MonkeyZero
Mexican Mayonnaise Weiner Sandwich
I watched "This is how I live" on Prime the other night. Skip it.
"I think you should leave", if it hasn't been discussed previously.
Watched Gray Man last night--totally stupid but really a lot of fun.
Yeah, I'm all for inclusion and all, but I'll be darned if I noticed a single straight male character in all of those first four episodes. Sort of hampers my sense of realism.We started watching Netflix's "Uncoupled"
Maybe I'm missing something but this just seems to be one big string of gay stereotypes and tropes with a low rent version of Queen Latifah thrown in for good measure.
I watched the first two episodes of Sandman. It felt sedate to me, like they were trying to capture the mood of the books a little too hard. But maybe doing something different is a good thing in the intense world of post-GoT TV drama. Some of the CGI looks like it’s about twenty years old—the scenic shots especially, such as the gates of The Dreaming—but there’s a lot going on that blends right in. I’ll give it another episode or two before I decide if I’d rather just read a book.
Have any of you watched the show Strange Angel?
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Strange Angel follows "Jack Parsons, a brilliant and ambitious blue-collar worker of 1930s Los Angeles who started as a janitor at a chemical factory but had fantastical dreams that led him to birth the unknown discipline of American rocketry. Along the way, he fell into a mysterious world that included sex magic rituals at night, and he became a disciple of occultist Aleister Crowley. Parsons used Crowley's teachings of self-actualization to support his unimaginable and unprecedented endeavor to the stars."[3]"
I enjoyed it, but I really don't know who proposed nd funded a show about rocketry, Aleidert Crowley, occultism, and free love. I'm puzzled at how sucessful they expected it to be.
I feel they should have stuck with the late Thatcher-era setting.
I'll have to check that out - Parsons wasn't quite the favorite son that Feynman was in grad school, but he might have been a close second (that book about him came out while I was there), and we made more than a few trips out to the desert to putter around in his and George Van Tassel's (another fun Mojave weirdo) footsteps