1. So, I'm trying to watch
Ringer again. This is what I'd call an example of a bad soap opera. Where the plot is imposed on the characters as opposed to the other way around and twists are used for shock effect. I don't know why I'm still with it - curiousity I suspect. Also...it's fluffy and I can do other stuff during it. Oh and this episode they have both Jason Dohring and Misha Collins guesting. Plus this is the episode where they explain why Siobhan (Shiv) hates Bridget and is seeking revenge. And it makes no sense. None. Siobhan doesn't have a good reason. Is she insane?
( Ringer spoilers )Still half-way wish they'd bring in James Marsters - maybe as their father because that would be hilarious. What? It's not worse than anything else he's done. This is my problem with doing the mindfulness exercises - I multi-task all the time. Focusing on one thing is hard for me to do after a week of multi-tasking.
2. Missed this week's
Merlin because the dang DVR (setup) refused to tape it for some reason. I called the Momster who told me it was skippable. She said halfway through, she felt she'd seen this story before. She had, just not on Merlin. It's the quintessential spiderwoman episode that every single sci-fi/fantasy show this side of the Pecos has done. Even Doctor Who and Star Trek and Space 1999. You know the trope, spiderwoman shape-shifts into a beautiful woman, seduces the men, then turns into a nasty creature. Even Buffy did it in S1. It's an annoying overdone trope that symbolizes the male fear of women, and I wish writers would stop doing it. So I decided not to spend $3 to grab Merlin on itunes, due to it not being taped. Oddly Lost Girl, which I gave up on, sort of has that character at its center...a succubus.
3.Just made the turnip/leek soup with apples and bacon again. Quite tasty. Especially for a cool windy day. And watched the Broadway musical
Memphis via PBS Great Performances this morning. It's good. The songs catchy. But the male lead's voice grated on my nerves, an exaggerated Southern nasal accent. Spoke with the Momster who lives in South Carolina and she said - that this was not a southern accent, it was too nasal and sounded more Northern. I'd agree. It was exaggerated hillbilly and I found it grating and offensive. I think, if I saw it now, on Bway with Adam Pascal, I might like it better. He had a great singing voice but his regular voice was hard to listen to. It's a realistic bio-pic musical about the DJ (Dewey Phillips and Alan Freed intermixed) who introduced rock and roll to the airwaves in the 1950s. He was the first to put white and black singers on the radio and on television. In the musical he falls for a beautiful black singer. It's a story about the creation of rock and roll, but also about racism in the US. I'm wondering if it would be better on stage.
4.As a follow-up to that meme regarding
favorite episodes from each season of you favorite tv series (ie the one you can actually remember episodes from which for me is just Buffy for some reason), come up with a list of no more than five episodes from each season that you loved. It can be anywhere from 1 -5. Best way to do it, is not to think too hard, just pick the one's you'd love to rewatch several times right now.
( five favorite episodes from each season )Now for a bit of fun,
the least favorite episodes of each season or the one's you didn't like. Up to 5, no more than 5. You can do under 5. Also best way is to pick the one's you'd skip if you were rewatching or have little interest in seeing again any time soon.
( my least favorite episodes )Hmmm..Whedon managed to write my favorite and least favorite episodes of the entire series.
5) Reading the latest
Rachel Morgan novel at the moment, entitled
A Perfect Blood by Kim Harrison, who while not as technically good at writer as Butcher is a lot better at world-building and character development. She also is a bit more innovative on the fantasy front and a little less black and white in her mythology.
In some respects I find Harrison's stories to be less derivative and more surprising.
She blends science fiction in with the fantasy, which most urban fantasies don't do.
And her characters continue to evolve along with the world. Plus she introduces bi-sexuality and homosexuality without issue. As much as I love Butcher, there's an underlying and somewhat unsettling religious undertone and sexism that bugs me.
So one is better "technically", while the other is better story wise.
Interesting. Both are noir in some respects. But one is more...boilerplate noir and less ambitious - Butcher's, which explains why the plot is tighter, and more consistent and technically better. He doesn't try to do as much as Harrison or take as many risks.