Posted on 09/11/2017 10:58:40 AM PDT by EdnaMode
TLS was good the first season and ok the second season. So far the third season sucks IMHO.
I told friends that the Achilles heal of this show is that it is limited to coastal locations; they can't do heartland where a destroyer can't go.
The seasons are only 10 episodes long, so they do have to jump right into the action. This season, the story is that the virus has mutated and is now killing the plant life. However, the early episodes are dealing with intrigue instead of warship action.
So far...
-PJ
If you think the actor playing Howard Hamlin is bad, have you seen Bob Odenkirk’s anti-Trump freak-out(s)?
Of course you are right - it is season four. I guess season three was only notable in my mind because Tex bought it.
Oh and don’t get me going on the “science” around a virus that mutates from animals to plant.
Never got into "St Elsewhere".
I tripped over "Alice" just recently while insomniac surfing on late-night TV.
You're right, it's completely unwatchable. The characters that I vaguely remembered as humorous? Yep, not funny. Vic Tayback did an ok job of playing himself, though.
"Three's Company" reruns are on fairly often. I surf through them; they're pretty much unwatchable as well.
Let me make a suggestion on that, there is a book I have that came out in 1979 called “The Complete Directory to Prime Time TV Shows from 1946 to the Present”. There are lots of editions to the book, it’s by Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh.
Get a copy of the book, any edition will be fine, and you will find a great list of TV shows and I will bet you and your Dad can find some he will like and most of the old ones will be on YouTube.
I am 62 and I almost would rather watch TV shows I grew up, they are really better than the offering today. Let me know how that goes.
Here is a link to Amazon so you can see what I am talking about: https://www.amazon.com/Complete-Directory-Prime-Network-1946-Present/dp/0345497732/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1505232589&sr=1-1&keywords=tim+brooks
Nothing can ever top “Looking” for overt pro gay sex, with explicit conversations about being penetrated during the anal sex act.
I saw it for 2 minutes and was appalled.
Real People had a host, Kip something, and he wore a skirt on one segment and for a brief split second his penis was visible.
But I will never forget the Yogi Kudu, the guy who could fold himself into a Lucite box about 1.5’ by 1.5’.
Later, they had him on do repeat the act and they put him and the box at the bottom of a swimming pool for several minutes. I thought that was cool.
That I believe was actually Skip Stephenson. His was a bit of a sad story as he was looked upon as a possible successor to Johnny Carson as host of the Tonight Show. Unfortunately, he had some very serious problems with alcohol and cocaine addiction and that most likely cost him the above and other things regarding his career as a comedian. Believe he passed away in 1992 from a heart attack.
I can remember watching the one featuring a man who toilet trained his cat and that had me as a kid continuing to laugh about it even at the meal table (earning a rebuke from my parents, lol).
Ernie Kovacs. One of many heartbreaking stories about how networks took untold hours of priceless film cans and videotapes of TV shows produced from the 1950s through the early to mid 1970s and either taped over them or all in out chucked them into landfills or New York Bay. There should still be outstanding arrest warrants for the persons who were involved in that.
I like this site
http://www.metacritic.com/feature/tv-premiere-dates
Yes, Skip Stephenson! His is a sad story.
They seemed to have fun on that show.
Wait: brain epiphany: “Omnibus” with Bill Moyers. It was bad. I was 12, but I was still able to sniff out shitty leftist propaganda.
Any of these shows that we like are probably 90% libtard. If we filter that out, we’d have nothing to watch.
You’re right. We have nothing to watch. Haven’t turned the tv on in a couple of years.
Why reward them? Their message is toxic. Let them starve with now audience.
Yes so true.
A few years ago I binge-watched “Have Gun Will Travel” (greatest TV western!)
A number of episodes (guessing: 10-15) credited the writing to Gene Roddenberry.
He had the same funky/moralistic style.
Paladin (the “Knight without armor in a savage land”) was James Bond cool before Sean Connery came along.
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