What are you binge watching? | Page 53 | The Boneyard

What are you binge watching?

Continuing with The Witcher. Still good. Fantastic episode called “everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face”. Next one was boring though. It sucks that Henry Cavill is out.
I rewatched from the beginning and finished "everyone Has a Plan...". Great episode. Not happy with Cavill going away and I'm not big Hemsworth fan either.
 
The warden and I have been watching The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. We're both really enjoying it. Well written and funny. Alex Borstein, Tony Shalhoub and Kevin Pollak are amazing and Rachel Brosnahan is as great as she is adorable in the title role. Big props to Luke Kirby who is a fantastic Lenny Bruce.
 
I've been through pretty much every streaming service, so I decided to try PBS.

I'm currently watching Sanditon. Good so far.

About Charlotte Heywood, a spirited and impulsive woman, who moves from her rural home to Sanditon, a fishing village attempting to reinvent itself as a seaside resort.

 
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I finally am getting around to season three of Ted Lasso. I'm a couple of episodes in and I have to say it hasn't been all that impressive.

The big question, which I obviously don't want to know the answer to, is whether the Lego stadium is foreshadowing.
 
If you haven't watched Winning Time, they are marathoning the first season as the second approaches. It's the story of Jerry Buss and the birth of the showtime Lakers. I have found it fun and compelling.
 
I finally knocked out all five seasons of Breaking Bad after a couple of failed tries. There were so many times I found myself anxious and uncomfortable over the five seasons, especially in the last season. So many hours of sleep lost. Better Call Saul is next up.
 
I started Season 2 of Foundation. First episode was so complicated. They really need to help you follow some of this stuff. Second episode was better. Lee Pace is a physical specimen, holy crap that guy is ripped. Jared Harris is a superb actor and the show suffers a bit when he or Pace aren’t in the scene. The female leads can’t carry the scenes very well, but there’s a new one that might.
 
I've been through pretty much every streaming service, so I decided to try PBS.
Did you ever get into Endeavor? The prequel to Inspector Morse. The final season just finished but I haven't watched it yet. I swear, some of them are feature film quality.
 
I finally knocked out all five seasons of Breaking Bad after a couple of failed tries. There were so many times I found myself anxious and uncomfortable over the five seasons, especially in the last season. So many hours of sleep lost. Better Call Saul is next up.
So...you liked it?
 
Mayfair Witches. This is on AMC/AMC+. From the Anne Rice books that came out of the Vampire Lestat series of novels and told the tale of a family of witches in New Orleans. Alexandra Daddario has the lead role as Rowen. That may be all you need to know to justify watching it, her crazy eyes are a good match here. If you like Anne Rice books, these were pretty good and so far, three episodes in, this is well done. Some of the adaptations of her stuff hasn't been good. I think AMC is just sticking with the story and that's a welcome change.
 
The Recruit - 2022 - 8 episodes

Just started and it is entertaining enough so far. It has been renewed for a second season.
"Owen Hendricks, a young CIA lawyer whose first week on the job turns upside down when he discovers a threatening letter by a former asset . . ."
 
I started Season 2 of Foundation. First episode was so complicated. They really need to help you follow some of this stuff. Second episode was better. Lee Pace is a physical specimen, holy crap that guy is ripped. Jared Harris is a superb actor and the show suffers a bit when he or Pace aren’t in the scene. The female leads can’t carry the scenes very well, but there’s a new one that might.
I watch the first season, but their decision to diverge from the Foundation source material made it less interesting to me.

I am a few of episodes into The Silo, which is better than I had hoped. It'll be interesting to see if they can sustain it. The notion is that a community lives in a huge silo. There was some sort of rebellion in 140 years previously and all computer records history and source material was destroyed. They don't know who built the silo or what its purpose is. One of their principal rules is that if you asked to leave the silo, you must leave the silo and you cannot return. Their only view of the outside world is through video screens all showing the same view of a gray lifeless valley. The camera is in a slight depression so they really can't see very far. People who are sent out of the silo or given the opportunity to clean the lens before they walk away. Even though you would think that people being expelled from the silo would just flip off the camera and walk away without cleaning it, every single person does clean the lens before they stagger a few steps and die.
 
I watch the first season, but their decision to diverge from the Foundation source material made it less interesting to me.

I am a few of episodes into The Silo, which is better than I had hoped. It'll be interesting to see if they can sustain it. The notion is that a community lives in a huge silo. There was some sort of rebellion in 140 years previously and all computer records history and source material was destroyed. They don't know who built the silo or what its purpose is. One of their principal rules is that if you asked to leave the silo, you must leave the silo and you cannot return. Their only view of the outside world is through video screens all showing the same view of a gray lifeless valley. The camera is in a slight depression so they really can't see very far. People who are sent out of the silo or given the opportunity to clean the lens before they walk away. Even though you would think that people being expelled from the silo would just flip off the camera and walk away without cleaning it, every single person does clean the lens before they stagger a few steps and die.
Never read the books, so that didn't matter to me. Honestly, if the divergence made it easier to follow in TV form, then good. It was still too difficult to follow.

On Silo, I started the first book recently. The show builds slowly but I'm reading the book in part because it really sucks you in. So many possibilities exist that you can't help wondering what is really going on. Are the baddies the baddies? What do they know? Is what they know even accurate? I found the Silo fascinating, despite similarities to some other stories like Logan's Run.
 
Never read the books, so that didn't matter to me. Honestly, if the divergence made it easier to follow in TV form, then good. It was still too difficult to follow.

On Silo, I started the first book recently. The show builds slowly but I'm reading the book in part because it really sucks you in. So many possibilities exist that you can't help wondering what is really going on. Are the baddies the baddies? What do they know? Is what they know even accurate? I found the Silo fascinating, despite similarities to some other stories like Logan's Run.
I may read the books. That's a great idea.

Right now I'm reading the Nick Louth series that begins with The Body in the Marsh. The first book is very good. It is the story of a police detective who ends up investigating the murder of his first love that he hasn't seen for 30 years.

I liked it better than, The Rules of Prey for whatever that's worth. I highly recommend it.
 
I may read the books. That's a great idea.

Right now I'm reading the Nick Louth series that begins with The Body in the Marsh. The first book is very good. It is the story of a police detective who ends up investigating the murder of his first love that he hasn't seen for 30 years.

I liked it better than, The Rules of Prey for whatever that's worth. I highly recommend it.
To be clear, I finished the season and just wanted more of it, hence the book. Nick Louth could be cool. I've struggled with books lately. Not much grabs me.
 
To be clear, I finished the season and just wanted more of it, hence the book. Nick Louth could be cool. I've struggled with books lately. Not much grabs me.
The Body in the Marsh is worth a look. It's pretty easy reading in the fact that it's set in the UK was a good change of pace for me. But I know what you mean a lot of people, including on the Boneyard said that The Rules of Prey series was outstanding. I didn't particularly enjoy the first one. I found the lead character pretty unlikable.
 
If you haven't watched Winning Time, they are marathoning the first season as the second approaches. It's the story of Jerry Buss and the birth of the showtime Lakers. I have found it fun and compelling.
Looooooooooooooooooooooooooooooove "Winning Time"! I think the casting of Adrien Brody as Pat Riley is just magnificent, loved his little monologue in the first episode of season 2 after they beat the Celtics in Boston.
 
I finally am getting around to season three of Ted Lasso. I'm a couple of episodes in and I have to say it hasn't been all that impressive.

The big question, which I obviously don't want to know the answer to, is whether the Lego stadium is foreshadowing.

The first half of the 3rd season sucks. It gets a lot better and ends well.

Verrrryyyyy important stuff happens off-screen in season 3. It was a poor choice by the writers.
 
The first half of the 3rd season sucks. It gets a lot better and ends well.

Verrrryyyyy important stuff happens off-screen in season 3. It was a poor choice by the writers.
I finished it up. It was satisfying but not as good as the first two seasons for me. I did like the exposition of why Ted is who he is.
 
I rewatched from the beginning and finished "everyone Has a Plan...". Great episode. Not happy with Cavill going away and I'm not big Hemsworth fan either.
I was disappointed with S3.
I loved S1 and S2 was enjoyable.
 
I thought it ended very well. But the Zava stuff was a total dud. Awful.
And it went nowhere. It was basically a rehashing of a reoccurring plot line where star player and upcoming star have to reconcile differences. We saw with Roy and Jamie, then we saw it again with Jamie and Danny then we saw it again with Jamie and Zava. It seemed like they ran out of ideas.

(I thought there might be some kind of reconciliation in the end where Zava comes back and says something like "Zava knew the team had become too reliant on Zava's greatness so Zava left so that you could be reliant upon your own greatness" or something like that. Instead it was like OK so Zava's gone now.)

That said, the Zava giant avocado sight gag made me laugh.
 
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