so that I wondered if "Twin Peaks" influenced "Northern
    Exposure".

    There's another great tv show---Northern Exposure. I really enjoyed it.


    Yeah, I was only able to catch random episodes of "Northern Exposure" back then, but liked them a lot when I did.

    I should give a shoutout to the late Peggy Lipton for more than holding her own with the younger girls on the show
    https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-features/twin-peaks-babes-in-the-woods-229726/

    I'm currently watching season 3 of "Twin Peaks" and the quality is a lot more consistent. I think he directed all the episodes so that's probably why. He's really into doppelgangers and dwarves.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to grif on Sat Oct 7 18:10:35 2023
    On Friday, October 6, 2023 at 11:16:38 AM UTC-4, grif wrote:
    On 06/10/2023 03:14, Court_1 wrote:
    On Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 12:18:41 PM UTC-4, grif wrote:

    https://i.imgur.com/svKGAsb.png

    The actress who plays Shelly is extremely attractive. Lynch must have put a specific scene in one of the episodes just so he could kiss her.

    There were three very pretty women/actresses in that show: Sherilynn Fenn, Lara Flynn Boyle, Madchen Amick. They didn't all age well but they sure were lovely at the time they did that tv show IMO.

    I saw "Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me" ages ago. I liked it at the time but was aware that it wasn't as well received as the show. I hadn't seen the series back then so wasn't really sure why there was negativity for the film. Coming into the show, I
    might have been expecting it to be more like the film. What I was not expecting was it to be a campy soap opera in large parts. They tried for a lot more humour than I was expecting, so much so that I wondered if "Twin Peaks" influenced "Northern
    Exposure".

    There's another great tv show---Northern Exposure. I really enjoyed it.

    Yeah, I was only able to catch random episodes of "Northern Exposure" back then, but liked them a lot when I did.

    I should give a shoutout to the late Peggy Lipton for more than holding her own with the younger girls on the show
    https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-features/twin-peaks-babes-in-the-woods-229726/

    I'm currently watching season 3 of "Twin Peaks" and the quality is a lot more consistent. I think he directed all the episodes so that's probably why. He's really into doppelangers and dwarves.

    Yes, I forgot about Peggy Lipton on that show. She was nice- looking too. Boy, David Lynch must have had a literal field day(Sherilynn Fenn, Lara Flynn Boyle, Madchen Amick, Peggy Lipton) if you know what I mean. They're all casting couch participants
    in that unsavory entertainment business(men and women.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Sat Oct 7 18:57:43 2023
    On Saturday, October 7, 2023 at 6:10:37 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    Yes, I forgot about Peggy Lipton on that show. She was nice- looking too. Boy, David Lynch must have had a literal field day(Sherilynn Fenn, Lara Flynn Boyle, Madchen Amick, Peggy Lipton) if you know what I mean. They're all casting couch participants
    in that unsavory entertainment business(men and women.)

    Assuming that this was going on during casting of "Twin Peaks" (a giant assumption), Peggy Lipton wasn't desperate for money after 15 years of marriage to Quincy Jones. Her "Mod Squad" days are another story. She didn't get that role through her acting
    skills.

    Sherilynn Fenn and Madchen Amick were very attractive. Lara Flynn Boyle not quite as much IMO. Years after "Twin Peaks" there was an episode of "Psych" with a "Twin Peaks" theme and they got a number of actors from TP to guest. As you've said, those
    girls didn't age so well. That "Psych" episode was a waste unfortunately. It tried way too hard to be funny and failed in every way.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Sun Oct 8 15:23:42 2023
    On Saturday, October 7, 2023 at 9:57:45 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Saturday, October 7, 2023 at 6:10:37 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    Yes, I forgot about Peggy Lipton on that show. She was nice- looking too. Boy, David Lynch must have had a literal field day(Sherilynn Fenn, Lara Flynn Boyle, Madchen Amick, Peggy Lipton) if you know what I mean. They're all casting couch
    participants in that unsavory entertainment business(men and women.)

    Assuming that this was going on during casting of "Twin Peaks" (a giant assumption),

    I disagree about it being a "giant" assumption. You don't make it in that business unless you use the casting couch. It shouldn't be looked at like some kind of perfect fantasy world. It's a sleazy business. A lot of these actors/actresses came from
    small towns, had zero education, were escaping dysfunctional families. They knew what they had to do to "make it." This is common knowledge when you start investigating the history of the entertainment business. Actors/actresses were always akin to
    escorts in the early days.

    Peggy Lipton wasn't desperate for money after 15 years of marriage to Quincy Jones.

    You wouldn't think so but who knows. We don't know how much she received from Jones or how she invested her money.


    Her "Mod Squad" days are another story. She didn't get that role through her acting skills.

    For sure.

    Sherilynn Fenn and Madchen Amick were very attractive. Lara Flynn Boyle not quite as much IMO.

    I think Lara Flynn Boyle was very pretty when she did the tv show, The Practice. She went downhill fast after that though. She had too many cosmetic procedures which ruined her face, she got heavy. She seems off her rocker too.

    Years after "Twin Peaks" there was an episode of "Psych" with a "Twin Peaks" theme and they got a number of actors from TP to guest. As you've said, those girls didn't age so well. That "Psych" episode was a waste unfortunately. It tried way too hard to
    be funny and failed in every way.

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 8 17:05:01 2023
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 3:23:44 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Saturday, October 7, 2023 at 9:57:45 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Saturday, October 7, 2023 at 6:10:37 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    Yes, I forgot about Peggy Lipton on that show. She was nice- looking too. Boy, David Lynch must have had a literal field day(Sherilynn Fenn, Lara Flynn Boyle, Madchen Amick, Peggy Lipton) if you know what I mean. They're all casting couch
    participants in that unsavory entertainment business(men and women.)

    Assuming that this was going on during casting of "Twin Peaks" (a giant assumption),

    I disagree about it being a "giant" assumption. You don't make it in that business unless you use the casting couch. It shouldn't be looked at like some kind of perfect fantasy world. It's a sleazy business. A lot of these actors/actresses came from
    small towns, had zero education, were escaping dysfunctional families. They knew what they had to do to "make it." This is common knowledge when you start investigating the history of the entertainment business. Actors/actresses were always akin to
    escorts in the early days.

    I don't see it as any fantasy world. I've just never heard anything like that about Lynch and until I do, I've no reason to believe all those actresses had to ride his rod before he'd consider them for the roles.

    Peggy Lipton wasn't desperate for money after 15 years of marriage to Quincy Jones.

    You wouldn't think so but who knows. We don't know how much she received from Jones or how she invested her money.

    Her "Mod Squad" days are another story. She didn't get that role through her acting skills.
    For sure.

    Sherilynn Fenn and Madchen Amick were very attractive. Lara Flynn Boyle not quite as much IMO.

    I think Lara Flynn Boyle was very pretty when she did the tv show, The Practice. She went downhill fast after that though. She had too many cosmetic procedures which ruined her face, she got heavy. She seems off her rocker too.

    Years after "Twin Peaks" there was an episode of "Psych" with a "Twin Peaks" theme and they got a number of actors from TP to guest. As you've said, those girls didn't age so well. That "Psych" episode was a waste unfortunately. It tried way too hard
    to be funny and failed in every way.

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.

    Your priorities have been right on that one. :) It sucks mightily.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Mon Oct 9 15:26:05 2023
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 8:05:04 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 3:23:44 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Saturday, October 7, 2023 at 9:57:45 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Saturday, October 7, 2023 at 6:10:37 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    Yes, I forgot about Peggy Lipton on that show. She was nice- looking too. Boy, David Lynch must have had a literal field day(Sherilynn Fenn, Lara Flynn Boyle, Madchen Amick, Peggy Lipton) if you know what I mean. They're all casting couch
    participants in that unsavory entertainment business(men and women.)

    Assuming that this was going on during casting of "Twin Peaks" (a giant assumption),

    I disagree about it being a "giant" assumption. You don't make it in that business unless you use the casting couch. It shouldn't be looked at like some kind of perfect fantasy world. It's a sleazy business. A lot of these actors/actresses came from
    small towns, had zero education, were escaping dysfunctional families. They knew what they had to do to "make it." This is common knowledge when you start investigating the history of the entertainment business. Actors/actresses were always akin to
    escorts in the early days.
    I don't see it as any fantasy world. I've just never heard anything like that about Lynch and until I do, I've no reason to believe all those actresses had to ride his rod before he'd consider them for the roles.
    Peggy Lipton wasn't desperate for money after 15 years of marriage to Quincy Jones.

    You wouldn't think so but who knows. We don't know how much she received from Jones or how she invested her money.

    Her "Mod Squad" days are another story. She didn't get that role through her acting skills.
    For sure.

    Sherilynn Fenn and Madchen Amick were very attractive. Lara Flynn Boyle not quite as much IMO.

    I think Lara Flynn Boyle was very pretty when she did the tv show, The Practice. She went downhill fast after that though. She had too many cosmetic procedures which ruined her face, she got heavy. She seems off her rocker too.

    Years after "Twin Peaks" there was an episode of "Psych" with a "Twin Peaks" theme and they got a number of actors from TP to guest. As you've said, those girls didn't age so well. That "Psych" episode was a waste unfortunately. It tried way too
    hard to be funny and failed in every way.

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.
    Your priorities have been right on that one. :) It sucks mightily.

    Actually, I just looked it up. It wasn't Psych I wanted to watch, it was In Treatment with Gabriel Byrne(love him!) I got mixed up.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Mon Oct 9 16:05:01 2023
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 3:26:07 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 8:05:04 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 3:23:44 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.

    Your priorities have been right on that one. :) It sucks mightily.

    Actually, I just looked it up. It wasn't Psych I wanted to watch, it was In Treatment with Gabriel Byrne(love him!) I got mixed up.

    Well that is very different. :) I watched all of "In Treatment" when it was first aired. The first two seasons are high quality and well worth watching IMO. I didn't love the third one so much.

    I've always liked Gabriel Byrne too. He's good in just about everything.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Mon Oct 9 16:11:46 2023
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 4:05:03 PM UTC-7, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 3:26:07 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 8:05:04 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 3:23:44 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.

    Your priorities have been right on that one. :) It sucks mightily.

    Actually, I just looked it up. It wasn't Psych I wanted to watch, it was In Treatment with Gabriel Byrne(love him!) I got mixed up.

    Well that is very different. :) I watched all of "In Treatment" when it was first aired. The first two seasons are high quality and well worth watching IMO. I didn't love the third one so much.

    OK, my blunder this time--I just checked at there were FOUR seasons! It was the last one I didn't like.

    A note of trivia: It was adapted from an Israeli series called BeTipul that had a shorter run. I still haven't seen the original.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Mon Oct 9 17:15:15 2023
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 7:05:03 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 3:26:07 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 8:05:04 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 3:23:44 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.

    Your priorities have been right on that one. :) It sucks mightily.

    Actually, I just looked it up. It wasn't Psych I wanted to watch, it was In Treatment with Gabriel Byrne(love him!) I got mixed up.

    Well that is very different. :)

    Indeed! I don't have an interest in Psych but In Treatment is one of those shows I've always intended to watch at some point but haven't managed it yet.


    I watched all of "In Treatment" when it was first aired. The first two seasons are high quality and well worth watching IMO. I didn't love the third one so much.

    I've always liked Gabriel Byrne too. He's good in just about everything.

    Also, he was never one of those desperate celebs who have their PR teams plaster their faces in gossip magazines weekly to help keep them relevant. He was always low key.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Mon Oct 9 17:23:20 2023
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 7:11:48 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 4:05:03 PM UTC-7, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 3:26:07 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 8:05:04 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 3:23:44 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.

    Your priorities have been right on that one. :) It sucks mightily.

    Actually, I just looked it up. It wasn't Psych I wanted to watch, it was In Treatment with Gabriel Byrne(love him!) I got mixed up.

    Well that is very different. :) I watched all of "In Treatment" when it was first aired. The first two seasons are high quality and well worth watching IMO. I didn't love the third one so much.
    OK, my blunder this time--I just checked at there were FOUR seasons! It was the last one I didn't like.

    A note of trivia: It was adapted from an Israeli series called BeTipul that had a shorter run. I still haven't seen the original.


    Interesting. I didn't know that.

    I've watched very little in the way of tv shows or movies lately other than some documentaries(MH370: The Plane That Disappeared, Icarus--which is about doping in sports.)

    That last tv series I watched that I thought was decent was Love & Death, created by David E. Kelley.
    I tried to watch that movie, The Whale which has received glowing reviews. I couldn't get beyond 10 minutes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Mon Oct 9 19:09:26 2023
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 5:23:22 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 7:11:48 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 4:05:03 PM UTC-7, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 3:26:07 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 8:05:04 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 3:23:44 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.

    Your priorities have been right on that one. :) It sucks mightily.

    Actually, I just looked it up. It wasn't Psych I wanted to watch, it was In Treatment with Gabriel Byrne(love him!) I got mixed up.

    Well that is very different. :) I watched all of "In Treatment" when it was first aired. The first two seasons are high quality and well worth watching IMO. I didn't love the third one so much.
    OK, my blunder this time--I just checked at there were FOUR seasons! It was the last one I didn't like.

    A note of trivia: It was adapted from an Israeli series called BeTipul that had a shorter run. I still haven't seen the original.

    Interesting. I didn't know that.

    I've watched very little in the way of tv shows or movies lately other than some documentaries(MH370: The Plane That Disappeared, Icarus--which is about doping in sports.)

    That last tv series I watched that I thought was decent was Love & Death, created by David E. Kelley.
    I tried to watch that movie, The Whale which has received glowing reviews. I couldn't get beyond 10 minutes.

    Yes, it seems like the best films the last few years have been documentaries. Touted narrative films aren't interesting me. You got further than I did with "The Whale." I had it on deck to watch and couldn't make myself interested enough. I have seen a
    few TV series I've liked.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Tue Oct 10 18:41:57 2023
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 10:09:28 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 5:23:22 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 7:11:48 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 4:05:03 PM UTC-7, Gracchus wrote:
    On Monday, October 9, 2023 at 3:26:07 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 8:05:04 PM UTC-4, Gracchus wrote:
    On Sunday, October 8, 2023 at 3:23:44 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    I never watched Psych even though I've been meaning to for years.

    Your priorities have been right on that one. :) It sucks mightily.

    Actually, I just looked it up. It wasn't Psych I wanted to watch, it was In Treatment with Gabriel Byrne(love him!) I got mixed up.

    Well that is very different. :) I watched all of "In Treatment" when it was first aired. The first two seasons are high quality and well worth watching IMO. I didn't love the third one so much.
    OK, my blunder this time--I just checked at there were FOUR seasons! It was the last one I didn't like.

    A note of trivia: It was adapted from an Israeli series called BeTipul that had a shorter run. I still haven't seen the original.

    Interesting. I didn't know that.

    I've watched very little in the way of tv shows or movies lately other than some documentaries(MH370: The Plane That Disappeared, Icarus--which is about doping in sports.)

    That last tv series I watched that I thought was decent was Love & Death, created by David E. Kelley.
    I tried to watch that movie, The Whale which has received glowing reviews. I couldn't get beyond 10 minutes.
    Yes, it seems like the best films the last few years have been documentaries. Touted narrative films aren't interesting me. You got further than I did with "The Whale." I had it on deck to watch and couldn't make myself interested enough. I have seen a
    few TV series I've liked.

    From the first five minutes, the plot revealed its weaknesses when Brendan Fraser's character invited a Jehovah's Witness salesman(a stranger) into his home to read to him. That was number one. Number two was Brendan Fraser looked absolutely repulsive in
    this film. I couldn't look at him for more than 10 minutes. He's an obese, sweaty mess! He was hyperventilating trying to spit out a sentence. I never even liked Brendan Fraser as an actor when he was young and in great shape.

    What a dumb, dingy, depressing film.

    What tv shows did you watch and like?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to olympia0000@yahoo.com on Tue Oct 10 17:51:54 2023
    Court_1 <olympia0000@yahoo.com> writes:



    From the first five minutes, the plot revealed its weaknesses when
    Brendan Fraser's character invited a Jehovah's Witness salesman(a
    stranger) into his home to read to him. That was number one. Number
    two was Brendan Fraser looked absolutely repulsive in this film. I
    couldn't look at him for more than 10 minutes. He's an obese, sweaty
    mess! He was hyperventilating trying to spit out a sentence. I never
    even liked Brendan Fraser as an actor when he was young and in great
    shape.

    What a dumb, dingy, depressing film.

    What tv shows did you watch and like?

    I didn't watch it, but wasn't he "supposed" to look that way? I mean,
    it's not like it was just an accident and nobody noticed... right?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Tue Oct 10 21:26:11 2023
    On Tuesday, October 10, 2023 at 9:52:01 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Court_1 .com> writes:



    From the first five minutes, the plot revealed its weaknesses when
    Brendan Fraser's character invited a Jehovah's Witness salesman(a stranger) into his home to read to him. That was number one. Number
    two was Brendan Fraser looked absolutely repulsive in this film. I couldn't look at him for more than 10 minutes. He's an obese, sweaty
    mess! He was hyperventilating trying to spit out a sentence. I never
    even liked Brendan Fraser as an actor when he was young and in great shape.

    What a dumb, dingy, depressing film.

    What tv shows did you watch and like?

    I didn't watch it, but wasn't he "supposed" to look that way? I mean,
    it's not like it was just an accident and nobody noticed... right?

    Yes. He was supposed to look that way and I knew what it was about. The title--The Whale--kind of gives it away, don't you think? ;)

    However, I wasn't prepared to see something that revolting. If that was it, it would have been fine. But, when you add in the foolish script(from the first 10 minutes) and sit and watch Brendan Fraser appear like he's going to have a heart attack after
    spitting out a few words that was it for me.

    I don't know, I"m not a big Brendan Fraser fan so maybe it's me?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 11 12:15:14 2023
    Court_1 kirjoitti 11.10.2023 klo 4.41:
    Number two was Brendan Fraser looked absolutely repulsive in this film. I couldn't look at him for more than 10 minutes.

    I guessed that it was the main reason. This is how women function.
    Points for honesty.
    Not that I'm interested in watching it myself either.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 11 12:59:44 2023
    Court_1 kirjoitti 11.10.2023 klo 7.26:
    I don't know, I"m not a big Brendan Fraser fan

    Who is?

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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 11 13:11:16 2023
    Court_1 kirjoitti 11.10.2023 klo 7.26:
    The title--The Whale--kind of gives it away, don't you think?

    Not necessarily... I was excited that the film would be about next
    Gordon Gekko.

    Seeing the poster I thought now way in hell am I watching that.

    Then again it's Aronofsky & A24 film, so could be very good if one gives
    it a real chance.

    The trailer doesn't make it look very attractive, been there, seen that. https://youtu.be/nWiQodhMvz4?si=6ML0uNcnIPIggZ7M

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  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 11 07:27:19 2023
    On 10/11/23 3:11 AM, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 11.10.2023 klo 7.26:
    The title--The Whale--kind of gives it away, don't you think?

    Not necessarily... I was excited that the film would be about next
    Gordon Gekko.

    Seeing the poster I thought now way in hell am I watching that.

    Then again it's Aronofsky & A24 film, so could be very good if one
    gives it a real chance.

    The trailer doesn't make it look very attractive, been there, seen that. https://youtu.be/nWiQodhMvz4?si=6ML0uNcnIPIggZ7M

    I realize that this is not an airtight analogy, but do you consider A24
    to be the inheritor of the role filled by Miramax--that is to say a high
    level of quality as compared to the other major producers/distributors?

    When I see the A24 logo I feel that there's a much better chance that
    I'll find something about the film that I like, and with Miramax, it was
    the same way.

    It's like seeing The Criterion Collection, or Janus Films.

    But who the hell wants to see a film about a morbidly obese man, anyway?
    Not me.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The food at the new restaurant was awful--but at least the portions
    were large!" --Sawfish

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  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Oct 11 07:52:02 2023
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 1:56:20 PM UTC-7, Court_1 wrote:

    Frasier, Cheers. Good comedies.

    Yes, except they went on too many years and weren't so funny by the
    end.

    I've read there is a new Frasier series imminent. No Niles, Martin or
    Daphne though. No thank you.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 11 20:06:39 2023
    Sawfish kirjoitti 11.10.2023 klo 17.27:
    On 10/11/23 3:11 AM, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 11.10.2023 klo 7.26:
    The title--The Whale--kind of gives it away, don't you think?

    Not necessarily... I was excited that the film would be about next
    Gordon Gekko.

    Seeing the poster I thought now way in hell am I watching that.

    Then again it's Aronofsky & A24 film, so could be very good if one
    gives it a real chance.

    The trailer doesn't make it look very attractive, been there, seen that.
    https://youtu.be/nWiQodhMvz4?si=6ML0uNcnIPIggZ7M

    I realize that this is not an airtight analogy, but do you consider A24
    to be the inheritor of the role filled by Miramax--that is to say a high level of quality as compared to the other major producers/distributors?


    Yes. A24 films are often different & interesting. Some sort of high
    quality indie film company.

    Haven't thought about Miramax films quality really. Weinstein apparently
    had good taste.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Court_1@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 12 18:30:12 2023
    On Wednesday, October 11, 2023 at 5:15:16 AM UTC-4, TT wrote:
    Court_1 kirjoitti 11.10.2023 klo 4.41:
    Number two was Brendan Fraser looked absolutely repulsive in this film. I couldn't look at him for more than 10 minutes.


    I guessed that it was the main reason. This is how women function.
    Points for honesty.
    Not that I'm interested in watching it myself either.

    The main reason was that in the first 10 minutes something occurred in the script that was absurd/unrealistic. I couldn't watch more for that reason alone.

    Number two was Brendan Fraser's character was repulsive to look at but my comment had nothing to do with gender. I'd say the same if it were an obese female and you'd be the fist one to say same if the man character was a blimp.

    Also, I really never liked Brendan Fraser as an actor. He's horrible in The Whale. Huffing and puffing like a beast taking his last breath. It goes to show you how the Oscars are BS and all bought awards.

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