What are you watching now?
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@jodi said in What are you watching now?:
@LuFins-Dad I go by fast, but you can see me in the opening city scenes!
And just barely in this shot behind Harrison Ford!
That last was the one I noticed!
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@jodi said in What are you watching now?:
@LuFins-Dad I go by fast, but you can see me in the opening city scenes!
And just barely in this shot behind Harrison Ford!
And why were you complaining about them getting a root beer?
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If you're a fan of A Christmas Story then I think you'll like A Christmas Story Christmas. Very tender, with Peter Billingsley As Ralphie now all grown up, and back in Holman Indiana with brother Randy, freinds Flick, Schwarz, and even archenemies Scut Farkus and Grover Dill (all played by the same actors). Too bad Melinda Dillon didn't reprise Mom Parker.
Really enjoyable holiday entertainment for the whole family.
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@jodi said in What are you watching now?:
@LuFins-Dad I go by fast, but you can see me in the opening city scenes!
Nice work, it is time for the Academy to create a category for extras.
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@Copper said in What are you watching now?:
@jodi said in What are you watching now?:
@LuFins-Dad I go by fast, but you can see me in the opening city scenes!
Nice work, it is time for the Academy to create a category for extras.
Yes. I was enjoying a nice whiskey while watching, but Jodi's performance made me feel guilty and I had to stop drinking...
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@LuFins-Dad said in What are you watching now?:
@Copper said in What are you watching now?:
@jodi said in What are you watching now?:
@LuFins-Dad I go by fast, but you can see me in the opening city scenes!
Nice work, it is time for the Academy to create a category for extras.
Yes. I was enjoying a nice whiskey while watching, but Jodi's performance made me feel guilty and I had to stop drinking...
Because she wasn't there to share it with you?
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Jodi, many years ago I portrayed a local WCTU (Women's Christian Temperance Union) character in a fall historical Cemetery Walk event. Local high school classes worked on the character development and lines for each of us. I provided my own costume and props. This woman owned the dress and millinery shop in town, and the WCTU met at her shop. I had great fun doing the part, and played it up to the hilt, so much that some people in town thought that I was anti-alcohol. They assumed that because I put effort into portraying the character, that I must have the same beliefs and attitudes as the character.
The problem became evident when as a city councilmember I had to vote on city ordinanaces related to our local bars and other alcohol sellers. People were aghast if they saw me enjoying any alcohol beverage in public. It was all so ridiculous!
Three times I played various local residents from the past: the WCTU leader, the woman who gave her home to the local Women's Beautification organization (they cared for the parks and worked to improve the appearance of the community), and the mother of our local city historian.
As noted, the WCTU character showed how silly assumptions can be made from unrelated events. It took several years for that to settle down.
The philanthropist's home that she donated is very similar to my home. The city park adjacent to my home is named in her honor, so it was fun to 'get to know her' by portraying her. Holy cow, she was a wonderful crazy gal. She went to Florida every year for the winter season, having a driver take her there in her huge car, and she took a complete carload of things with her. She died due to an automobile accident on one of those trips, with a full china service for twelve around her in the back seat.
The local historian, the one whose mother I protrayed, was still alive at the time of that performance. Oh my, it was unnerving to see her in one of my audiences that day. There's no way to completely understand and protray another person, and to have the daughter of that person there to see your presentation ...... Well, I figured she would have much to correct and even criticize, because that was her nature, so I braced myself for it. To my amazement, she said it brought her mother right back to her. She said it was uncanny how similar we looked and acted. Wow. I never knew her mother, and just guessed how she might be based on what I knew of this daughter. Apple and tree FTW!
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@jodi said in What are you watching now?:
@brenda - great stories! I’ve really enjoyed the dress up in costume part of this whole thing, and the pretending and pantomiming, it’s a little like being a kid again. Hoping to get to do it again when they film the second season next year.
Yes! I hope you get to do this again, too. It's an adventure, and I bet your kids are going to brag about it for years.
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@jodi said in What are you watching now?:
@brenda - great stories! I’ve really enjoyed the dress up in costume part of this whole thing, and the pretending and pantomiming, it’s a little like being a kid again. Hoping to get to do it again when they film the second season next year.
Work your way up to recurring character!
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Kings of Pain season 2. Especially like the episodes with Orange Baboon Tarantula and Horrid Assassin Bug. Season 1 hilight was the Giant Asian Centipede.
Entertaining and macabre science.
Especially designed for teenage males.
Highly recommended.
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Glass Onion a Knives Out Mystery
Netflix
It was a fun movie to watch.
It reminded me of a Family Guy episode.
Link to video -
National Treasure. The TV series spin-off, not the Nicholas Cage movie.
Utter crap.
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I recently watched the Netflix documentary "Don't pick up the phone". It's about the string of phone calls placed to fast food places where the caller pretended to be a cop and had employees do salacious things in the guise of police strip searches. Nobody knows how many of these calls happened. Some people went to prison for what they were convinced to do. That's tough. So they were gullible, but it's such a novel situation that few could be prepared for. I would not convict if I were on a jury. It's not a crime to be stupid. Appropriately, the documentary brings up the famous psychological study where normal participants were convinced to shock random people almost to death (or so the participants thought).
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I saw a story about cop shows, and it cited "True Detective" as being a masterpiece (at least the1st season). So, I'm revisiting that.
I watched the 1st episode this morning. Woody Harrelson, as whack as he can be, is a fabulous actor. And McConaughey is just as good. Watching the subtle, almost imperceptible things these guys do is a delight. It reminds me of the director of "Foyle's War" talking about the star, Michael Kitchen, "Kitchen can do with one look of his eye what would take 10 pages of dialog to convey."
Yeah, it's that good.
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