Of course they are.
Of course they are.
Bundle dem services!
Oh, okay.
No, what I meant by "it could have been even better in later seasons," I meant the animation.
And that's saying something! That name exudes manliness!
Damn, if the animation was that good in later seasons, that I can only imagine just how good it could have been had the series been done in 2D.
That's what happens with audience fragmentation, with people having much more choices than just books and four channels. That, and the networks having common crap alongside the rare gold.
Well, I don't watch AMC, and I didn't hear any news about the show. Maybe that's why I managed to avoid the commercials.
TBH, I didn't even know that this show existed. So maybe it had to do with the fact that AMC didn't do a good job promoting it, although the reviews weren't good.
Fun fact: Mad Men creator Matt Weiner started his career as a writer on that show.
That's Fox News, I'm talking about the Fox Network on broadcast TV.
The spiritual predecessor of Fox TV.
Yes - everything wise at NBC, but not with Universal.
Nah, Comcast is actually a better owner. Yes, NBC has been lackluster, comedy wise, but they have really improved their film unit Universal.
Nah; CBS and Viacom are no longer the same company, but Sumner Redstone (through his holding company and theatre chain National Amusements) still majority owns both.
Dat Viacom synergy!
I think that ID2 got greenlit because of audience nostalgia for the original.
I watched Beakman's World on WNYW when it was in syndication. It was a pretty good, albeit cheesy, educational show. The guys behind the show, particularly Jok Church, were passionate, and it showed on the series. May Mr. Church rest in peace.
Paul Dini's involved in this show.
At least there's still Turner Classic Movies.