I saw her reaction as, "I think I may have another source/asset."
I saw her reaction as, "I think I may have another source/asset."
Not end with because the show won't go too far past 1986, but yes. Henry is going to end up with one intelligence or another, and the Centre is going think "Damn it! We went after the wrong kid."
Yes! I was trying to find a way to say this and you did a much better job with the idea.
Mine too. The fact that's incredibly cute and sexy doesn't hurt either.
That's the point. The Centre wants the second generation to get jobs in American government or intelligence agencies.
I thought of "Apocalypse Now."
Question-I'm not into fiction and I have trouble getting through books that have a great deal of description/world building (When I took a spy fiction class, I enjoyed Flemming and Ludlum, but found Tom Clancy's work to be tedius and boring. There were students who felt the opposite, which made class discussions fun).…
I would have gone with "Chapel of Love" instead of "How I Saved the Senator." The television show was serious and took itself seriously, while still having some fun. The movie was a dumb parody. In the original series the police officers are smart, dedicated professionals, not idiots and screw-ups like in the movie. I…
He's young, and still has many chances to get the PEGOT. "In the Heights" is going to be made into a movie as is "Hamilton," plus he may do some music for the upcoming "Marry Poppins" sequel. (Also, major points for knowing that he'll be PEGOT, not just EGOT)
No, because those were both sequels.
It worked for "Dallas" and that was a drama/prime-time soap.
Yes! I thought for sure this series would reference "WarGames" or "Red Dawn."
Except that Judy Garland appealed to older gay men and the patrons of Stonewall were younger men. It's a generation gap of sorts.
I think enough Americans, especially in the younger generation, would have been going to Europe for travel or semesters abroad that they might have seen it.
Judy Garland had a tragic life, and pre-Stonewall and pre-GLBT liberation, that was something that many in that community related to. Also, "Wizard of Oz" is about leaving a very drab ordinary place for this exotic technicolor wonderland. The story resonated with GLBT who left drab ordinary places for the big cities…
I really hope that the original eventually ends up in the Smithsonian or the GLBT History Museum in San Francisco.
You had me until you mentioned a remake of the the Thin Man.
My immediate reaction is that Neeson is too old, or at least looks like he's too old to play Marlowe.
Liked for the mention of Vaughn Meader. When I was watching the scenes of the White House tour in "Jackie" there was a moment or two all I could think of was Vaughn Meader's version of it.
I just thought my cable was having trouble. It didn't even occur to me that Russians were hacking the signal.