But that's just my point! You she obeys! She obeys you! There's obeying going on right under my nose!

Wash ,'War Stories'


Natter 42, the Universe, and Everything  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, flaming otters, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Kat - Feb 01, 2006 8:18:41 am PST #4204 of 10002
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

No matter what, I could not NOT watch, at least up until Leomeo drives off into the desert with Balthazar Getty.

kat p! I LOVE YOU! I kept trying to place Balthazar Getty cause he kept looking familiar and I couldn't do it. SO thank you for the help!

Mmm...plaintains. Maybe I should go to Porto's again. But only if I ride my bike. Which means won't happen.


DavidS - Feb 01, 2006 8:21:03 am PST #4205 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Sundance Channel Alert!

***********

"Slings & Arrows," second-season premiere 8 p.m. Feb. 19, first- season encore marathon 3 p.m. Feb. 18, Sundance Channel.

This Canadian import is searingly spot-on and seems effortlessly great, probably helped by having only six episodes per season.

Revolving around a group of actors at the New Burbage Theatre Festival (purveyors of all things Shakespeare), the series attempts to mix art with commerce, real life with drama. It focuses on Geoffrey (the superb Paul Gross), an actor turned director who ran a theater that stood on its values but never attracted an audience.

He was once as thick as thieves with his mentor, Oliver (Stephen Ouimette), and with the love of his life, fellow thespian (and aging star) Ellen (Martha Burns).

But the bitterly mean Oliver was killed while drunk (he now reappears in death) and Geoffrey had to put away thoughts of selling out and instead become artistic director of the New Burbage Festival, where he manages to pull off "Hamlet" despite myriad woes (Mark McKinney of "Kids in the Hall" and indie film guru Don McKellar also star).

In the second season, all hell continues to break loose while Geoffrey must stage "the most jinxed play in theatrical history" -- "Macbeth."

*********

Highly recommend this show to all Buffistas.


shrift - Feb 01, 2006 8:26:48 am PST #4206 of 10002
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

My guess. Money.

Yeah, all right.


Steph L. - Feb 01, 2006 8:26:55 am PST #4207 of 10002
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

He throws away the mad scientist and pig-man vote

The pigmen are always marginalized.

Listen! Can you hear the weeping of the pigmen...?


Gudanov - Feb 01, 2006 8:28:24 am PST #4208 of 10002
Coding and Sleeping

The pigmen are always marginalized.

What about the bat-boy? Nobody ever thinks of the bat-boy.


Aims - Feb 01, 2006 8:29:11 am PST #4209 of 10002
Shit's all sorts of different now.

X-post toasties:

The controller said that my current salary and bonus will transfer to a new position in Philly. We are seeing if Joe can transfer.


JZ - Feb 01, 2006 8:31:10 am PST #4210 of 10002
See? I gave everybody here an opportunity to tell me what a bad person I am and nobody did, because I fuckin' rule.

What about the bat-boy? Nobody ever thinks of the bat-boy.

Ehn, the bat-boy's been tabloid-beloved for decades and he has his own musical now. I save my tears for the pig-man. America's forgotten chimeric hero. The other other white meat.


Kat - Feb 01, 2006 8:31:33 am PST #4211 of 10002
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Glarkware does a McDreamy shirt. I still feel bereft about missing the spy daddy shirt.

Aimee, life in Philly is so much less expensive so it would be like getting a raise to b/c of cost of living. Where are the offices?


Nutty - Feb 01, 2006 8:32:13 am PST #4212 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Whether he'll have to relearn to walk and talk is a question for a couple of weeks from now.

Right. Although, this is the first time I've seen anybody admit outright that his injuries might be longterm. (I expect everybody vaguely expected him to die, and now he's unlikely to do that, the speculation bandwagon is catching up.)

The brain is tricksy, and some people with shockwave trauma only, no wounds, have serious problems, whereas there was some historical guy who took an iron bar through the head and seemed unaffected.

The funniest part about Gage is that, given the medicine of the time, it was basically a matter of yanking the bar (a pin thicker than your two thumbs together, used for packing explosives) out of his head, and sewing up the flesh wounds. I mean, have you seen the models they've done of his skull? If you've got to take a giant rebar to the head, remember to take it vertically, up front near the face.


kat perez - Feb 01, 2006 8:32:44 am PST #4213 of 10002
"We have trust issues." Mylar

Ha, glad to be of service (kinda), doppelkat. However, upon further review, it seems that Balhtazar Getty was not in R+J. It was this dude, Jesse Bradford whom I probably got mixed up with Balthazar Getty because the character he's playing was Balthasar.

Seeing now that he played Eliza Dushku's boytoy in Bring It On years later. Two of my favorite movies! But alas, I still can't help you place the real Balthazar Getty.