Doctor Strange
I'll Lock Up
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- Hudson Valley, NY
I finished off season 2 of Jessica Jones. I think it's still the best of the Marvel Netflix shows by a wide margin, but this season's not quite as outstanding as season 1.
A delayed viewing of the last episode of Victoria. Along with SHIELD. Does anybody know if the producers of the show, or maybe the ABC network, required the writers to set everything inside? The majority of the action was on the space ship, and now underground, with occasional forays to the outside.
I recently watched a few minutes of a completely forgettable WW2 bucket of dreck on YouTube where the response to another character's thank you was "hey, no problem man."The characters talk and act in a very modern way.
I have watched two episodes and loved it. The aspect I found so interesting is how much of history is chance, luck and circumstance. Daniel Boone and Boonesborough being saved from certain capture and annihilation by Black Fish by the rain. If it had not been for that rain we may never had heard the name Daniel Boone. He would have been an obscure reference in some out of print history book. Or if Black Fish had thought of the whole fire tactic thingy if would have been over on day two.I’ve been watching History Channel’s “The Men Who Built America: The Frontiersmen.”
It’s on Wednesday nights and covers the Westward Expansion of the United States.
I finished episode 2 tonight covering Lewis and Clark and it has been exceptional.
Hang in there... it gets deeper and, unfortunately, truer to life with every episode. I grew up in the Projects of NY City long before the era depicted, however the corruption and misery represented there... is true... all true.The Wire. I'd heard good things about this show but never thought it was something I'd be interested in. Watched three episodes last night. I'm interested enough to keep watching.
Hang in there... it gets deeper and, unfortunately, truer to life with every episode. I grew up in the Projects of NY City long before the era depicted, however the corruption and misery represented there... is true... all true.
Worf
did gamers grow up watching Mr Rogers? Do we have him to blame for gamers or is it just the stoners?In honor of Fred Rogers' 90th birthday, the "Twitch" website is running a continuous marathon of all 800+ episodes of "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood." It's still in the early black-and-white era, and it's fascinating to see programs I haven't seen since I was five years old, and yet still vividly remember.
"Twitch" seems to be a site having to do with video-game enthusiasts, and why and how this marathon is happening on this particular venue is beyond explanation, but I'm very pleasantly surprised to find it.
https://www.twitch.tv/misterrogers
I can't remember a TV show that got me more invested in the characters than this one. Even the annoying McNulty!The Wire. I'd heard good things about this show but never thought it was something I'd be interested in. Watched three episodes last night. I'm interested enough to keep watching.
did gamers grow up watching Mr Rogers? Do we have him to blame for gamers or is it just the stoners?
The character that got to me most was Bodee. He starts out as just a street slinger/soldier but in many ways becomes almost the moral compass of the show from the "back side" of the mirror if you catch what I mean. I knew cats like him in my formative years. Some ran "numbers", some sold weed, some sold Horse... but hey had lines they wouldn't cross. Back then if you were a scholar or an athlete, they left you alone. If you weren't cut out for the game they would tell you so in words or with fists... but killing civilians was not part of their game. They were hustlers just trying to make a living. That has sadly changed.I can't remember a TV show that got me more invested in the characters than this one. Even the annoying McNulty!