Yeah, I started with the AV Club search and gave up on that pretty quickly. I ended up using Google.
Yeah, I started with the AV Club search and gave up on that pretty quickly. I ended up using Google.
That makes sense to me. What's weird is that the model for Ariel was the woman who voiced Slappy the Squirrel.
Getting the feeling of deja vu:
http://www.avclub.com/artic…
Obviously not but the approach the behind the scenes documentary seems to be taking is the same as the one made for In the Heights. My point was that making a Making Of documentary about a musical is not something unusual for Hamilton and that it's not even the first one made about a Lin Manuel Miranda musical.
Good to know. Although I don't know how newsworthy it is since they made a near identical sounding documentary about the making of In the Heights.
PBS had some unexpected showings of shows like The Nance and Memphis but I think commercial options for Hamilton probably make PBS an unlikely option. BroadwayHD is a nice new service but right now most of their offerings are from the BBC and I don't see it being a option for currently running shows yet. I don't…
Probably so it doesn't cut into touring companies.
It's pretty much a given that we'll seen some screen version of Hamilton at some point. But the quote from the man himself very much seems to say, "We'd love to but it's a bit early to be talking about it."
Hmm…looks like you're right. I have them downloaded so it's been a while since I looked. Here's an alternate that looks like it has some of the earlier seasons: http://www.dailymotion.com/…
They did, very very briefly. I could go into a full rant about that.
50 Shades of Grey has an Oscar nomination…
Aw, even the Razzies forgot about Jem and the Holograms.
She's also very good in Wolf Hall.
Is this his way of saying we're not getting a new Bugle this year?
I was looking at it more as the result of writing being forced rather than the story being written at the writer's ideal pace.
I feel a bit sorry for Martin. Writing a novel is difficult under most circumstances but writing one so highly anticipated that people are just waiting to rip apart must be hell. I suppose it's a double edged sword that the more popular someone you create is, the more you lose control of it.
It's shown that it was part of hallucination when the skeleton comes to life. I think Sherlock even says something like, "Oh, I see, it's still not real."
As someone who saw Series 3 being about Sherlock's inability to recover from Reichenbach and finding himself wrong footed as result, it was a deeply gratifying surprise to find this episode ended up essentially being an exorcism of Moriarty. And at the waterfall, no less. Having Watson show up and push Moriarty off…
If it's the same map I'm thinking of, they went with Queer as Folk. Presumably because of how accurately it portrayed us yinzers.
If memory serves me right, they originally wanted Tom Cruise to play Tom which is why he was written so blandly perfect. Hartman was a last minute fill in.