ive been watching the bridge on tvnz on demand
not something I would have got around to watching in a weekly series but I have enjoyed it
not something I would have got around to watching in a weekly series but I have enjoyed it
Very flat. Little doubt about there being another series.
I hope they do leave it there, I’ve had enough of it. British TV is beginning to follow the US model - if a show is popular keep it going long after it’s natural lifespan has been passed.Total pish - what a let down after all the hype. No way they can leave it there
I hope they do leave it there, I’ve had enough of it. British TV is beginning to follow the US model - if a show is popular keep it going long after it’s natural lifespan has been passed.
I hope they do leave it there, I’ve had enough of it. British TV is beginning to follow the US model - if a show is popular keep it going long after it’s natural lifespan has been passed.
I hope they do leave it there, I’ve had enough of it. British TV is beginning to follow the US model - if a show is popular keep it going long after it’s natural lifespan has been passed.
* Why do the the Americans insist on calling TV shows seasons? Which we call series. And sporting events as a series, that we call seasons?
The only long series I can recall watching every episode of is Mad Men, all 93 of them. And that was because the family needed a first lockdown (remember that) joint quest. The first series was brilliant, then huge chunks of it were a bit of a chore, but it was very well acted and made and worked in a number of levels. And at least it wasn’t murder after murder. I’ve seen most of the first season of The Sopranos, it’s really good, but I’ve got it now, no need to see any more. I was hooked on the first two series of American Gods, but that lost itself in series three and I gave up after 3 episodes and I hear that they aren’t being funded for season 4 - a classic case of writers leaving the source material and ending up a blind alley.I haven't watched this series of LOD. My wife has, and she felt let down. I felt the same after watching the last one, so didn't bother this time. The problem with box sets, and prolonged series shows is that you have to invest a lot of time to them, with no guarantee of a resolution after watching ten or so one hour episodes. Even more if they decide to embark on another 'season.'* I have to try and be selective with my viewing as I try to not watch too much TV. Heaven forbid even attempting 'The Sopranos', 'Breaking Bad' or 'Game of Thrones.'
Give me a self contained film lasting one hour forty - two hours any day of the week.
I watched 'The Accountant ' starring Ben Affleck earlier this week. I enjoyed that, done and dusted in one hour and forty five minutes.
* Why do the the Americans insist on calling TV shows seasons? Which we call series. And sporting events as a series, that we call seasons?
The only long series I can recall watching every episode of is Mad Men, all 93 of them. And that was because the family needed a first lockdown (remember that) joint quest. The first series was brilliant, then huge chunks of it were a bit of a chore, but it was very well acted and made and worked in a number of levels. And at least it wasn’t murder after murder. I’ve seen most of the first season of The Sopranos, it’s really good, but I’ve got it now, no need to see any more. I was hooked on the first two series of American Gods, but that lost itself in series three and I gave up after 3 episodes and I hear that they aren’t being funded for season 4 - a classic case of writers leaving the source material and ending up a blind alley.
The Americans also do this with comedies. Seinfeld is a work of genius, mostly, but I really don’t need 180 episodes of it. I’ve got 12 of Fawlty Towers, and that’s fine thanks.
I used to do most of my film watching on transatlantic flights, so that’s fallen off a bit……
* Why do the the Americans insist on calling TV shows seasons? Which we call series. And sporting events as a series, that we call seasons?
Obviously not the case with TV as it’s relatively recent, but for a lot of your other examples the Americans use the words which we used to use. Apparently ‘soccer’ was in common use in Britain until the late sixties. Similarly with the spelling, which is pretty random in English anyway (to the frustration of people trying to learn the language), the US spelling often dates back a few centuries. Bill Bryson wrote a book about it, Mother Tongue, but it’s a bit dull to be honest, unlike his travel stories.Just thinking logically about this now - a lot of their shows used to be 13 episodes long, the length of a season.....?
It’s called the World Series because the first few finals were sponsored by a newspaper (no longer existing) called “the world”.Because they're awkward ****ers. Why call a sport football when it's mainly played with your hands, and then invent the name soccer for a sport that uses the feet?
Why the World Series, when there's only a handful of nations who play that particular sport?
And don't get me started on elevator, sidewalk, jelly and all of their terrible spelling like color etc!
British TV is beginning to follow the US model - if a show is popular keep it going long after it’s natural lifespan has been passed.
Might be a bit slow in places for some people but the first series of the wire is very good
Bought all five so I must watch the rest some time
Obviously not the case with TV as it’s relatively recent, but for a lot of your other examples the Americans use the words which we used to use. Apparently ‘soccer’ was in common use in Britain until the late sixties. Similarly with the spelling, which is pretty random in English anyway (to the frustration of people trying to learn the language), the US spelling often dates back a few centuries. Bill Bryson wrote a book about it, Mother Tongue, but it’s a bit dull to be honest, unlike his travel stories.
I’ve been told that The Wire is the perfect long format programme, because each season/series addresses a different aspect of a city, rather than stretching a single story ever more thinly. But I haven’t seen any.
For me Madness are one of the most perfect pop bands ever from this country or anywhere else for that matter. The whole was way bigger that the sum of the parts. Apart from being from the wrong part of London there’s not much wrong with them. And this lovely little film is a bit of social history which will resonate with a lot of us, of a certain vintage.
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Yeah, quite a few times, great fun and sometimes outstanding - when they did the Liberty of Norton Folgate it was like a Weimar Republic music hall event. I think a version of that concert is on YouTube as well, worth a look. Suggs hasn’t got the greatest voice in the world, and sometimes it’s disastrously off, but he is a huge and charming character, and the fantastic hooks on some of these songs means that the whole audience is singing along anyway.I assume you've seen them? We've seen them a couple of times, big party gig![]()