Posted on 08/25/2016 5:24:40 AM PDT by Kaslin
In recent days, a bunch of entertainment industry denizens gathered together behind a phalanx of armed guards at Justin Timberlakes mansion to sip chardonnay and celebrate Hillary Clintons commitment to the poor and gun control. She came out of witness protection long enough to pocket some cash before returning to her previously scheduled indifference to the people flooded out in Louisiana. In Marthas Vineyard, Barack Obama donned his mom shorts to chip some balls with that tiresome guy from Curb Your Enthusiasm before petulantly visiting the waterlogged South. And noted disaster logistics specialist Samuel L. Jackson smirked over a photo of Donald Trump delivering goods, including kids toys, to flood victims. Not Pictured: Samuel L. Jackson.
This all leads to one inescapable conclusion: Hollywood is terrible and must be destroyed.
If you need more proof, start flipping through the offerings on Netflix looking for a movie you actually want to watch. Youll be there a while, assuming you are neither ten years old nor a drool cup operator. On the surface, it seems odd that the more entertainment options we have, the fewer shows we actually want to watch. But there is a simple reason for it. Most movies and TV are crap.
Its not all ideological, but some of it is. For instance, you may have seen the ads for a new TV show about the first woman major league pitcher. Who on earth wants to spend a season watching Hollywoods idea of normal Americans yelling at are plucky heroine I reckon girls cant dun done play no baseball!? Because you know thats what will happen. The entire show is inevitably going to be a shrill lib/feminist screed about how, darn it, girls totally can too play baseball as well as the male pros! You know, just like in real life.
Yawn. OK, time to flip over to a crime drama. Hey, some good old fashioned cops and robbers how can that go wrong? Hmmm, who is going to turn out to be the murderer, the inner city punk who dresses like a thug or the well-coiffed business man? Thats only an actual question if you havent watched TV in the last 20 years. Thank you Hollywood for teaching me that the guy who walks, talks, and dresses like a criminal isnt; its the guy who doesnt who is. Again, just like in real life.
Maybe we should try a spy movie. Oh look, Jason Bourne is back, as exhaustingly unstoppable and untouchable as ever. Uh oh, some assassin is lurking Im worried that this time Bourne wont magically sense him and then outfight him using the stapler and bottle of Elmers glue that happen to be lying around. Oh, and once again the American government is the evil, conspiratorial bad guy better head to that fundraiser for the evil, conspiratorial woman who wants to make the American government bigger and more intrusive!
Theres a reason that actors are rarely former protégés of Stephen Hawking.
Oh, and lets not forget the new clichés that you cant seem to escape. My personal favorite is how every freaking movie seems to revolve the characters family relationships. The new Star Wars was less swashbuckling adventure than a trudge through a Freudian minefield of boring paternal issues. Same with the new Star Trek movies beam me up, Daddy. Even the two Walking Dead shows seem more interested in feelings about Pa than zombie stuff. Can you Hollywood hacks go get your therapy on your own time?
And speaking of The Walking Dead shows, which people are steadily abandoning, lets understand something about action/adventure shows. The action/adventure part is the most important part. But somehow, somewhere, someone lied to these screenwriters and told them that the audience really wants to get into these characters and explore what makes them tick. No, people want to see them fight zombies. Less talking, more zombies. If you go a whole episode and only have one zombie, who kind of wanders in as a couple characters are on minute eight of a dialogue about their feelings about stuff, then you are making a terrible zombie show.
The same is true in non-animated corpse contexts. For example, the interesting thing about Saul in Better Call Saul is his shenanigans, not his psyche. But Better Call Saul takes a hilarious, fascinating character and has chosen to devote two seasons to him fighting with his brother. Wacky antics? Not many. Kooky side characters? Few and far between. Confrontations with big bro where feelings are shared? Every freaking week.
And finally, stop relying on bad choices to propel the action. Its like every character in every show is now one of the teenagers who, after being warned not to go into the basement, goes into the basement without turning on the light and while leaving their shotgun upstairs. These arent just bad choices these are loony, insane choices no rational human would ever make. In The Walking Dead, every week, some character, in a fit of the feels, decides to wander off for some reason, spurring an unplanned, uncoordinated search by the others that inevitably results in someone getting put on the menu. In Better Call Saul, the action is always always the result of some unbelievably dumb maneuver by a character whose best quality is supposed to be his cleverness. Its lazy writing, Hollywood, and if you dont watch out it will make people return to reading.
But then what can we expect? These are the same people who dont bat an eye about jumping on a private jet to fly halfway across the world to hear Gilbert Grapes little brother pry himself off his latest model conquest in order to lecture them about the weather.
I’ve enjoyed and recommend several series lately on Amazon Prime: Downton Abbey, Mr. Selfridge, Doctor Thorne, and Poldark to name a few.
Piracy is a victimless crime
Watch Sherlock before you cancel. I love it, another season will be coming out, but it will be awhile until it reaches Netflix. My daughter roles her eyes at me for being a “fan girl “ at my advanced age of 42, but just hearing the theme music makes me happy.
I’ve also watched all the episodes of Poirot, Midsommer Murder, Rosemary and Thyme (mediocre), Murder in Paradise and Psych on Netflix...took years to watch all those shows, by the way! I don’t watch TV constantly. Once I get through Inspector Morse I will be out of shows to watch. Then what will I do while washing dishes or folding laundry??
Yes; I have trouble maneuvering through Amazon and Netflix. I generally give up! I have the original Poldark for the 70s and prefer Upstairs, Downstairs to Downton Abbey - just me.
All in the Family was a great series; when I see it and Sanford and Son I always watch.
I've seen what HBO is playing. A lot of the movies are rated less than 50% by Rotten Tomatoes, and many are rated below 30%. I'd say Hollywood is killing itself.
Well, I am a stooge fan but not that much. I prefer Laurel & Hardy although Curley is hilarious. On Facebook, folks were talking about a Hanna Barbara cartoon about the stooges as little kids - with a bald Larry except for those tufts of hair on the sides of his head. Apparently, it was cancelled before it went to air. Looked great!
One show we’re going through now is Naked City - a brilliant Sterling Siliphant show from the early 60s. Nothing is filmed in a studio; all in the streets and tenements of NYC. Absolutely brilliant series. Then we watch Bilko over and over.
That’s why I now watch KDramas.
Someone had to bring those up! American fictional TV is almost unwatchable once you have decent characters, good plots and story lines, and occasional doses of reality. (Unless you are watching something completely unrealistic like My Love from Another Star).
I’m watching “W” now. Unlike anything you’ll see on American TV.
My teenagers like Sherlock, but it didn’t do much for me. I’ve seen most of the others. I agree Rosemary and Thyme wasn’t brilliant, but I liked Thyme.
I listen to recordings from “The Great Courses” while doing housework, or Spanish Christian pop music if I’m sad or Steve Earle or Halestorm if I’m angry.
I am watching that one too. It’s pretty amazing.
My favorite of all-time is “Master’s Sun.” Love Gong-Hyo Jin, and I can’t wait for her new one, “Jealousy Incarnate.”
I got episode one in last night. It’s classic Gong Hyo Jin and Lee Mi Sook, my favorite queen of crazy has a role in it too.
Actors and actresses tend to be morons.
More movies, less bullsh*t.
bookmark
great move sir
I haven’t watched TV in over 30 years. My grandson put me on his subscition to Netflix. I watched Breaking Bad which I thought was funny. Then I watched “Lillyhammer” and almost peed my pants laughing. Stevie Van Zandt is a comic of epic proportions.
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