solovsfett
Registered User
S2 is great too.
Can’t wait to dig into season 2 but wifey wants to wait for the free stream
S2 is great too.
Oh my god. This Paul Krugman bit on Colbert is AMAZING
Half of the kids I grew up with had Bootsie as a mother. (The other half had Catherine Hepburn.)
What a fantastic segment.
Welp, him being Irish would get us closest to the book origins of being Scottish. I haven't seen Peaky Blinders, but Barbara Broccoli was persuaded to get Craig by his performance in Layer Cake.Cillian Murphy as the next Bond!
Yeah, that entire episode is wonderful. Especially Russi Taylor doing emo Donald.Playing catch-up on ducktales. Finally got to the Christmas episode.
As soon as young Donald started talking, I immediately knew it was the lady who did the voices from the original show. So cool.
Did anyone else watch the Ken Burns documentary, Country Music, which aired on PBS earlier this month? I finally got around to streaming the last few episodes.
I was not, and really am not, a country music fan. Obviously, growing up in North Dakota it was always around but my family was more likely to have a Top 40 radio station on than a country music station.
But I thought Burns' documentary was excellent, both from a music perspective and also from a cultural perspective of the South and West. I am interested, though, in the thoughts of someone who saw it and is a lot more versed in the music than I am.
I wanted to like Bluff City Law, but I just didn't care about the main characters.Anyone else tried out any of the new "Network" shows, or is it all a cable crowd here?
I liked Emergence, and Stumptown. Bluff City Law was ok. I have Evil and All Rise on DVR.
I was worried this would be super hipster-y and cliched.I tried Sunnyside and was not impressed. The ensemble cast was so over the top cliched that I am not sure it's something I could tolerate for very long.
Did anyone else watch the Ken Burns documentary, Country Music, which aired on PBS earlier this month? I finally got around to streaming the last few episodes.
I was not, and really am not, a country music fan. Obviously, growing up in North Dakota it was always around but my family was more likely to have a Top 40 radio station on than a country music station.
But I thought Burns' documentary was excellent, both from a music perspective and also from a cultural perspective of the South and West. I am interested, though, in the thoughts of someone who saw it and is a lot more versed in the music than I am.
First two episodes have been fantastic. I grew up with my father listening to Jimmie Rogers and The Carter family so I knew a lot of the songs in that episode. Didn't know the history as well and man, was that interesting. Not so much with Gene Autry & Bob Wills. Dad thought Hank Williams WAS country music (and I can't argue) so I am hoping to get to episode 3 soon. Can probably skip the rest of them since other than the "Outlaw" movement and a rare "Americana" act, I don't really have much to do with country music now. However, if the first few episodes are any indication, it will be worth watching just for the history lesson. Trying to get to watch Burns' Prohibition series also
I wanted to like Bluff City Law, but I just didn't care about the main characters.