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08-10-2020, 07:04 PM | #1021 |
Supporter
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Scott City KS
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08-10-2020, 07:05 PM | #1022 |
Cheat Death
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Land of Drincoln
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One thing I can’t get over.
Emily Dodson looks like Ozzie Osbourne. Which I guess ties into the song he recorded about him. |
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08-10-2020, 07:08 PM | #1023 |
Supporter
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Location: Scott City KS
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08-10-2020, 07:13 PM | #1024 | |
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Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Scott City KS
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Quote:
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08-10-2020, 08:44 PM | #1025 |
MVP
Join Date: Aug 2017
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I have been trying not to watch, haven't missed an episode
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08-11-2020, 06:24 PM | #1026 | |
Why so serious?
Join Date: Dec 2016
Location: Chicago
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Quote:
The finale was nice. It's not a top-10 show, but it's extremely watchable and enjoyable. I'll definitely watch the second season, but I'm not exactly pining for it. On the subject of HBO series, I finished I'll Be Gone in the Dark recently too and that was great. The way they wove it all together was really impressive and thoughtful. And I'm on the verge of finishing I Know This Much is True with Mark Ruffalo. His acting performance is ****ing brilliant. But man, it's dark and sad. Watching it feels like swimming in your pool with weights dragging you to the bottom. |
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08-11-2020, 06:38 PM | #1027 | |
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Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Hollywood, CA
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Quote:
The character first appeared in more than 80 novels, followed by six feature films in the 30's, a radio show that ran for 13 years in the 40's and 50's and most famously, the TV Series starring Raymond Burr, which ran for more than 200 episodes with a follow up series in the 70's and more Movies of the Week in the 80's and 90's. The HBO series bears no resemblance to any of the novels, radio shows and TV shows of the past, other than the names of the major characters (Mason, Della Street, Paul Drake and DA Hamilton Burger). I think I would have enjoyed the series exponentially more had they created new names for the characters and called it something else because it's been nothing like the original. |
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08-11-2020, 09:23 PM | #1028 |
MVP
Join Date: Aug 2017
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Waiting for "Johnnie Cochran" on the "Cock" (Peacock)...didn't want to bring Clay's dick into this.....
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08-12-2020, 09:39 AM | #1029 | |
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Location: Scott City KS
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Although now I feel like a douche for not being familiar with Perry Mason. |
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08-12-2020, 04:59 PM | #1030 |
MVP
Join Date: Aug 2017
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I don't care what all the novels, radio, or TV shows portray, I know they all were bedding their respective Della Street's.
Surprised their isn't a porno parody of Raymond doing her on the witness stand |
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08-12-2020, 05:43 PM | #1031 |
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Location: Hollywood, CA
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08-13-2020, 12:36 PM | #1032 |
MVP
Join Date: Aug 2017
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OK so, Della with a strap on riding Perry like a horse on sidebar?
So Burr was like Clay? Except for Burr was rich and famous.. Said he was ****ing all the hot women (Natilie Wood) while actually getting his fudge packed outside prying eyes. "So, to cover his tracks, Burr had begun to invent a completely bogus history for himself. This included military service he had never undertaken, battle wounds he had never sustained, early marriages to two women who never existed, the birth and death of a son who was yet another figment of his fantasy, and alleged sexual relationships with female Hollywood stars, one of whom — Natalie Wood — laughed the idea to scorn when I asked her about it. Many of the claims Burr made about his life were accepted at face value by his first biographer, Ona Hill, in a book published in the year after his death. But his definitive biographer, Michael Seth Starr, writing 15 years after Burr’s demise, confronted all the claims head-on, demolishing most of them. His book was entitled Hiding in Plain Sight: The Secret Life of Raymond Burr. Raymond William Stacy Burr was born on May 21, 1917 in New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada. He was a chubby baby, exhibiting even then the ample girth that would both help and haunt him for the rest of his days. By the age of 22, Burr, as far as anyone knew, had never dated anyone. But the gossip columnist Ed Sullivan muddied the waters when he published an unsubstantiated rumour that Ona Munson, who had played Belle Watling in the movie Gone With The Wind, was ‘flirting with San Franciscan Raymond Burr’. There was only one problem about this. Ona, despite three disastrous marriages, was a lesbian who was later linked to both Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich. Burr met his first and only wife, Isabella Ward — Bella, as she preferred to be called — in 1943, during his first season as a trainee actor at the Pasadena Playhouse. The couple co-starred in Burr’s first Playhouse production, Quiet Wedding, and were married on January 10, 1948, when he was 30. The marriage collapsed within months and they were divorced in 1952. Neither would ever remarry. Bella would later comment: ‘Some people are just not marrying people — and I think I’m one of them.’ Burr was later to insist that Bella was not his first wife and that he had been married previously to a Scottish actress named Annette Sutherland, whom he was supposed to have met while he was touring Britain in the early 1940s. He claimed Annette had died in June 1943 in the same plane as actor Leslie Howard, shot down by the Nazis over the Bay of Biscay." Do I need to go on? "In 1959, seven years after his divorce from Bella, Burr began introducing yet another previous wife into his calamitous history. This one was named Laura Andrina Morgan and he claimed to have married her in either 1955 or 1953. She conveniently died soon afterwards, having lost her battle with cancer just before the couple’s planned honeymoon in the Bahamas. Once again, no one known to Burr ever met Laura and no trace of her has ever been found." It's an OK series, I don't go out of my way to watch it. but I do watch it. Last edited by cooper barrett; 08-13-2020 at 01:37 PM.. |
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08-13-2020, 08:10 PM | #1033 |
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Join Date: Aug 2000
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Rather than diving back into Umbrella Academy, or delving into darker fare like horror or thrillers, I finally started my with through NPH's 'Series of Unfortunate Events' Netflix series.
Only 5 eps in thus far, but pleasantly surprised in an unexpected way. It's sinister and whimsical in the vein of Pushing Daisies [Sonnenfeld], like I expected. But the sense of humor is very dry and often disarmingly funny. It's what you might call smart and winking humor, which could come off smug and tedious in the wrong hands. It plays with subverting the narrative and making callbacks and little snarky asides. I sense that a lot of this comes from the brliiance of the books it was based on, and if so I see why they were so popular. But it really delivers at moments. Surprised how often I find myself chuckling almost involuntarily. EDIT: It was bugging me what the 'smart-dumb' humor reminded me of, and it just struck me. . . . It has a similar sense of humor to Raising Arizona crossed with The Princess Bride . . . It's definitely reminiscent some of the better young adult books I recall from my childhood. Just curious, if anyone has seen the whole thing and how it holds up long term. I don't want to overstay the welcome or wade into some of the material if the consensus is it is subpar. Last edited by Baby Lee; 08-16-2020 at 09:23 PM.. |
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08-13-2020, 10:17 PM | #1034 |
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Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Hollywood, CA
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Oh, this is probably in an older thread but last year, when I was recovering from back surgery, I binged Parks & Rec.
The first season was a tough watch but I fought through it because the show has been so highly regarded by essentially anyone whose seen it. But goodness gracious, does that show take off in Season 2! And I have to say I think that it’s was Rob Lowe’s career defining role and he was sooooo freaking good. All of the actors where outstanding, although it took me a bit to warm up to Billy Eichner’s character. But overall, it’s an 8.9 with the only thing holding it back from a ten is season one. |
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08-13-2020, 11:01 PM | #1035 | |
Everybody Lies.
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: 22 Acacia Avenue
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