Now there’s a sport worth winning medals in.Me and my girl also write smut for sport
Now there’s a sport worth winning medals in.Me and my girl also write smut for sport
Afraid there is, and this show does it, and the writers do not know how awful they sound. Even so, have to check out the Jesus thing. I'm sure its a jest, but WTF?Trump is posting memes of himself as literal Jesus while started mideast wars. There is no such thing as "ham fisted wearing its politics on its sleeve" any more.
It's on its 4th season. But they went on hiatus midway through season 3 so it feels like more.Invincible, season 5 (with one ep left)
I like this show a lot but after 5 seasons I think it's been enough.
This shit is peak dad TV. My grandfather loves it.SAS: Rogue Heroes
BBC show that tries to give the Guy Ritchie treatment to the SAS chapter of WW2 in Africa. I know the name Dudley Clarke from the intro to Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines, and he's played by Dominic West in the show, but our main POV is David Stirling, the other founder of SAS. And as far as I'm concerned West should've been our main guy. I don't think the dude playing Stirling is very good or can carry a show. But whenever West walks in, holy shit, please stay.
Anyway, the Guy Ritchie thing: we freeze on characters whenever they're introduced, their names stenciled across the screen like they're Borderlands NPCs, and the soundtrack is pure punk rock. Everyone's simultaneously witty and rowdy. The humor is hit and miss. I suppose it's all broadly accurate - Stirling's parachuting accident, the Lewes bombs, the raids on Axis airbases - with the usual distortions and exaggerations. Everyone existed in real life, with the exception of course of the one female character, a spy played by Sofia Boutella who starts every conversation announcing that she's a spy and for lack of anything meaningful to do becomes Stirling's love interest.
It's alright. Band of Brothers it is not.
The daddiest TV. Miss my grandpa. He liked Bonanza and thought Star Wars was stupid.This shit is peak dad TV. My grandfather loves it.
My grandfather didn't think it was stupid, but he'd grown up reading Asimov and Clarke and Doc Smith. And reading Dan Dare. Star Wars just didn't have much to offer him. Loves Star Trek though.The daddiest TV. Miss my grandpa. He liked Bonanza and thought Star Wars was stupid.
I was so bored with the show that I decided to read all the comics instead, and honestly, majority of the problems in the show are present in the comics as well. I think it's because I was so down on the the show already, but I did not like the comics as much as I hoped I would.I'm guessing it's all like the comic books and comic books go on forever which is why I don't read them.
Yeah, the show is pretty good but it's "goodness" is kinda tied to how satisfying the answers/reveals are. I hope this is the last season.From: S4:E1: Let The What-The-Fuckery Continue / Great
I maintain this is one of the best shows that not enough people are talking about. I can't even really discuss this new season without spoilers, but I just want anyone willing to listen: watch this show.
"Unfortunately," my source being my friend who enthusiastically texted me in advance of the start of this 4th season, there's going to be a 5th and final season, so don't expect any definitive answers throughout this 4th season. But it's so good, I don't mind. Apparently, writers have hinted that the answers are in the first season... WTF?!? That gives me hope that they've thought this through already, but also unnerving that they're just fucking with us for two more seasons. It's like magic: I want to know how it's done, but at the same time, I greatly appreciate the mystique of the illusion. So far, this show has not done what a lot of other shows do which is fuck around with retrospective or tangential storyline episodes; every episode is "now," and we the audience are just as confused and frustrated in the moment as the characters. Such a great fucking show, and if they stick the landing in season 5, I'll easily call it the best show I've ever suffered through.Yeah, the show is pretty good but it's "goodness" is kinda tied to how satisfying the answers/reveals are. I hope this is the last season.
Yes, there's a recap, but while informative, it does not do the full journey justice. You can't recap 3 seasons of a show like this in 3 minutes, but it does enough to give new viewers the gist. The best way is to start at the first season and work your way to the present to understand the absolute duress and struggle our protagonists have been through.Thirding the From props. Cool show. Thx for reminding me there's a new season. I hope the first episode is accompanied with a solid "previously on" segment though.
Oh, I watched the seasons. I just don't remember stuff.Yes, there's a recap, but while informative, it does not do the full journey justice. You can't recap 3 seasons of a show like this in 3 minutes, but it does enough to give new viewers the gist. The best way is to start at the first season and work your way to the present to understand the absolute duress and struggle our protagonists have been through.
I get it; I remember you commenting that you've watched it, just saying that for any newcomers, the recap at the start of S4 doesn't do the entirety justice. The recap is perfectly serviceable for From veterans who might be fuzzy on a bigger details, but anyone who thinks they can jump in "now" with a 3-minute recap is missing a TON.Oh, I watched the seasons. I just don't remember stuff.
It's the last season so I forgive its current weaknesses in favor of savoring every moment of the best back-and-forth-giving-each-other-shit duo on TV in a long while.Hacks: S5:Ep 1-3: Meh / Great
The show starts with a great premise, but has seemingly jumped (well, more "hopped over") the shark.
Quick synopsis: aged comedian and young(ish,) woke writer both grasping at the straws of modern relevance find themselves willfully entangled in a battle with the entertainment industry that would relegate them both to the sidelines if not the dust bin. Oh, and their characters couldn't be more diametrically opposed to one another, so while fighting the industry, they're tacitly fighting each other.
It's still good if you've been along for the journey and love the characters, but the show really is contriving its own existence at this point. I feel like a scripted Deborah Vance fan at this point; tirelessly faithful, though I know her best is behind her, and I defy you to convince me otherwise. 6/10 so far.