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Yes it is.Is that the Welsh (?) actor who was in Ringer a few years ago with Sarah Michelle Gellar?
Yes it is.Is that the Welsh (?) actor who was in Ringer a few years ago with Sarah Michelle Gellar?
My wife watched some or all of it but I didn't, not any more than I could help (because her TV is always on). I knew it would bring up too many painful memories. Moreover, no one lives live with multiple viewpoints, nor do we rarely have well-observed hindsight, not when we need it the most. Besides, there's bound to be things left out. I don't know if it was mentioned or not, but there were more troops stationed in Europe at the time than were stationed in Vietnam. Of course, you didn't stay in Vietnam as long as you would had you been sent to Europe.I watched the entire thing. I didn't really plan to, but I got sucked in and watched almost all of it on the nights it premiered. It's outstanding. I didn't think I could stand 18 hours of Vietnam, but soon discovered it was necessary.
Having grown up in those days with news junkie parents, I recall a lot about how things unfolded... and seeing those events treated in comprehensive detail, with an objective approach from multiple viewpoints and well-observed hindsight, was quite moving for me.
it made me angry at things now. We didn't learn one single thing besides learning to hate each other. I was again made aware that we are a nation that despises protesting. A nation built upon protest detesting protesting. Brilliant.Second episode of Burns' "Vietnam."
Documentary great and - and I knew this would happen - I'm getting mad at everyone all over again.
it made me angry at things now. We didn't learn one single thing besides learning to hate each other. I was again made aware that we are a nation that despises protesting. A nation built upon protest detesting protesting. Brilliant.Second episode of Burns' "Vietnam."
Documentary great and - and I knew this would happen - I'm getting mad at everyone all over again.
Sorry, I can't agree with you guys. I thought that episode was awful. Especially because it was so sure it was a serious inquiry into a thorny issue, when it was completely superficial and confused.
It was bad enough back in TNG when they didn't have the COURAGE to let the member of the sexually neutral J'naii who loved Riker become/remain female, but had to have her "cured"...
or not allow Beverley to still love the Trill symbiant when it was transplanted into a female host. But okay, that was thirty years ago, when TV and our society were in a very different place.
I've got a gay son and a daughter who identifies as bisexual. She's got friends who consider themselves "gender fluid". It's not 1988 anymore, and a treatment of gender this simplistic and regressive is an embarrassment.
As for the other, I don't recall it as well. But it was pretty honest, again for those times, to admit that Beverly would have limits to what she found attractive in a mate, just as we the viewers do; that there were limits even to ST's optimistic view of the human future.
But you must know that the endless WHY ARE THERE NO GAY PEOPLE ON STAR TREK? discussions that have gone on in the years since continually focus on those episodes as being cop outs. So I am guilty of having a sense of their "failure" drummed into me after all my years on the Trek mailing lists, bulletin boards, and forums. I repeat, I don't think they "failed" when they were first made.
BTW, did anyone watch the pilot for the new Star Trek series?
Just started to watch the Brit series on Netflix..."The Detectorists"....a wonderful, low key comedy with two of Britain's best in the leads.
Started season 4 of "Line of Duty", a Brit Netflix offering. This season the plot is a bit convoluted and there were a few jump the shark moments but it is only 6 episodes so will see it through to the end.
American Horror Story: Cult. Honestly, I thought this would be upper-level stupid. I thought it would be beyond trite and preachy. I didn't care for a lot of the new cast. I was wrong. Most of it is interesting in its makeup. The character twists have been solid. It's been genuinely creepy and made-well for October. Really, with its shortcomings noted, it's rather genius. Absolutely better than the past couple seasons, and I liked the past couple of seasons. I've been surprised. I might go as far as to recommend it.
it's likely to be a quick casualty of this era when there are way too many superhero projects.
Oh, also episode two of the current season of Gotham. We love this show!
....Popular media can certainly give a real sense of how times change; certsinly, in British television the gay characters of the esrly eighties who were celebrated as ground breaking then would, by now, as often as not, be seen as offensive stereotypes.....
...The superhero bubble certainly has to burst at some point, it's been such a hugely successful trend for so long....
And thirty years from now, what many today think are timeless views, cosmically correct morality, intellectually advanced ideas and absolutely right values will look dated, backwards, out of step and / or off in some way, etc.
Overall, I'm encouraged that we are moving in the right direction on many of these cultural / social issues, but knowing how history shows that some of even the most progressive or correct ideas held in a particular period look wrong or "off" today keeps me from being smug about our present pieties - some will prove timeless and some won't.
I recently watched a movie "Son of the Gods" form 1930 that had very advanced (thankfully) views on racism and I have to believe these were the "forward" ideas of the day, but even though the anti-racism ideas were highlighted positively, there were angles, aspects and nuances of that "forward" thinking that is cringe worthy based on today's values.
I thought this would have happened already as for every darn-good "Wonder Woman," we get a lot of retreads and weak efforts trying to simply cash in once again. When it does burst, it might usher in / accelerate a more dramatic transition in the movie industry away from theater releases and to more direct to streaming, etc. ones.
...I'm still hoping Tarrantino will do a superhero film. I personally loved ZAk Schneider's effort at Watchmen, though I'd love to see a Tarrantino run on that material. I gather someone else is currently working it up for Netflix, though, which will give Alan Moore something new to hate. He'll like that.