I hate wrestlers given time to speak, but they're boring.
I miss the Million Dollar Man & Virgil.
I miss the Million Dollar Man & Virgil.
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Ive seen a worse one. It's some vampire, an F-rate flick with the worst acting I have ever seen, vampires freely walking the daylight, but what makes it beyond salvageable is at the beginning it says vampirism is caused by some virus that really exists.I love the ruse at the beginning of the movie, Fargo....
This is a true story. The events depicted in this film took place in Minnesota in 1987. At the request of the survivors, the names have been changed. Out of respect for the dead, the rest has been told exactly as it occurred.
They intended it to be seen as a true story....a style choice.
People took it literally, & have been searching for the money
hidden in the snow.
It is, and at the same time I also kind of see it like a modern Shakespeare. Violent, lewd, vulgar, and though it's stereotyped as for the rednecks and plebs, it draws in a lot of higher class society.Wrestling was essentially the afternoon soap opera for men. Some gals too! *grin*
And dialects that are indistinguishable from mumbling. I have a fair understanding of the English language but I'm not a native speaker. So some dialects like West Coast Gangsta slang or Hillbilly mumbling are very hard to understand. But who really doesn't speak English are the English.A few things that annoy the hell out of me:
Mumbling -
In the same vein, nobody ever locks the car door when they get out.I didn't read through the whole thread, so apologies if this was already mentioned...
Except on All in the Family, where there is the occasional toilet flush, no one ever uses the bathroom.
And dialects that are indistinguishable from mumbling. I have a fair understanding of the English language but I'm not a native speaker. So some dialects like West Coast Gangsta slang or Hillbilly mumbling are very hard to understand. But who really doesn't speak English are the English.
Exactly. (I had that scene in mind.)
Then it got cheesy and over the top. It made pretty boy Rick Flair a Plain Jane.It is, and at the same time I also kind of see it like a modern Shakespeare. Violent, lewd, vulgar, and though it's stereotyped as for the rednecks and plebs, it draws in a lot of higher class society.
And it's like, the smallest thing happens and it's such a massive thing, blown up to huge proportions, time honored traditions of trash talking each other, and it's just all so dramatic and pompous and flamboyant, lmao. It really is an art form that stands in its own world.
Terry Funk once responded to a journalist ridiculing wrestling for all that. He went on having a song, and fireworks, and pretty girls, but wait, no, he's not talking about wrestling he's talking about every time the Dallas Cowboys score a touchdown.Once the pyrotechnics fireworks and ribbons started I realized something.
I really only knew Mean Gene as an announcer. And for singing a not too bad version of Tooty Fruity.Mean Gene was gone and I stopped watching.
They were pretty good. The Rock was pretty good. Roddy Piper was phenomenal.I hate wrestlers given time to speak, but they're boring.
I miss the Million Dollar Man & Virgil.
I'd rather have it bleeped out than substitutingOn American TV? Bleeping out profanity.
It is something I really hate...listening to people cussing is liberating.
I hate how people drinking whisky & other
hard liquors gulp it down as fast as possible.
They've no time to taste it.
What puts bees under your bonnet?
I tried watching The Mandalorian.So much of TV and movies are the very same thing: Explosions, cops and robbers, good guys and bad guys, and people with some super powers. What I long for the most is a Good Story. I want to be hanging off the edge of my seat, not being able to wait to see what happens next.
Perhaps, I have seen too many movies and too much TV. I find them lacking so very much in what counts the most: A Good Story.