My wife and I subscribe to Netflix and Amazon Prime and watch regularly. Maybe I'm just feeling out of it these days, but it seems to me there are more and more popular culture references in what we're watching, more and more of which I don't get.
Sometimes it's musical, which since I've not kept up with popular music since the Beatles it's understandable I'll miss them. Often it's what critics like to call "homages" or "call-outs" to other programming. Those I miss as well.
I think it's "Billions", the third season of which we just finished, which made me particularly aware of this. It's possible it's just the writers of that show who are especially into references to other pieces of popular culture, but it seems more pervasive. Although there are fewer directors' commentaries these days now that Netflix is shifting from DVD's to streaming, they're another way I become conscious of things I'm missing.
It seems a logical trend in our culture: the more time people spend watching and listening, the more likely creators will cross-reference things. I suspect the trend also means fewer references to the older sources of reference material: the classics and the Bible.
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts
Monday, April 22, 2019
Wednesday, April 18, 2018
For the Good Old Days of DVD Extras
The NYTimes had a piece on the fading away of extra features which used to be included on DVDs. My wife and I are long-term subscribers to Netflix, back in the days before streaming, and we (or I at least) enjoyed most of the features, particularly the director commentaries. The best movies seemed usually to have been models of teamwork: a lot of talented people working together for a common goal. No doubt that was an exaggeration, or more kindly a rosy colored look back.
The commentaries varied widely: some directors would narrate the action on the scene--very boring. Others would use the action as the launching point for little stories, discussions of technique, particularly the more cinematic types. Some would make a point of praising the work of both the actors on screen and the members of the crew behind the scenes. Some series, like Breaking Bad, and Mad Men, would have multiple features and often two or more commentaries per episode.
I'll miss the extras.
The commentaries varied widely: some directors would narrate the action on the scene--very boring. Others would use the action as the launching point for little stories, discussions of technique, particularly the more cinematic types. Some would make a point of praising the work of both the actors on screen and the members of the crew behind the scenes. Some series, like Breaking Bad, and Mad Men, would have multiple features and often two or more commentaries per episode.
I'll miss the extras.
Friday, May 22, 2015
"Maggots Don't Lie"
An all-time great line, from an episode of "Waking the Dead".
The speaker is the forensic scientist, played by Tara Fitzgerald.
A quick google reveals this is what Gene Weingarten of the Post calls a "googlenaught"--something which returns no hits, though there is the meme that "bugs don't lie".
The speaker is the forensic scientist, played by Tara Fitzgerald.
A quick google reveals this is what Gene Weingarten of the Post calls a "googlenaught"--something which returns no hits, though there is the meme that "bugs don't lie".
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