Okay, watched it tonight ("Victorian") and I saw it. It wasn't as clearly defined as American shows but yes, the other two rounds were considered.
Okay, watched it tonight ("Victorian") and I saw it. It wasn't as clearly defined as American shows but yes, the other two rounds were considered.
I'll have to watch more closely, but I don't think I've ever heard it mentioned at the end. Not like Chopped where they specifically talk about how their appetizer or entree round was good or bad. I will watch more closely, so thanks for the reply.
I enjoy this show. Like Sue (who I think of as the British Rachel Maddow) and Mel, and of course Paul and Mary. Only one thing really, really confuses me. What's the point of the three rounds? No matter who wins or loses the first two there are no advantages or eliminations and they don't seem to judge them in the…
We had the warriors, we had the weapons, we had the chariots and catapults. Unfortunately, we also had the Syphilis.
It's really a beautiful story. They could have kicked his ass to the curb and let him starve but they actually accepted his home made money so he could eat.
You know how many people were buried in that cemetery? All of them.
I used to live near a Jehovah's Witness hall but eventually they had to get a restraining order to keep me from knocking on their door every morning.
The Masons are such a secretive cult that they have a large building right down the road from me. They tried to lure me in with strange rites like a "Pancake Breakfast" but I was too clever for them.
Yes and after the end times, when there's no electricity, the few survivors will be able to rebuilt society with the EB. Although they will not understand the entries like "The Internet" or "Pokemon Go"
So many of these organizations followed the template of the Freemasons, with some kind of conceit. The freemasons being stonemasons, their tools and their clothing. Others were for lesser men who couldn't get into the Masons, like Tammany Hall in New York that started as a Native American based organization before…
Birch Barlowe: "Mayor Quimby, you're known to be soft on crime. But what if it was YOUR family tied up the basement, SOCKS stuffed in your mouths to muffle your screams. You TRY to escape but there's too much blood on the doorknob .."
Quimby: "Uh, what's your question?"
Birch Barlowe: "My question is about the budget,…
How movies view politics:
Please tell me you've at least HEARD of "The Great McGinty". McGinty starts as a bum who votes 37 times in one election. Then gets a job as a collector before being put up for office himself - by "the Boss" who is behind both parties. His downfall is when he does one honest thing for a change. The movie is a…
GOP answers, in order. Reagan. Clinton. Obama.
They why don't they vote for Steve Harvey? Oh, right.
So you just reached into a bucket and pulled out word slips and typed them out in the order you drew them?
I never got around to reading The Night Manager, but if the TV movie was any indication it wasn't much good. It certainly failed the "caper test" where they went through an unbelievable plan and in the end none of it really mattered. I think A Perfect Spy was the last one I enjoyed reading. After that, with drug…
Is this movie any good, considering the anger among fans beforehand about a remake of a male movie to a female version? The all woman panel says yes. Also, I think we can ALL agree that if it wasn't for Hollywood's phallocentric maleocrasy the FIRST Ghostbusters movie would have been all women.
Sometimes I can feel…
Just realized - it's been 75 years of American Cinema from Citizen Kane to Sharknado 4. It was sure worth it, wasn't it?
It's the second worst. The worst is losing to the Commies.