Willow: That's a work ethic! Buffy, you're developing a work ethic! Buffy: Do they make an ointment for that?

'Beneath You'


Premium Cable: The Cursing Costs Extra

[NAFDA] A thread for the discussion of all original programming on HBO, Showtime, Starz and other premium channels.

This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.


erikaj - Oct 27, 2006 1:00:14 pm PDT #371 of 7329
Always Anti-fascist!

This is true...God, taking both sides much? Pres was so horrified when he heard that, I think that will stick with me forever. But I do miss George's hand with the...thrills and chills. And shit.


Gus - Oct 27, 2006 1:19:40 pm PDT #372 of 7329
Bag the crypto. Say what is on your mind.

Hey, I am a week or so back. I just got to the face-slashing thing, then the chilling aside.

First: Major props to the writers for ducking the Dangerous Minds thing. If one more white person Movie Star steps in to heal the beleaguered blacks, I may hurl.

The Wire pace is picking up.

Second: Opinion? Reserved.


Gus - Oct 27, 2006 5:08:16 pm PDT #373 of 7329
Bag the crypto. Say what is on your mind.

Groats.

OK, I am caught-up on The Wire.

You know who I am watching? The little dude who likes cars. Him, and Dukie.

Dukie, more. These boys have tech, but Dukie has more tech.


Hayden - Oct 27, 2006 8:48:43 pm PDT #374 of 7329
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Yeah, Dukie's going to break all our hearts in a big way.


Frankenbuddha - Oct 28, 2006 2:30:32 am PDT #375 of 7329
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

In semi-DEADWOOD related news, I'm going up to my brother and his wife's in Maine tonight (these are the folks who got me hooked on DEADWOOD), and I'm bringing one of my old MST3K tapes that has a "movie" from the 70s with Ian McShane as the villain. Movie in quotes because I think it was actually a pilot for a failed spy show set in Hawaii - the MST version was called CODE NAME: DIAMOND HEAD, but I've no idea if that's what the series would have bee called. Might also have been a made-for-TV-movie, though. It definitely is some form of 70s network television.


erikaj - Oct 29, 2006 10:02:19 am PST #376 of 7329
Always Anti-fascist!

Ok, Six Feet Under people: Why don't I feel the love? Apart from(Sorry, Gus) thinking that PK is hot.(Casey, maybe it *was* the hair) It's dark, it's twisted, and it's got a brainy teen girl in it. So why can't it pull me in? I like it well enough...watch one and tell it "That was fun. We should do it again soon." But I don't. Months go by and I don't even care that much. People love the shit...what's wrong with me?(Uh, okay, maybe I shouldn't open the floor *quite* that much.)


Hayden - Oct 29, 2006 10:13:44 am PST #377 of 7329
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

My wife loved that show, but I never got it, either.


erikaj - Oct 29, 2006 10:19:05 am PST #378 of 7329
Always Anti-fascist!

Ok, so, we can rule out that I'm a braindead. Maybe it's something about Simon fans...one of those diagrams from logic. One circle"Wirefiends", one circe 6FU fans and a tiny intersect(possibly only Mrs. Corwood)


IAmNotReallyASpring - Oct 29, 2006 12:16:13 pm PST #379 of 7329
I think Freddy Quimby should walk out of here a free hotel

Ok, Six Feet Under people: Why don't I feel the love?

Six Feet Under is the greatest show I've ever seen but that has less to do with it being generally successful and more to do with it striving in directions I think important.

When it was at its best, it eschewed almost all the trappings of high-brow and low-brow fiction so it could have fidelity to the character's interior lives as its first, last and middle concerns. Like, Claire's arc in season two is, when you strip away the specifics, identical to her arc in season three. So, by letting the characters become victims of habit, then have them wake up to it, then having them become victims of some slightly different habit that degrades in the exact same way and by asking 'But why? But why? But why?', it shaded in some pretty ugly psychological mechanisms that all people share. Like the unavoidable tendency to objectify and the almost unavoidable tendency to romanticize people we're in relationships with. The character-up approach to writing is optimum, I think, because if you stick close to it, dogma can't get in and infect it. When it got philosophical and started up offering answers to their characters' predicaments, I cringed but it was expert at elucidating the problems.


erikaj - Oct 29, 2006 12:33:04 pm PST #380 of 7329
Always Anti-fascist!

huh. Interesting thought. I do generally like the acting.