DRW50
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Viewing Topic: One Life to Live Tribute Thread
Everything posted by DRW50
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EastEnders: Discussion Thread
I keep forgetting he does that. Anyway, the Danny Dyer thing is from this puff piece on why "posh girls" love Eastenders, listing him as some sort of totty. I always got the feeling that Dyer had been a back number in the UK for years for everyone, posh, girl, or no, but I guess he's a "name," and most of the hot guys on the show are either leaving or play rapists, so slim pickings. (seriously - Masood is better looking than most of the male cast these days...not that he'll ever get on "posh girl" lists) http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/eastenders/11410913/Why-posh-girls-love-EastEnders.html
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EastEnders: Discussion Thread
Jake Wood wins weird crush award. Nothing weird about having a crush on him...a world where it's weird to think he's hot but seen as the norm to want Droopy Dawg Dyer is not one I care for. http://www.digitalspy.com/celebrity/news/a629256/eastenders-star-jake-wood-awarded-heats-weird-celebrity-crush-2015.html
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EastEnders: Discussion Thread
Thanks. June always looks so youthful for 88.
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As The World Turns Discussion Thread
The picture quality is awful, but this scene is a great example of why I enjoyed Tess so much. Endless, endless bitching about Courtney and about people we don't even see ("she probably wants to play both parts!"). There was literally no reason why Hutch was interested in Tess or why he stayed with her as long as he did. Sometimes I just tell myself he was secretly gay and saw her as a catty BFF. It's not like he ever had chemistry with women anyway. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LnOgrBXCZM0
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Another World Discussion Thread
I tried to find those scenes on Youtube once but don't know if I ever did. These scenes, plus Rachel freezing Liz out of the family, were phenomenal. It was also so nice to get to see Irene Dailey get a chance to act. I think Swajeski did a decent job at AW, but those weeks with Lemay really brought AW alive.
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EastEnders: Discussion Thread
I'm happy to hear it. I hope he treated her respectfully. He often treats people in the audience like garbage just to show what a big man he is.
- Y&R: Old Articles
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The Doctors Discussion Thread
Thanks. No wonder he looked familiar. Hello, Larry.
- Y&R: Old Articles
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The Doctors Discussion Thread
I keep wondering if they should have done that anti-smoking campaign 15 years earlier (of course that would have been hard for Brooke Shields...). I often feel like smoking and drinking, especially smoking, are now shown on TV at a much smaller proportion to how many people smoke and drink in real life. What I ask myself is if what we see on here, and other shows of this era, was representative, or was more, or less, compared to general society. Even when that guy Anderson was being kept away from his wife, the orderly offered him a smoke and he took it. I had a question - can anyone tell me who was playing his lawyer? I couldn't find his name in the credits. My mother said the show doesn't even seem like a soap. And in some ways it doesn't, but that's mostly because what we have seen soaps become (an endless repetition of bad acting, lazy writing, and tired "soapy" cliches) is not what this show is about.
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As The World Turns Discussion Thread
OLTL was her best known soap, but she had the two ATWT stints, and then she was on GL for a bit in 1985 as a huge bitch nurse who was murdered in some plot with Fletcher/Ed/Maureen/Claire. An example of some of the insta-plots and general OTT melodrama pushed onto the show at that point.
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As The World Turns Discussion Thread
That's quite odd, as Tad was that show's major young stud, and resident loveable jerk. I guess Kirk filled that role to a point but nowhere near as prominently. Of course if he hadn't quit (didn't he want to leave?) he may have filled a larger role in time, but I get the feeling Marland wasn't fond of any of that group, aside from Frannie.
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As The World Turns Discussion Thread
Lucinda wasn't much of a maternal woman - her relationships with Sierra and Lily were horribly damaged for ages due to her not knowing what being a mother was actually supposed to entail. That's why I liked her adopting Bianca, which unfortunately went nowhere. I like both characters. I grew up with Lucinda so I'll always love her most, but Althea's great too. What makes Althea stand out is that she has actual relationships and bonds. Lucinda, due both to her character (never trusting, never accepting thanks to being neglected as a child), and the actress (Liz seemed to do scenes her way and other actors needed to take a wide berth), never really had that as such. There was Lily, and John, and Jane and Ambrose of course, but nothing like Althea and Maggie, or Althea and Nick. Lucinda was "me and me against the world." I still remember a scene after she lost Walsh Ent. and was at the stables or somewhere, all on her own...just as she'd been her whole life. It broke my heart, then and now.
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All My Children Tribute Thread
That Gilles St. Clair story...when I first started watching AMC 20 years ago someone told me this was the worst story ever on the show.
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GH: Classic Thread
- The Doctors Discussion Thread
Another of my favorites was John and one of Polly's nieces (I think it was the married one) puffing away dramatically in the restaurant.- All My Children Tribute Thread
When I saw that I just started thinking of the soap magazine reports at the time that the woman who played Claudette was very angry about being made the killer and being written out. Frankly I'm kind of surprised Claudette stayed as long as she did.- Y&R: Old Articles
- Y&R: Old Articles
- Y&R: Old Articles
- Another World Discussion Thread
They'd already started before he took over, but yes, that seemed to be what he was writing.- The Walking Dead: Discussion Thread
I finally got to watch the episode this morning. How much of that rain scene was designed for the horny viewer at home? Not sure who would win in a wet T-shirt contest between Rick, Rosita and Tara. I had mixed feelings about the episode. I felt like it was one of those that had such low lows that they felt the need to insert high highs (for this show). One of my problems with the highs is they just felt very Hollywood for me. Does that mean I disliked them? No, not entirely. They just nagged a little. Scenes like the rush against the barn door - I like the idea, I liked the scene, and yes, I'm glad for solidarity and a reminder that the group stands together and must be together to truly survive, but the way it was filmed just seemed so unlike TWD. The same with the scene walking out of the barn (although the impaled walkers amused me). And I felt like some scenes, several scenes, ran on too long, and were full of telling-not-showing. I realize when they don't tell too much, some fans say it's confusing, but I didn't need scenes like Gabriel saying, "I'm sorry I stopped believing!" I wish he'd just looked up at the rain and smiled. And the music box just felt so heavy-handed, as did Aaron's CAN-THEY-TRUST-HIM arrival. The thing is, if you keep telling us maybe we can't trust this person, then we will never trust a new character. They will always seem shady. Their first scenes also seem increasingly stilted and artificial, like that car commercial that used to run (does it still run?) where the people are confused at the man who survives the ZA with a cool car, or whatever. I also felt like there were a few too many padded scenes of talking about being sick and weak and wandering along the roadside. It felt very self-serious and borderline parody. The other small thing that annoyed me was when Michonne grabbed Sasha in the middle of Sasha going HAM on a walker. I understand why Michonne did it - Sasha was out of control and had a death wish - but the way it was framed, there was a walker right next to Sasha. I had no idea how Sasha did not get bit. So, what did I like? - Michonne in a central role, taking Sasha in hand when everyone else (aside from Maggie, who was giving more of the soft, quiet approach of mutual loss) was letting her just drown in herself. It was a new side of Michonne, and it was a reinforcement of how vital she is to the group. She has no time for these crises, and I can respect that. - The scene with Maggie and the car trunk. It went on a little, but I just liked how it represented Maggie's paralysis over her choices and over the world they lived in. Then when she wanted to kill the walker inside, do the right thing, it was too late. Overall I thought this was an episode Maggie needed, and one of her strongest in a long time. She wasn't just a part of a group, with her thoughts and feelings left for us to grasp at or make up for ourselves. We finally got to hear her voice on her terms. And frankly, as someone who has always liked the character even when it was cool to call her a selfish bitch who only cared about dick, I don't give a crap if this was some sort of afterthought writing to make up for lack of mention in 4B and 5A. I'm still glad she said it and tried to express why she hadn't mentioned Beth. If that's too late for some people, that's up to them. I still like the character, and I always will. - I liked that Carol, Glenn, Daryl and Michonne all represented different types of hope, while not being Disney-type voices of the right path. I also liked that Rick's more hardened view was challenged, but not in the old ways of seasons 2 or 3 where it was one person shouting against another person and all kinds of conflict for the sake of conflict. These people are friends, and we saw that here. - As much as I dreaded Daryl Woobie Hour, the limited scenes we got worked for me, especially the harrowing scene of him burning himself with a cigarette, so he could feel something (anything), and as a reminder that he is still, deep down, an abused child. I was shocked that scene got through. His conversation with Carol was moving, and mature, and very them at their best; it was nice to see Carol there for him. - Sasha feeling alienated and needing to be alienated, always at a distance. Yet she never just seemed sullen or unpleasant, as can happen with poor writing choices. I hadn't expected them to show as much of her struggle as they did. The scene of her killing the dogs was also a real jolt, and very interesting to me in terms of her role in the group - it was a reminder that she's always been a little separate from them, and they need this. - Even with the music box cheese, I liked the Maggie/Sasha scenes. Lauren Cohan talked to Hardwick about how much she appreciates this relationship, and I can see why. I'm glad to see it revisited. And as much as the rain scene felt a little too long for me, the shot of her and Sasha being the only two to not react did get to me.- The Doctors Discussion Thread
Of the ones I can remember, it would have to be the Steve/Liz one. I think there was a John/Bonnie one I liked, and one of the first, with John in the dark glasses, bumping into Nick. And I like the ones where the characters are happily chattering away to extras (who can talk the day away as long as we can't hear them!) I also remember one of an episode I watched from later on with Lydia Bruce Maggie in bed.- Another World Discussion Thread
Lemay wrote the material where Jamie moved in with Sharlene, Josie and Jason, and there was heavy tension between the Frames and Rachel/Mac. There were a few terrific scenes where Sharlene argued with Rachel about Janice's death and about the way the Corys had looked down on the Frames. This was also around the time Liz had some good speeches about how dirty and sleazy the Frames were and how they had infested Bay City (which is how many AW fans felt back in the day, actually). Sadly it didn't last long. I don't know if he brought any of them back (I think DePriest brought Jason in - initially his story seemed to be about reteaming him with Denise Alexander).- EastEnders: Discussion Thread
I know some fans thought Andrew Sachs would be related to her. - The Doctors Discussion Thread
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