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- Also, RIP to Martin Nodell, creator of one of the most enduring characters in modern popular fic
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TV STUFF:
- iTunes plug: Our SciFi and Fantasy Page is now fully loaded and brimming with vintage goodness! As of tonight, you can hit up iTunes, click on the SciFi Channel Page, navigate over to SciFi and Fantasy Classics, and download episodes or seasons of the following:
Sliders, Tremors, Rod Serling's Night Gallery, Kolchak: The Nightstalker, Hercules: The Legendary Journeys, Xena: Warrior Princess, The Incredible Hulk, and ... the ORIGINAL Battlestar Galactica.
So log on, hit up the page, and download an episode or two. Spread the word.
- Oh yeah, VERONICA MARS is now on iTunes. Hells yes. (not NBC related)
- So last night I tried to play catch-up with Sci-Fi's THE LOST ROOM miniseries, as I'd heard relatively positive things. Overall, I thought it was a somewhat guilty-pleasure show that has some great actors involved, but was hampered by a pretty thin premise and some loose writing. First of all, Peter Krause is a great lead. I'm a fan from his work on Six Feet Under, and he is a solid leading-man presence and definitely makes them ost of the material given to him here. Problem is, the material is pretty generic "single dad desperate to keep his daughter" stuff. Even worse, the characters are written as pretty grounded, regular people, yet the plot is so out-there and surreal that the combination doesn't quite click. It's like someone took the characters from Law and Order and threw them headfirst into a game of Myst. Regular Joe detective / cop characters just don't gel with surrealist, abstract science fiction concepts when the show can't seem to decide if it's reality-based science fiction or just Jose Louis-Borges-esque abstract, high-concept scifi. I mean, the writers basically apply a thin, videogame-y logic to the plot, which feels like the producers played one too many rounds of Zork as teenagers or something. Despite all that, I was compelled to watch all two hours of the opening chapter of The Lost Room, and overall, enjoyed myself. Once I realized to basically throw logic out the window and watch the show as if it was some wacky Choose Your Own Adventure I might have read in fifth grade, it was pretty cool. Curious to see how Part II attempts to build on the momentum.
My Grade: B
- Man, has anyone seen that stupid MTV show, Twenty-Four Seven? Basically it's like a reality show version of entourage, with a bunch of total dumbass losers being filmed as they attempt to "make it" in Hollywood. How these guys got their cushy jobs as club-promoters / professional slackers in the first place is a mystery, although I think one of them dates Hayley Duff so that probably explains it. Anyways, this show basically represents everything I hate about Hollywood - the idea that it's a place for spoiled rich kids too lazy for real jobs to go and try to hit it big while living off of their parents money, allowing these mostly talentless wastes of space to somehow infiltrate the worlds of movies, music, and TV simply because their uncle has a connection or something. Anyways, this show like so many recent MTV "reality" shows is probably about 70% staged, but still, I wanted to punch my TV while watching these guys sleaze their way into a business deal with some promoter by bringing two silicon-sporting girls to their business meeting to basically seduce him into taking business advice from two twenty-something morons. Yikes, if this is "reality," then I don't want any part of it.
OTHER STUFF:
- Have yet to make much mention of it here in the blog ... but, this Sunday, I am seeing GUNS N' ROSES, live, in concert! Awwwww yeah, baby, this is gonna rock my face off. Believe it or not, this will actually be my second time having seen GNR in their post-breakup formation, as I saw the Buckethead-led incarnation in Boston in 2004, and despite the naysayers, it was a ridiculously awesome concert. So suffice to say, while I'd kill to see the ORIGINAL GNR lineup in all their Slash-eriffic glory, I am optimistic that this show will nonetheless rule it. Not only will GNR hopefully be in top form, but the opener is none other than Sebastian Bach, he of SKID ROW (and Gilmore Girls!) fame. Can't wait to hear some vintage Skid Row stuff - Youth Gone Wild, 18 and Life, etc. And man, while they may not have the original lineup, is there any band with a catalog of songs that rivals GnR for sheer awesomeness? I think not, baby. Welcome to the Jungle, Paradise City, Sweet Child O' Mine, Rocket Queen, Mr. Brownstone, November Rain, Civil War, I Used to Love Her, You Could Be Mine ... etc., etc., etc. Also, back when I saw 'em in Beantown, the concert was pure vintage ROCK ... from the riotous crowd to the sheer atmosphere of debauchery and scandal, I felt like it was 1988 all over again and rock was king. So yeah ... this should be freaking awesome.
- Alright, that's about it for now ... stay tuned for some special BEST OF 2006 entries and a few other surprises.
1 comment:
I'm glad you mention "Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose." This is the first place I really noticed Peter Boyle, and it remains one of my favourite X-Files episodes because of his performance. And it was the first thing I thought of when I heard the sad news today.
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