Binge rewatching the first season
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Maybe my all-time favorite Netflix show returns for its final season March 9:
The Last Kingdom
If anyone needs a movie their wife would probably like with Valentine’s Day on Monday and is actually pretty good, check out Ophelia on Netflix.
Stumbled over episode 1 of the new season of Killing Eve…Season 4 on Sundays, BBC channel.
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Saw that PBS has a new Ken Burns documentary on Benjamin Franklin premiering April 4.
Started Longmire today.... holding my interest
Longmire is one of my favorites
What ever happened to Alaska The last Frontier? The Kilchers and all that?
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Still on as far as I know, it was last season.
That’s on the discovery channel.
New Top Gun trailer:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Q_K...ainmentTonighthttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Q_K...ainmentTonight
Straight into my veins. Cannot wait.
Enjoying "Winning Time" on HBO Max so far. I'm sure they're taking license with the facts but it's a fun watch, especially if you remember the late 70s/80s.
I’ve stuck with The Last Kingdom and am now in season 5 which is the final season… been pretty good, but I’m getting Viking’d out. I’ve watched The Viking and Valhalla series over the last few months.
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Didn’t someone have review on The Chosen One?
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OK, if you liked The Wire, you'll be excited about a return to Baltimore. "We Own This City" is an HBO mini-series starting next Monday. It's by David Simon who created The Wire, includes a couple of the actors from The Wire (Jamie Hector and Delaney Williams--Marlo Stanfield and Jay Landsman, respectively) and dealing with the Baltimore PD, again. But different subject matter. Looking forward to it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_Own_This_City
Almost done with the better call saul binge so I can partake of the final season. Needed to refresh whats going on
I binged season 5 last Saturday so that I could be ready for season 6.
I thought season 5 was really good and enjoyed the first 2 shows of season 6.
I caught a couple of shows last night I had never seen before, "Louisiana Law." I thought it was going to be like a COPS kind of thing, but instead, it was Louisiana Wildlife Enforcement. Sort of a cross between COPS and "Swamp People." I enjoyed it, but I don't know if it's the kind of thing I'm going to enjoy long-term or not. I mean, there's only so many times they can do the same thing before it will bore me: get a guy for not having a fishing license, confiscate his catch and give it away to someone, catch someone taking someone else's crab trap, catch someone night hunting (guy shot a deer decoy), catch a guy for not having a harvester's license on a boat, catch someone who was not releasing immature female crabs (kind of icky, really, hearing them talk about virgin crabs), and catch someone carrying a deer across state lines. I think that's all I saw. As I said, I found it interesting and enjoyed it, but I don't know how long I can enjoy it unless they have different things that pop up.
Then again, if Swamp People happened to be on TV when I'm flipping channels, I'll guar-ON-tee I'll watch that for a spell. So maybe I will continue to enjoy it.
Just finished "Don't F**k with Cats". I was expecting something far different! Expecting a comedy, not a documentary on the tracking and apprehension of a murderer! Still, I would recommend
Also "Stranger Things" has new season coming out May 27th
Watched two more episodes. Still not bored with it. Added a few more storylines--guy who shot two does the day before (they had to hide out in the woods to catch him home), someone who failed to have the kill switch for a boat motor attached to his wrist while boating, who had caught a monster catfish, cited four guys in a wildlife management area who were harassing other hunters who were using "their" blind (it's a public hunting area; no such thing as private ownership, even if you built the blind), guy who shot a deer from a roadway--lengthways down the road, like where houses and cars were behind if he missed (he didn't), overloaded boat nearly capsizing, tracked down an elderly man in the marshland who got lost hunting and his cell phone ran out of battery power, and a small charter boat guy without his licenses--for the 2nd time that summer. Also a guy who took his nephew out with him to help him with a school project on what it takes to be a game warden/wildlife officers.
Final part of Ozark is out.
The 18th century was more than a little rapey if you go by this show. Seems everybody in this show gets it at one point or another, some more than once.
I'd go see it even if every critic hated it, but Top Gun 2 is 97% on Rotten Tomatoes:
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/top_gun_maverick
Oh, wow.
We watched Top Gun (Saturday?) when we were flipping channels. I'm a sucker for rewatching those shows when I run across them on regular TV (even though I have the DVD sitting a few feet away). Probably the 10th time I've seen it. Looking forward to Top Gun 2, and glad to see such great reviews of it.
This is how weird I am.
I have watched almost none of the shows discussed here, though there are a few I want to catch. But for whatever reason I have been for years completely retro in my music and TV viewing.
I am slowly (maybe once a month watching an episode or two) watching House again. I love Hugh Laurie both from his Blackadder and Hugh and Laurie days, and as House.
But mostly while I work I need things not too distracting, and since I once again have opportunity to cook now and then, I am watching youtube cooking videos.
Some are newer people who are 100% youtube creations, but I have discovered that old PBS stations like KQED that produced So much public TV when we were younger have put up a ton of it on youtube.
So I'm watching Jacques Pepin, arguably the father of cooking shows, and the marvelous Julia Child (harder to find), most definitely the mother of all cooking shows.
Despite being the source of much humor (the Dan Akroyd bit playing her on SNL is IMO one of the very funniest SNL skits), she is actually a remarkable woman. For those who don't know she is a true American hero to start, having worked in WWII and after for OSS, the precursor to the CIA, and was a fairly senior staff member in Pacific operations with Top Secret clearance. During that time she actually created a shark repellent formula for the military that is still used today by the US Navy. No joke.
Then when she retired from that position is when she went to study at Cordon Bleu, and thereafter through some happenstance started her cooking show. But she had a very respectable and successful career before she became the Grand Dame of American cooking shows.
Pepin is in the same league, one of the best chefs ever.
They are so much more pleasant to watch than modern cooking fare. First I want to actually LEARN things, not all that BS drama, and second they are pleasant, affable, nice people. I have no desire to watch angry people screaming and acting like 6 year olds who need a spanking.
Among current chefs my personal favorite is Alton Brown. Again he teaches principles, and is an affable person.
Just some random thoughts as I work on a report watching Julia on the other monitor making classic french onion soup. :)
He stars in a show on Hulu as well that ran 2-3 seasons that I really liked. The show is called chance.
I've heard of Chance, haven't seen it. Hadn't heard of Why Didn't They Ask Evans?.
I may get around to them some day. I watch little TV, and little that can't work with me working while it's playing. I have Prime and Hulu but don't use them much. Maybe someday.
I may queue up some Blackadder however. Maybe III this time, with Laurie as the Prince Reagent.
I have only seen him as House, but I am also a big fan. I have spoken about the app I have on my phone,DroidTV, which is where I watch 99% of my non-sports television. A few years ago, I began exactly what you are doing – watching every episode of House from the very first episode to the very last. Even though I had seen some of the episodes before, it was very enjoyable to watch, and I will probably do that again in another year or two.
Off the top of my head, I have watched every episode of the following shows exactly that way:
30 Rock
Backstrom (only one season, though)
Blacklist (ongoing)
Body of Proof
Bones
Boston Legal
Breaking Bad
Broadchurch (3 seasons, really enjoyed this British detective drama)
Castle (ongoing-never saw it originally)
Criminal Minds
Fargo
Friday Night Lights
Good Behavior
House
The Mentalist
The Middle
Monk
Nurse Jackie
Parks and Recreation
The Practice
West Wing
I have also watched just some favorite episodes, random episodes, hitting or missing depending upon mood of many others like: Weeds, Warehouse 13, Two and a Half Men, That 70s Show, Storage Wars, Sherlock (maybe all), Seinfeld, Rookie Blue, The Office, Married with Children (I still enjoyed that show, but it's not as funny as when it first came out-I think it had more shock value back then), MASH, King of the Hill, The King of Queens, In Plain Sight, Get Smart, Community, Cheers, and probably a bunch of others. I skimmed through the Classic TV listings to find this, but some of them are on the Prime time, so I skipped those.
Anyway, watching those shows, commercial-free, at random times and on my telephone where I always have it, and almost always have a set of Bluetooth headphones with me, is how I do my television thing, and have for years.
I’m in season four of a Better Call Saul binge-a-thon. I started watching while I was recovering (see Covid thread).
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