Mrs. Maisel was created and is helmed by Amy Sherman-Palladino (I suspect with help from her husband Daniel), the creator and producer of another machine-gun dialogue series, Gilmore Girls.
I had the same reaction to the comedy soap-opera satire Soap when it first appeared. People I knew raved about it, but I didn't get it . . . until years afterward. One night, bored, I watched an episode in syndication -- and I realized. It was a comic strip! If you replaced Burt with a...
I've just begun watching the first season. It's a quiet kind of entertainment, and you have to pay attention to what everyone is saying (which are good things). My only objection is in the presentation, a flaw it shares with most films/TV shows these days. At the end the credits list the...
Julian,
There is a moment in one of the Wolfe novels or novelettes. To me it's an expert example of how well Stout wrote, how he made Wolfe work. On the phone, Wolfe is trying to reach Lieutenant Rowcliff, whom he detests (and so does Archie, and so does the reader after only one encounter!)...
He played Rex Stout's overweight, orchid-fancying private detective Nero Wolfe in Meet Nero Wolfe in '36, and I've always thought he had the right look and manner. You could easily imagine him dominating a room full of suspects at the climax, or any room, for that matter. Apparently the movie...
I can't remember when I saw a free air pump at a gas station. Almost all the pumps cost $1.00 to operate, and unless you move with the speed of the Flash, you can't fill up all your tires before the bell goes off. There goes another $1.00. Sorry, no.
Miss Linda bought me a portable air...
Parts 2 and 3 of Masterpiece's "Little Women," with Maya Hawke (Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke's daughter, I found out) as Jo, Emily Watson as the girl's mother, and Angela Lansbury as Aunt March. I don't know how it compares to the famous version of the Thirties with Katharine Hepburn. But I see...
Last movie: The Family Fang, Jason Bateman's sophomore directing effort, with Nicole Kidman and Christopher Walken. Almost a detective story, as Bateman and Kidman's brother and sister, who spent their childhoods being used in their parents' "performance art," are told their parents may be dead...
I first saw that film on late-night TV when it was only a few years old, so it didn't look vintage to me then. At the time, I was astonished by its technique of switching time periods -- the hair styles and cars were my way to keep up with it at first. And I thought then it was one of the few...
Possibly Barbasol shaving cream? It dates to the 1920s, I think, and certainly was mentioned in a lyric in Guys and Dolls. You can still buy the pressurized can, which came out after WWII, in drugstores, WM, and even the Dollar Tree.
Saturday morning shopping day in Bedford Falls, a couple of years after the war. The town's booming now that Old Man Potter has kicked the bucket. . . .
Top pic: That's a '56 Chevy, the best-looking in my opinion of the famous Tri-Fives. But the car to its right looks like a late '60s Dodge Charger, so this must be from, say, '67 or later.
Middle pic: Yes, Stephen King fans, there is a town called Castle Rock, but it's in Colorado, between...
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