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ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
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« Reply #1869 on: 19 May 2010, 06:22:43 » |
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Lost was... it was very, very, very good tonight. Very satisfying. Posted on: 18 May 2010, 21:06:07
I made this comic for everyone who watched Lost tonight: (It's a spoiler, so only click if you've seen the episode... it'll only be funny if you've seen it, anyway): [spoiler] [/spoiler]
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ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
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« Reply #1873 on: 26 May 2010, 20:04:39 » |
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It's so weird that Lost is over... out of all the countless shows I watch, I think Lost was the one I had the strongest emotional connection to. It was the first show I really got too caught up in and it's always been the one I've gotten most excited for on a week-to-week basis. And now it's done. It just doesn't feel right. (I absolutely loved the finale, though. Great way to end it.) Posted on: 24 May 2010, 02:16:39
The true ending of Lost:
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ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
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« Reply #1888 on: 25 August 2010, 03:59:49 » |
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The comics are really great - the premise is an on-going survival story with no ending planned at all, delving deeper into the psychological and sociological aspects of life post-zombie apocalypse. There's clear original merit in the source material despite it being well-tread territory (even the waking up in a hospital only to realize it's a zombie apocalypse has been done in 28 Days Later), but the point is that it uses zombie staples and cliches to explore the human psyche. The show looks absolutely fantastic - and true to the source material - and it's being done by top-notch showrunners. AMC already has two unbelievable hits on its hands with Mad Men and Breaking Bad, two of the best shows on TV right now. This is looking to be another home run. Just because it's zombies and zombies have been done countless times doesn't mean you should turn it down. Zombies are so ripe for human reflection and deeper storytelling. What makes them different from us? Is it right to kill them? What if a loved one becomes a zombie? All of that jazz. One of the more artistic movie-monsters. And, might I ask, what other zombie-centric television show can you possibly think of? The idea of doing an on-going zombie survival serial drama is novel in and of itself. Don't fall into that annoying trap where something is stupid just because you don't appreciate the idea. My rule is that as long as someone genuinely cares about the project and is pouring some real passion into it, I at least A) respect it or B) give it a try, so long as it piques my interest. I may not always like - in fact, I usually don't - but I try not to bash anything with a respectable following. I mean, if something is really bad (Twilight, Seltzer/Friedberg movies, Disney Channel shows) then I won't feel bad for badmouthing it... but other than that I've been trying to tame myself lately when I don't like something. I've met too many people like the guy I used to be and they all annoy me to no end. "You like THAT?" or "You don't like THIS?", always with such an attitude to imply you're an idiot with no taste. Don't be one of them, Chron. Just say this isn't your cup of tea. That's the honorable way to go. I know at some point they'll try to explain what happened, which is stupid, stupid, stupid. Nope. Seven years on for the comic and counting with no inkling that there will ever be an explanation to the outbreak.
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« Last Edit: 25 August 2010, 04:47:58 by ASR »
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ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
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« Reply #1894 on: 26 August 2010, 02:28:06 » |
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Well, if you ever choose to stop being so jaded, television programming is at its all-time high right now. In addition to Mad Men and Breaking Bad, you've got Dexter, Party Down (which was unfortunately just cancelled), Louie, Eastbound & Down, the triumphant return of Futurama, Community, Modern Family, Californication, The Venture Bros, Doctor Who, Curb Your Enthusiasm, 30 Rock, Parks and Recreation, Always Sunny, Archer, and so so so so many more. If you could find it in your cold and angry heart to tell which kind of shows you like, I'd love to tell you which ones you should watch to help you realize how great things are in the world of television right now. [Monk is only decent. And I believe it's over now, anyway.] For the record: Mad Men is an ensemble character study set in the 1960's about an advertising agency. Created by one of the writers on The Sopranos, it's miles above that show... which is really saying something. Very slow-paced but always involving. The best acting and writing on TV right now. Breaking Bad is about a chemistry teacher who finds out he is dying of cancer and decides to cook and sell meth with one of his former students in order to leave his family with a lot of money when he dies. If it sounds similar to Weeds, brush that feeling off because once you watch the pilot you'll realize how completely individual this show is... and you'll be hooked because it's one of my favorite pilots ever. Increasingly dark and morally testing. Gets better and better with each season. Posted on: 25 August 2010, 20:12:19
PS I love you Chron. I just want you to be able to love me back again. I need to fix that little heart of yours.
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Chron
Super Robot
Posts: 2790
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« Reply #1896 on: 26 August 2010, 02:56:27 » |
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Astute observation, Nova.
ASR. Neither of those shows seem to interest me in concept much. I think the Sopranos was no good, but then I am actually an Italian American and that show deals with a side of that I want nothing to do with. Perhaps you are not describing Mad Men well enough for me? As for Breaking Bad, the concept turns me off.
I think this may be a case where our tastes are radically different; you seem to like very artsy, well produced and intellectually stimulating shows. I'm sure they are that. I can appreciate things like that, but I am, in general, far more simplistic in my tastes.
Some of my favorite shows are Mystery Science Theater 3000, Everybody Loves Raymond, Columbo (which is more a series of movies), and Third Rock From the Sun. I'm one of those people who loves cheese and bad, not to complain about it... it amuses me. Thus why I like Monk fairly well, and Psych, even though it is basically Monk only more annoying.
My mother and sister have been watching a lot of NCIS, and if I get past the fact that I can't use my PS3 because of this, it is actually a fun show.
So I suppose a good thing to suggest to me would be in that mystery/crime genre. I like sci-fi, as well, but typically not TV shows.
When it comes to the sort of serious, slice-of-life dramas you like (and that is conjecture on my part), I'm hard to impress.
I'll admit I flew off the handle, and I apologize for it.
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ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
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« Reply #1897 on: 26 August 2010, 03:23:23 » |
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Oh, I watch just as much as cheese as I do the quality stuff. I just figured you'd be more interested in that sort of thing, for whatever reason. I love MSTK3000, Everybody Loves Raymond, and ESPECIALLY 3rd Rock From The Sun. (Though I haaaaate NCIS.)
And hell, I can spew off a whole other list in the other direction: Chuck (very cheesy but fun spy comedy), Firefly (cancelled but cheesy sci-fi/Western fusion, Whedon at his best), Weeds (clever comedy for the first few seasons), House, How I Met Your Mother (surprisingly hilarious sitcom), Dead Like Me (cancelled), etc. etc. etc.
I'm gonna' stop.
But yeah, I watch too much from all ends of the spectrum. The only stuff that really bores me is repetitive procedurals like CSI and Bones, uninspired and empty comedies like Two and a Half Men, those sorts of things.
I don't really watch one type of show. At all. Hell, even that first list I gave you was almost entirely comedies - three of them were dramas - and I tried to only list shows that were still on the air. My lists could go on forever if I was including all finished or cancelled shows, like what was seeping into that second list. I do love "serious, slice-of-life dramas" but I also love the mindless trope-filled action of Chuck and the silly off-the-wall comedy of Community.
You're fine, you didn't fly off the handle at all. I just take this stuff WAAAAAY too seriously. At this point the only way I can redeem myself for how many shows I've watched is to eventually get a job writing for one.
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