elgrandfromage--disqus1
El Grand Fromage
elgrandfromage--disqus1

Would you watch my new tv series Cheeses of Nazareth, Jebus wanders around Galilee trying different cheeses? Alternative pitch Christ on a Bike, Jebus cycles with a different celebrity each week?

Thanks Alex. Did Rick and or KOOORRL kill Jebus?

Space:Above and Beyond. No, Goddamit, I will not let it go. Also, someone make a followup to Generation Kill. In the meantime, stay frosty out there.

Someone posted yesterday on (I think) the Kanye thread that music cassettes are making a comeback among the hairy cool yoof. Let that sink in for a minute

You had a fax machine as a child? I am scared, impressed and jealous.

GENTLEHERPESKHANNNNN!!!! (Spoilers: He was Khan all along)

Jebus, that escalated quickly

Close, the correct answer is broccoli. Broccoli.

Nah, people would find some other nonsense to fight over, haircuts or which is the worst vegetable (Cabbage)

Ah yes, Robert "Grassy Knoll" Lincoln.

Bugged me who that was, it was Ian Hart, who played John Lennon at least twice. Hollywood career ladder, you go from being lead singer to band manager..

The Record Men is not that essential, it's more of an extended essay, and there will be a fair amount of crossover to Vinyl. Tough Jews is fascinating, the origins of Murder Inc. and the writing out of history of Jewish gangsters by the Jewish community.

People, who need people to eat their brains, are the luckiest people of all

I wonder. Aren't music rights for in show music supposed to be hideously expensive as well as being problematic to agree? Thought Mad Men getting "Tomorrow Never Knows" was both a massive coup and cost $250k apparently, sweet Jebus.

It's just such a Scorcesian(?) hook/cliche at this stage, central character kills someone, cut to scene where body is being hidden. Can't we make it to lunch without bashing someone's brains in and having to bury a corpse? It's a storyline that's been overused and needs a break

For what it's worth, Bobby Cannavale has a speech at the start where he says he's not going to be the most reliable narrator, that drugs, bullshit and telling a good story may result in creative accounting of the past. Think you just have sit back & commit to the mayhem, and ignore the occasional historical hitches.

Read Rich Cohen's The Record Men, very interesting on running a record company. What came across was that it was a plate spinning exercise, one successful recording paid for 10 duds and so on. It was a numbers game. Some of the stuff that went on was amazing, though not in a good way. A lot of the artists were quite

Closest US comedy that springs to mind is Larry Sanders. Veep isn't quite as dark as The Thick of it where everyone is an utter chancer, but it's still very cynical.

Christine Baranski would class up everything.

If 28 Days Later taught us anything, setting zombies on fire just makes them really mad