What are we watching on TV?

BobClay

Well-Known Forumite
Wisting, BBC4 Saturday night. I do like these noir Scandinavian cop shows, Bit more gritty than their American counterparts. Also guest stars Carrie-Anne Moss (you may remember her as the girl from the Matrix movies. She plays a hard nosed FBI** agent, ruffling a few Scandinavian feathers.)
Fairly gruesome murders involving drug and people trafficking.

** She gives the impression she's working for other organizations better known by their initials, and I'm not talking KFC here.
 

proactive

Enjoying a drop of red.
Wisting, BBC4 Saturday night. I do like these noir Scandinavian cop shows, Bit more gritty than their American counterparts. Also guest stars Carrie-Anne Moss (you may remember her as the girl from the Matrix movies. She plays a hard nosed FBI** agent, ruffling a few Scandinavian feathers.)
Fairly gruesome murders involving drug and people trafficking.

** She gives the impression she's working for other organizations better known by their initials, and I'm not talking KFC here.
Is not heard of this. Will give it a try.
 

littleme

250,000th poster!
Alexander Armstrong in South Korea

 

BobClay

Well-Known Forumite
I'm probably not the only person who didn't watch The Queen's Gambit when it was big because "how interesting can a show about chess be?" but, bloody hell, it's good isn't it?!
For me Anya Taylor-Joy can do no wrong. She's not only a class act, drop dead beautiful with eyes that could turn stone into jelly, but she has 'presence.' When I watched this series a couple of years ago I'd only seen her once before, in a cracking film called 'Thoroughbreds' in which she and Olvia Cooke decide to solve a problem via a murderous route.

This is a series I might just watch again, it's so well made.
 

BobClay

Well-Known Forumite
'The English.' Written and directed by Hugo Blick, who a few years ago wrote one of my favourite TV series 'The Shadow Line.' He tends to write grim stories ... and this one is no exception. The theme ? ... it's a western, set in the midwest at the back end of the 19th century. But this is no Lone Ranger or Cisco Kid. This is a revisionist western of revisionist westerns. Dark, bloody and brutal. Just about everybody in it is on an aim to kill somebody, whether it be revenge, race hate, sodbuster hate, theft and lust or just for the hell of it. It portrays this era as more or less lawless, certainly not paved with gold and the land of the free.
Good cast, Emily Blunt, Toby Jones, Ciarin Hinds, Stephen Rea and Chaske Spencer. You may not have heard of Chaske Spencer, but I suspect you will in times to come. He's a native American (Sioux) and a sort of Clint Eastwood type. Doesn't say much, but when he does, you'd best listen.

Why the title ? Well apparently 'The English' was a collective term used by native Americans to describe all the Europeans who were coming across the Atlantic and pushing them out of their lands back then. So covers all the nations of Europe (and beyond.) I suppose this was because the English were some of the first colonisers.
 
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BobClay

Well-Known Forumite
'The Sky at Night.' They went big time this month toying with some of the strangest ideas in physics.
The Multiverse ... suggests there are alternate Universes, possibly an infinite number, with every conceivable combination imaginable. So out there, are an infinite number of forums like this one, with an infinite number of @staffordjas which means an infinite number of large incoming asteroids. While I am an observer of Clarke's First Law, I do have trouble with this one.
Dark Matter. No doubt it's out there, we can see it in action. What it is, is as yet unknown.
Dark Energy: Two words describing why the expansion of the Universe is accelerating, and that's it. Two words chosen I think because it sounds cool. It only gets a mention, because that's all we know. 😮
White Holes. The opposite to Black Holes, but reversed. (Everything comes out, nothing gets in.) Might be where our Universe came from. Why not ? I say.
Communication with aliens: A subject of interest to anybody interested in radio, although I've personally communicated with aliens numerous times on my way home from the pub.
Interstellar travel. Unless our physics is very wrong, this is tricky. Yes you might be able to fold space, but ... it requires energy far beyond anything we can understand. (However, see Clarke's First Law.)
There isn't another Sky at Night until 2023 now, but I figure this is more than enough to chew on. :eek:
 

BobClay

Well-Known Forumite
Happy Valley on the BEEB.

I saw they were advertising a new series coming soon. I remember watching this some years back now, and thinking at the time it was good. So since I'm a bit ****** at the moment with Dark Matter, I went on IPlayer to watch the first series again, and found there was a series 2 also, which has somehow got past me. WOW !! so started a binge watch of series 1.

Just as good as I remember, Sarah Lancashire is great as a tough police sergeant in a Yorkshire Hills town (I bet she keeps her real surname secret) and I'm enjoying the first series all over. Written by Sally Wainright who has definitely got a touch of the Coen brothers' style about her. I've got Series 2 to look forward to, and Series 3 when it gets broadcast.

So I'm a happy bunny except for two things:

1. Remote controls (TV, sound system, Firestick, Sky box) which somehow are being moved about when I'm not looking by some kind of TV hating poltergeist !!

2. The stuff moving through my veins that is causing an uneven rotation of the Galaxy (Milky Way and others) given its observable mass.

****** (rhymes with plucked.)
 
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