SPOILER WARNING: Prestige Television Discussion

wishfulHatch wrote:…so right up Julian's alley


Julian, wrote:I did not think I'd like it but did.


Why does vindication feel so good?
wishfulHatch wrote:
wishfulHatch wrote:…so right up Julian's alley


Julian, wrote:I did not think I'd like it but did.


Why does vindication feel so good?
I mean, you're sort of collecting low-hanging fruit. "Julian is much more apt to appreciate 'fiction for women'" – whatever that means – is not exactly the boldest of calls.
Julian, wrote:
wishfulHatch wrote:
wishfulHatch wrote:…so right up Julian's alley


Julian, wrote:I did not think I'd like it but did.


Why does vindication feel so good?
I mean, you're sort of collecting low-hanging fruit. "Julian is much more apt to appreciate 'fiction for women'" – whatever that means – is not exactly the boldest of calls.

it's not….but still felt good in these dark times
Big Little Lessons

"One of the many reasons that dismissals of Big Little Lies as a soap opera or chick lit rang so tone deaf is that they were half-right. This show had multiple scenes of a character clutching a wine glass while gazing soulfully into the sunset. But a basis in a previously dismissed or marginalized genre isn?t a knock against any given show ? it?s the entire story of modern prestige TV.

The Sopranos was a riff on rough-and-tough mob stories. Game of Thrones upgraded swords and sorcery for the liberal arts set. True Detective is named after a long-running pulp magazine. Half the fun of contemporary television is in eking great art out of what conventional wisdom and taste had once written off as worthless trash. Big Little Lies replicated the process with a different set of tropes: wealth, bitchy one-liners, domestic struggles, and wine. So much wine. The difference, of course, is that Big Little Lies? predecessors were working with source material that traditionally attracted a heavily male audience, a leg up that put them significantly closer to mainstream critical acceptance than stories about unfulfilled housewives."
Looks like I'll be diving into Aussie dramas.. Spent all weekend watching Janet King which WETA recently aired two seasons of.  Nothing like a well crafted 8 episode legal drams thriller story arc to get engaged in.  Really am over the typical one hour and done of most US broadcast shows these days. 

Also, stumbled upon The Code another well done short Aussie mystery series.  It interestingly had the guy from Rectify with a very credible Aussie accent and Lucy Lawless in supporting roles.  It was on Acorn TV, so not sure where else it's streaming.
Kosmo, have you seen the second season of The Missing? I just realized it exists and is out on Starz.

Speaking of Aussie series, the second season (dubbed China Girl) of one of my cult-faves Top Of the Lake, is coming out this fall.
Yeah The Missing is running at the same time as Big Little Lies, pretty sure both had their finales this week.  Completely different story and cast except for the French Detective returns.  Case is more complex with more twists then series one.
Housos is the only Australian tv show that anybody needs.
I liked Big Little Lies and surprisingly, so did my husband. I liked the book for something fun to read after reading a bunch of really really heavy books in a row.

Julian, wrote:
Kosmo, have you seen the second season of The Missing? I just realized it exists and is out on Starz.

Speaking of Aussie series, the second season (dubbed China Girl) of one of my cult-faves Top Of the Lake, is coming out this fall.


Did not know the second season premiere of Top of the Lake was announced! Exciting!!!!! One of my all time favorites.
Space wrote:
wishfulHatch wrote:
Space wrote:
My wife is telling me I need to watch some show called "Big Little Lies". But I'm behind on The Americans, Better Call Saul, and three seasons behind on Justified. Is Big Little Lies as good as any of those other shows?

been hearing good things about it too
but seems kinda marketed to females if you ask me…so right up Julian's alley


She also tries to get me to watch Girls as well. With little luck.


Girls is for Girls. Not boys.
K8teebug wrote:
Girls is for Girls. Not boys.
HEY NOW.
The early reviews for the final season of The Leftovers are near rapturous. (Pun intended.)
I bought an antenna at Home Depot…


hutch wrote:
I bought an antenna at Home Depot…
The horror.
Julian, wrote:
hutch wrote:
I bought an antenna at Home Depot…
The horror.


I get like 35 channels… but so far no ABC…am working on it..my kids were able to watch PBS Kids this afternoon…. these new antennas are pretty good…
hutch wrote:
Julian, wrote:
hutch wrote:
I bought an antenna at Home Depot…
The horror.


I get like 35 channels… but so far no ABC…am working on it..my kids were able to watch PBS Kids this afternoon…. these new antennas are pretty good…

you also know that you can buy a Roku for like $30 and connect your tv to the internet and get tons of streaming content (and pay for what you want)
DC is pretty lucky when it comes to 'free' tv from an antenna.
But of those 35 ….how many are QVC, spanish, russian, some other Asian langage.
there was only about 5-6 channels that were worth even thinking of watching IMO
QVC is over the air now?
Julian, wrote:
QVC is over the air now?

well it may not be QVC …but there are at least 2-3 knock offs doing it in DC

talk about Prestige TV!
Julian, wrote:
It's based on a beach fiction novel but it was very well done. I did not think I'd like it but did. Alexander Skarsgarrd and Nicole Kidman are early Emmy favorites for it.


Kidman I can see, but Skarsgarrd is one-dimensional.  As soon as he enters the scene you know you are either getting Perfect Father Perry or O.J. Perry.  Many are of course secretly hoping for the latter, if only because it means Nicole Kidman is about to get vigorously rogered on some piece of Architectural Digest-worthy home furnishing.