Jump to content

Recommended Posts

All police dramas have the main police character in a miserable failing marriage or seperated and poor little neglected

children all dressed up and waiting for the errant parent to take them out, but they let them down again.

Nearly all police dramas, on t.v. and film have this miserable state of affairs in them,ruining any good plot.

The exception being Midsomer murders old Barnaby, the happiest policeman in the world of fiction.

Enjoyed Shadow Line but find The Hour just too dull - am catching up with Spiral: The Butcher of La Valette recorded back in April. Very hand-help shaky camera thingy going on but it seems to work - maybe because they're all French and constantly shrugging and gasping (in a dynamic manner) in exasperation at the way things are going.

Tarot Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> All police dramas have the main police character

> in a miserable failing marriage or seperated and

> poor little neglected

> children all dressed up and waiting for the errant

> parent to take them out, but they let them down

> again.

> Nearly all police dramas, on t.v. and film have

> this miserable state of affairs in them,ruining

> any good plot.

> The exception being Midsomer murders old Barnaby,

> the happiest policeman in the world of fiction.



ALL police dramas do this. Nearly all police dramas do this. Midsomer Murders.


Ah bathos, how I do love thee.

  • 8 months later...
  • 11 months later...

did anyone catch "Our Girl" last night?


I have to say, underneath the veneer of watchability provided by Lacey Turner and Matthew McNulty was an unabashed recruitment advertorial for the Army's 'be all you can be' campaign, with some weird stereotypes thrown in for good measure.


Essex bloke, baby producing, council sponging, racist benefit cheat - tick

Muslim, bringing up issue of institutional islamophobia in government and the army (especially in light of further iraq abuses surfacing) somewhat undermined by making him a snarly, moustache twirling, doris hitting villain with a harem.


I know the beeb fawns rather in its royal coverage, but should it really be doing propaganda?

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 4 weeks later...
  • 4 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...

May have to do this on catch up/on demand.


I was slumped on the sofa yesterday and watched a strange little show called 'The Booth at the End'

Literally every scene is shot at a table in a diner where different people talk to a chap.


You make a supernatural deal with him, you ask for something you want and he sets you a task, if you complete it you get your desire granted.


It's unclear who he is or indeed who he may work for.


After 10 minutes i was thinking 'is this it?' but I was sucked in enough and watched all 5 half hour episodes.


It's almost old fashioned story telling, Jackanory or something, as the interwoven strands are recounted to the man in snatches.


Weird, but oddly compelling.


She said it better than me I did http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2011/apr/12/booth-at-end-lucy-mangan

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Cut the people list down to 3. Spend £16  simples
    • Has anyone found a car key fob in College Road SE21 or Dulwich Park?  Lost it at about midday Wednesday 17th December.  
    • An excellent point, ed. I reckon you could possibly get the cheese down to 75g per person depending on how many courses, the cheese media one is using and the accompiaments. A thicker biscuit can really increase the power of your cheese dollar. I'd also recommend putting all the last year's chutneys and pickles from the back of the cupboard in a single Kilner jar, adding a bit of malt vinegar and a grated apple, then attaching a hand written label saying 'Pikey's Pickle: Autumn 2025'.  It's not Megan Markle levels of domestic deceit, but it works every time. Pre-portioning cheese seems arbitrary, but I think acceptable when it's 20 people. It gives people an idea of how much a serving is, and negates the issue of somebody, normally a brother in law or cousin's new boyfriend, not taking their share of the rind. Remember, you're doing them a favour. Somewhere in the room there's an older family member who could see it and never forget. It's disinheritance stuff. It also gives rise to the great postprandial game of 'Cheese!' where guests can swap their share of cheese for another. Tastier than Monopoly and far less cardboardy, cheeses can be traded like currency or commodities. Hard and soft cheeses, dependent on their relative strengths, normally settle at close to parity but I've seen blue cheeses trade at less than half the price.  It's a Stilton lover's paradise, if you can hold your nerve.  Goat cheese lovers can clean up, but need to beware. As volatile as the 1970's Argentinian Peso, it's up and down like a bride's nightie.   I think I'll stick to Neal's Yard, then.
    • Another vote for The Cheese Block on LL but for 20 adults, you'd better be willing to pay a fair chunk of money or hope that they'll be happy with very small amounts of cheese! Other than that, supermarket or search online for a large Christmas cheese hamper and take your pick. For example: https://www.finecheese.co.uk/collections/christmas-selections-hampers (only mentioning them as we had a gift hamper, much smaller than a big Christmas one, from them a while ago and it was very nice). I'm sure there are other excellent options.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...