I like it too...but Daphne is just ridiculous for UK viewers, she’s so badly scripted, they could at least have got some sort of Manchester dialogue coach in there. Eddie and Frasiers dad have the funniest relationship IMO.
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Jane Leeves spoke about this on the bbc a few years ago
They didn't want an actual Manchester accent or especially British sounding dialogue. They just wanted something that sounded a bit working class but that Americans would be able to understand. I love the part she plays - once you get past the accent of course.
I felt the same at the time ut came out. I have since caught the odd episode with Daphne's mother on channel 4. I was surprised at how funny she was in them because I remembered her character really grating at the time. Turns out I don't have much bad to say about the series at all!
5 episodes into the third day , It's completely bonkers but i find myself fascinated by it
Just started watching Vikings .
Late to the party but it looks decent so far.
Watched “Hitsville - The Making Of Mowtown” on Sky Arts last night. Best programme I’ve seen on Mowtown, was brilliant and gave excellent insight.
The Lance Armstrong documentary on the BBC is a great watch.
Line of duty series 5 finished
Every single series was outstanding :top marks
Really enjoying Schitts Creek.
The Cult of the Family (Sky Crime), 3 episode series about a cult in Australia, quite unpleasant viewing.
Just finished The Sopranos, my 2nd or third time through and my wife’s first. She thought it was decent enough, but it’s not really her kind of show. I hadn’t watched it in years but was quite surprised to find it wasn’t quite as good as I remembered and also slower. Still a game changer, but didn’t think it held up all that well nowadays, unlike something like The Wire which is every bit as good today as it was at the time IMO.
I'm on my third attempt at trying to watch it. It's a slow burn over the first few episodes and I imagine much of the first season is hindered by the need to introduce and set the scene for so many characters. I sat down for a good few episodes this time and liked it well enough to go back to it.
There are things that date it but you can say that about all good tv series that people still reference 20 years later.
I'm not raving about It yet but an going to stick with it and see how it goes.
Started watching The Alienest on Netflix.
Season 1 is pretty good but the main standout is Martin Boyle playing Ted Roosevelt as the NYPD Commissioner...maybe it’s just me but the likeness is uncanny and I find it hilarious every time Boyler appears! So much so the Mrs is getting fair annoyed at me chuckling away at the squirrels performances [emoji23][emoji23]
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Really enjoyed the first iteration of the return of Unsolved Mysteries on Netflix, but the second batch weren't quite as good IMO.
I enjoyed the stories about Jack Wheeler (ex White House aide found dead in a dumpster) and 'Jennifer Fairgate', an unidentified woman found dead in her hotel room in Norway, but the final 3 episodes did nothing for me...
The Blacklist... End of discussion [emoji16][emoji16] watched all 7 seasons and James Spader is an absolute genius.
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Im interested in this idea of ‘dated TV’. What dates it; production costs, dialogue, style? What? Obviously something like I Claudius is dated, which affects my enjoyment of it because it’s more like watching a play, but aren’t all TV shows more than ten years old ‘dated’? It’s not an argumentative point, I’m genuinely wondering about examples.
A couple of contrasting examples i can think of in recent times would be The Wire and Gavin & Stacey.
With The Wire the whole concept of pay phones and pay as you go mobiles just seems from another era. Street dealers are peddling their wares on Instagram and Snapchat now and the Pirate Bay and the like revolutionised the sale of drugs. Drugs went digital. 'Burner phones' are still a thing but it just feels old. With Gavin & Stacey the show is based on the idea that 2 people who are effectively strangers can meet up for the 1st time whilst knowing nothing more than the information they have garnered from a few phone calls. That idea just wouldn't work as a new series in the world of Tinder, Facebook and so on. I caught an episode of Malcolm in The Middle last night and it looked like something from the 70s, everything about it looked old. In my head that show was still recent then I noticed the episode dated from 2001, a different world.
I don't think being dated really detracts from my enjoyment of shows. In some cases it enhances it, an example would be the earlier seasons of Still Game where the grainier pre HD filming adds to the show. I think if something is obviously set in the past it's easy to adapt to that but if you remember the show as being contemporary and then revisit it in a world that has changed it appears different, not necessarily worse but changed.
Hard sun , Really enjoyed it , Weird as hell but i can do weird
Never got renewed for a 2nd season , Shame
Great answer :agree: I suppose if a contemporary show (Like the recent sky atlantic ‘the affair’ truly awful TV) ‘feels dated’, that’s a negative critique, but if a historical show like ‘The Sopranos’ feels dated, well, that’s just because it is, by definition.
I may have mentioned this before (I know I have, every day for a week), but...the West Wing.
Toby Ziegler is potentially my favourite character of all time.