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Khan

Member
  • Joined

Everything posted by Khan

  1. Would someone remind me (and others) the circumstances surrounding Tony's death? Also, who was writing the show at that point? From the looks of things, that scene must have been in the actual stairway at CBS. I love the fact that music was used very sparingly. Nowadays, the music would absolutely intrude on such a scene to the point that it takes you OUT of the scene rather than put you in it. And that last shot of Bob and Jo walking down (I assume) the hospital hallway and past those swinging double doors? *chef's kiss* Thanks for sharing, @Joseph! I can't wait to see what else has been uploaded on that channel!
  2. I dunno, whenever I hear about a proposed TV series or movie set in NOLA, or any city or town in the South, I get the willies. Like, I just know the one, token Black character is gonna be an older woman who, like, wears 38 layers of junk jewelry and is always threatening to put roots on people. Call it "In the Heat of the Night" Syndrome, if you wish.
  3. I guess I shouldn't ask why TPTB cut that scene? I mean: no, it wasn't the most well-written or well-acted scene ever; and if you're gonna HAVE a scene that's just two people sitting on a couch, you should do more with them than just have them recap. (Sorry, Ronny C., you really should've known better, lol.) But, the fact that THAT scene gets cut and NOT the 122nd one about JoDevil fencing, plotting with his dead grandpa's portrait or generally getting moist about Gabi, says so much about why this genre is being lowered into the ground while the remaining fans throw roses on its' casket.
  4. FOX/Linda Gottlieb: "We're gonna do something different with this show! We're gonna do a soap opera that appeals primarily to men!" NBC/MTM/Steven Bochco:
  5. Agree. But, hey, I guess bringing up old [!@#$%^&*] with Kim Cattrall is a lot less work than putting out an actual, decent show! It ain't 2001 anymore. Kim Cattrall has moved on. Darren Star has moved on. The majority of us who once gaf about anything regarding these folks have moved on. It's only the fading SJP and her posse who can't or won't give up the proverbial ghost. So what do those idiots do? They come up with this show. This shitty show that, IMO, has done more to ruin the overall SATC brand than the two movies COMBINED. I'm sure all the delusional queens out there who actually think life was better when Dubya was still president love revisiting these narcissistic bitches; but, like I said, the rest of us have moved on.
  6. Agree. If I were going to pair Bert with anyone (besides back with Bill), it would've been with Henry Chamberlain. I really and truly believe there was room enough for ALL the families: the Bauers, the Chamberlains, the Lewises (and Shaynes), the Marlers, the Norrises and Thorpes, the Reardons, the Spauldings. It would have required the most delicate of balances, but it could have been done. What can I say? I loved all of GL. Even the stuff I wasn't around for. Even the stuff most people tend to hate. I just try to pretend everything that happened after '95 or so didn't, lol.
  7. You know, this wouldn't be happening if Y&R was even halfway interesting anymore.
  8. In retrospect, thank GOD that show never got off the ground.
  9. Exactly. Of course, you all know how I feel about telling this kind of story at all. But, I will say that having Marlena become possessed a second time was, well, redundant. Why couldn't the devil have possessed John this time around? Yup, and I think that's a very dangerous message to send to the audience, too. So, IOW, the devil is like COVID: some get possessed and feel little to no physical effects, while others aren't so lucky.
  10. Part of me suspects Ron Carlivati is sabotaging this particular story 1) because he didn't come up with it first and 2) because it's outside even his tacky and tasteless wheelhouse. And then another part of me's like, "N***a, please."
  11. Another one for GL: 1977. The year the show expands to 60 minutes, and also the year when then-HW's Bridget and Jerome Dobson introduce the Spauldings, a family that would dominate the show in years to come.
  12. At the end of the day, the majority of Americans don't care about what the (right-leaning) media cares about. It's like what Bill Clinton said back in the dark ages: "It's the economy, stupid." All that matters is whether folks have jobs, and whether those jobs pay well and deliver benefits for themselves and their loved ones. Period.
  13. To pull off a storyline like Possession 2.0, you needed a HW who didn't have what Victoria Rowell once described on an episode of "Diagnosis: Murder" as the "plotting abilities of a wombat." And I say that as someone who didn't care for this [!@#$%^&*] when JER wrote it.
  14. You know, I appreciate these online soap chats and reunions, but I feel like the well is soon gonna run dry, and we're gonna end up with "exclusive interviews" with some dude who was once an under-five in a scene on LOVE IS A MANY SPLENDORED THING.
  15. I wouldn't be surprised if Mr. Never Let 'Em See You Sweat believed younger actresses were the key to longevity on his show. And while I appreciated that OLTL eventually reunited Bo and Nora, to me, it was never the same.
  16. Yeah, Todd's bomb was, well, a bomb. But I still love how Pam Long and her writers turned the situation into a real pressure-cooker for everyone who was at the cabin. I was literally on the edge of my seat (for what was probably the last time as an OLTL viewer). I just wish the culprit's identity had been more shocking.
  17. No, they don't. Trina deserves someone who will set her nights on fire. Not this wispy-looking punk.
  18. I can't recall whether it was the ONLY primetime episode they did, but I still recall one that OLTL did back then: the denouement of the "Who Killed Georgie Phillips?" story -- IMO, the last, great tale OLTL ever told. The culprit's identity turned out to be underwhelming, but the reveal was very tautly written (by Pamela K. Long, Richard Backus and Gordon Rayfield) with everyone trapped in a house thanks to Todd (who'd been accused of the murder) and some (rather flimsy-looking) dynamite strapped to his chest. Man, I miss how this show used to be. So brilliantly executed (no pun intended) in every way.
  19. Thank you. I've been saying the same thing for awhile now. Ashland should have a daughter that's roughly Victoria's age, who HATES that her father has remarried (and to someone her own age!) and is determined to make her new stepmom's life hell. And maybe a son (perhaps by the same wife, perhaps not) who secretly loves Victoria and wants her for himself.
  20. Same. Maybe someone like Michael Warren ("Hill Street Blues") or Philip Michael Thomas ("Miami Vice")?
  21. Chances are, Zucker's gonna set up his own production outfit. (Hope you enjoyed "Fear Factor," 'cuz there's plenty more where that came from!)
  22. Ron Carlivati has always had problems with pacing.
  23. [!@#$%^&*] the soaps. I'd rather watch @Darn and @Vee in a buddy comedy.

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