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What TV Shows Are You Watching? The 9th Is - Excuse Me - A Damn Fine Cup Of Coffee

It doesn't, yet neither does it promote the chance that minorities would be treated as equals in that event. People in Fallout afaik are segregated or outright killed.
And there is a lack of the patriarchy, which in Fallout you'd rather think would have an actual reason to be there with all those thirsty warmongering archetypes ^^
 
Television and film writer, producer, and director Ed Zwick is on the radio, talking about how he really came to appreciate the work that actors do: He tried it himself. He appeared in a small part in a few episodes of his series Once and Again. He said it was a disaster. He said he couldn't remember the lines he himself had written, he couldn't make opening a door look natural, and he was sweating like Richard Nixon, all with "The Eye of the Cyclops" five feet away and 50 people staring at him. :lol: He said his scene partner - a 12-year-old by the name of Evan Rachel Wood - was a sweetheart and very patient. (If you've seen the show, Zwick played Jessie's therapist. If you haven't seen the show, I highly recommend it, but good luck finding it; it's caught in Rights Hell. They can't even put it out on DVD. I'd love to watch it again myself, if they ever figure out what to do with it.)
 
Hm, I tried to watch an Australian tv series, Mr. Inbetween.
Tldr: it is poor, peripheral and decadent.
Maybe the existence of so many Greeks in Australia has had a corrosive effect, but despite the epithets meaning other things at state level, culturally this looks to be more an Anglosaxon/Germanic brand ^^

(capitalizing epithets for peoples is really boring)
 
Finally got around to starting Monarch on AppleTV....2 epis. Despite a couple of minor inconsistencies, I'm liking it so far. It stars the pretty young actress who plays Mariko in Shogun, so I've seen her now in two things very close together, but not heard of her before. Based on IMDB, it appears that she's not been in much before at all. Based on the timeline, Kurt Russell's character should be much much older than his spry self.
 
Shogun episode 4 out.

Shōgun’s TV mastery​

A beautiful, blood-splattered adaptation of James Clavell’s historical novel is just the kind of weighty drama we’ve been waiting for

It’s been a little quiet for TV so far in 2024, hasn’t it? Sure, One Day was a treat, Mr Bates v the Post Office was significant to say the least and The Traitors was nothing short of an event – and, yes, there’s also been Mary & George, Mr & Mrs Smith, final seasons of Curb and How to With John Wilson, and Masters of the Air as well … OK, my argument is crumbling a little. Still, I do think that we’ve been missing the sort of grand, hefty drama that, from the very first frame, seems destined for the upper reaches of the end-of-year lists.

But good news: that show is here, and it’s called Shōgun (airing Tuesdays on FX in the US, and Disney+ in the UK). Four episodes in and there is a distinct vibe around this series, a feeling that it is quickly attaining that combination of mass attention and acclaim that all the major shows have. It has attracted an impressive number of eyeballs for our fractured post-streaming age, and as its storylines intensify (the end of its fourth episode has teed things up very nicely in that regard), noise around the series is only going to grow.



An adaptation of James Clavell’s hefty historical novel, Shōgun is set in the Sengoku period of feudal Japan, where a political vacuum has opened up following the death of the country’s supreme ruler, whose heir is not old enough to take to the throne. Into this febrile situation floats John Blackthorne (Cosmo Jarvis), a roguish English sailor who has been tasked by his Dutch Protestant paymasters with disrupting Portuguese Catholic merchants, who have been busy establishing trade routes with the Japanese. Blackthorne is considered a “barbarian” by the Japanese and he and his crew look unlikely to last very long in this new land (indeed, one crew member meets a very unpleasant end early on – this is not a show for the squeamish). But Yoshii Toranaga, a powerful daimyō (feudal lord) and one of the five regents vying for ultimate power, suspects that Blackthorne, with his knowledge of western weaponry, might be worth keeping around.

Inevitably, Shōgun has been compared with Game of Thrones, because we are obliged to do that with any historical drama where lots of people violently cark it. Shōgun does, though, have a better claim than most. In its succession-crisis plotting, unashamedly antiheroic lead characters, and lashings of gore, it does strikingly resemble Thrones’ first season, back when the fantasy drama was going very light on the fantasy, and instead focusing on political intrigue and gnarly beheadings. In both seasons you can see intemperate heads prevailing over cool ones, malevolent figures tinkering away in the background and peace shifting slowly into war. Given where Game of Thrones ended up, a show that seems to take the qualities of its earlier, more grounded seasons, rather than its later ones, is welcome.

What is particularly impressive about Shōgun is that it gets so much right when the potential for disaster is so high. This after all is an adaptation of a novel about feudal Japan but seen through the eyes of a westerner, a setup that practically begs for accusations of Orientalism. The original 1980 adaptation didn’t even bother to provide subtitles for its Japanese characters, so centred was it on its white saviour protagonist. Here, though, while Blackthorne is the show’s nominal lead, he is just one small thread in a complex tapestry. Jarvis is plenty watchable as Blackthorne, pitching his Protestant plunderer somewhere between Laurence Olivier and Tom Hardy at his most wild-eyed. But just as central a character, and arguably a more compelling one, is Sanada’s Toranaga, a genius-level military strategist whose inscrutability and quick-eyed cunning energises every scene he serenely strolls into.

Like Toranaga, always ready to capitalise on his rivals’ mistakes, Shōgun’s creators seem to revel in the shifting allegiances and complex codes of the particularly fraught period of feudal-era Japan in which the show is set. But they do sweat the small stuff as much as the grand overarching details – and the series has been praised in Japan for showing precision and respect in its recreation of the period.

The result of all this is the show of the moment. But there’s a catch: Shōgun is being sold as a limited series. Once its 10th episode airs, that – in theory – is it. It’s hard to imagine FX/Disney not capitalising on its success in some way, and there are further novels in what Clavell called his Asian saga to crib from – though those novels are all set centuries later in different locations (Hong Kong, Singapore, Iran). So this is likely it for Blackthorne, Toranaga et al. Enjoy them while you can.

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Official podcast channel -

 
And it was excellent!
 
I started "The Program" on Netflix about an abusive boarding school

I went to a similar school DeSisto and it was no picnic, props to the documentary makers & everyone involved in putting this out
 
Really enjoyed the Monarch series on Apple. Finished it up a coupla days ago. Nice binge-y show I'd been missing for a while now. The show set up some nice emotional impact for the last episode, with a surprise cameo (monster) at the end to set up things for the next season. Very solid acting and some nice monster action, including the big guy (or girl - not sure on that). I do hope they beef up the monster action a bit in the next season.

Also on Apple, I've been watching this comedy series The Completely Made-up Adventures of Dick Turpin. The show is very silly and I almost switched it off in the first epi, but decided to keep going. The show does grow on you. The main actor playing Turpin I'm not familiar with at all. Most of his lines are the silliest and least funny, but it is the overall character that much of the other humor builds off of, so the supporting cast brings much of the real laughs. The show is charming but may not be for everyone. Turpin is about a rather feckless highwayman who accidentally becomes the leader of a gang in a setting probably approximately 17th century and quasi-fantasy. Some interesting Brit comedians/actors pop up in small roles here and there like that lady who starred in that recent Netflix mock history documentary. Also, Tasmin Greig has a small but important role - she is just wonderful in everything
 
Late guest at the party I guess but my daughter and I had an amazing run at Stranger Things (S1-S4) these last couple of months.
 
Beacon 23
Ominous start: It's the 23rd century and one of the first scenes shows a character wearing a wife-beater.
Before her role in GoT, Lena Headey was in the Ok series Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, which had this beautiful scene...
I'm not confident this series will have anything of the same quality.
 
I watched the first ep of The Girls on the Bus (2024), about journalists following a fictional primary race for U.S. President. Melissa Benoist and Carla Gugino play two of the main characters. S'okay. Of the various shows I've tried lately, I guess I'm most likely to watch more of this one. It made me think of last year's Daisy Jones & The Six a little bit, even though the setting is a 2020s political campaign rather than a 1970s concert tour. Similar vibe, at least initially. All but one of the characters is fictional, but you can kind of see some analogues for real people and real news outlets. The New York Sentinel = The New York Times; Liberty News = Fox News. (There actually was a daily newspaper in New York called The Sentinel, in the 19th Century, but it didn't last long. I guess in this alternate universe, that became the 'paper of record' instead of the Times.) A number of ties to The CW: Benoist was in Supergirl; one of the showrunners was a writer on The Vampire Diaries; and Tala Ashe from Legends of Tomorrow plays one of the primary candidates. Brandon Scott looks super-familiar to me, but I'm looking at his IMDb page, and I cant' figure out where I might have seen him before. Scott Foley & Griffin Dunne I know from a bunch of things.

Before her role in GoT, Lena Headey was in the Ok series Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, [...]
An underrated series, imo. It seemed like even the fans of the Terminator movies that I knew were super-reluctant to give this a try. Dunno why. I think it was the best Terminator story since Terminator 2 at the time, and I think it probably still is. They've made 3 more movies since this series was on, and none of them has been quite 'right.' I imagine the show may have aged a little since 2008, but for anyone who's a fan of the first two movies, it might still be worth it. It's something I've been meaning to rewatch, myself.
 
Yup, TSCC was quite good for a network TV show and sorely underrated. We discussed it a bit here not that long ago. I rewatched within the last coupla years or so, and enjoyed seeing it again. I thought it held up fine.
 
Mayday (Air Crash Investigation): Season 45.
Good action scenes, but don't get too attached to the main characters.

Late edit: Could be season 45, or 45 to 50. Shrug. I'm just waiting for the Boeing, Going, Gone episodes. :)
 
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An underrated series, imo. It seemed like even the fans of the Terminator movies that I knew were super-reluctant to give this a try. Dunno why. I think it was the best Terminator story since Terminator 2 at the time, and I think it probably still is. They've made 3 more movies since this series was on, and none of them has been quite 'right.' I imagine the show may have aged a little since 2008, but for anyone who's a fan of the first two movies, it might still be worth it. It's something I've been meaning to rewatch, myself.
Well, there was a glut of series at the time, Terminator 3 had already been nowhere near as good as Terminator 2, and also there was the writers' strike and a decision by the network to intentionally screw the series by airing it on impossible days and timeslots at a time when we couldn't just record it or watch it over the next 24 hours ‘on demand’ as we can now.
 
I, too, have watched a couple of episodes of it.

It doesn't follow the book to the letter and I had to steel myself with that weird scene at the beginning where the captain kills himself. Some characters are simplified or amalgamated to keep the numbers down but at least in the couple of episodes that I've seen the narrative is mostly internally coherent.

There's one historical detail which is that generally the population of Japan's average stature was lower than the Europeans' in some historical periods.

One thing I'm sore about is Rodrigues (with an s!!!!!) having been made Spanish instead of Portuguese Oh, and changing Kiku's scene.
 
The use of CGI was well handled (but I am not even done watching ep1) imo. While it is clear they used CGI, it barely managed to escape being identified as a computer-game cutscene.
Re Osaka, it still sort of looked like a barbarian town to me (filled with wooden buildings, no sea wall, on the small side too etc). But maybe european barbarians thought otherwise ^ it was still far worse in historic reality.
That said, I doubt someone from 1600 Portugal would be impressed; they had all the gold taken to Lisbon.
 
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Iwaju on Disney+ -- Delightful. The setting feels like Wakanda, but its Nigeria. So it's a fantastical technologically advanced version of Lagos, Nigeria, as if it were like Wakanda, minus Black Panther and the Avengers, etc. The nuances/differences in accents, language, music, culture are apparent if you are familiar with Nigerian culture, but would be easy to miss if you are not. Only a few episodes and easy to watch in a couple sittings with family. A pretty straightforward kids-as-heroes type story... with some notes of Big Hero 6.
 
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