tv review
Best music TV from online, cable, and in the media.
Review of 'The Beatles: Get Back' Part 3
If I had to pick the single best moments in the nearly nine hours of the superb, one-of-a-kind documentary that is Peter Jackson's The Beatles: Get Back, it would be Paul McCartney saying "whew!" smiling, doing a dance, and continuing the concert, after turning and taking note of the robotic cops (or whatever they call them in London) intruding into the Beatles' rooftop performance. The same cops on the ground floor had been threatening arrests and claiming they weren't making threats before they demanded to go up to the roof. Good thing they don't carry guns like the police do here in America.
Paul LevinsonPublished 2 years ago in BeatReview of 'The Beatles: Get Back' Part 2
A very different kind of feeling and (true) story in Part 2 of Peter Jackson's The Beatles: Get Back documentary. Up from the doldrums, George Harrison is back, Billy Preston joins them, and the sound and the ambience is often heady and exhilarating.
Paul LevinsonPublished 2 years ago in BeatReview of "The Beatles: Get Back" Part 1
I started watching Get Back with the absolute knowledge that The Beatles were and are one of the best things in my life, and easily THE best thing musically. For the past few years, I've listened to them about as much as to MSNBC on Sirius XM radio, which is to say, any and all the time I'm in the car driving by myself (see The Omnipotent Ear). Their arrival in the United States in 1964 coincided with my first serious girlfriend, Barbara (we met when she came to hear my doo-wop group sing at a Y on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx). By January 1969, the time we see the Beatles in the studio in Peter Jackson's The Beatles: Get Back, I was with Tina, who became my wife. We're still happily married, with wonderful children and grandchildren.
Paul LevinsonPublished 2 years ago in BeatReview: HBO's The Sex Lives Of College Girls Is Surprisingly Tasteful
HBO's New Series, The Sex Lives of College Girls is a playful romp with excellent writing, sex-positive plot points, and even some social change. It's not at all what I expected, and I'm pleasantly surprised.
Bonnie Joy SludikoffPublished 2 years ago in BeatCharacter Review: Marge Simpson
S is a type of personality that often stays in the wrong relationship for a long time, as happened to Homer and Marge. Simpsons is a sitcom where the characters' personalities have not changed from one episode to another, so Marge remains the perfect woman of the family, always trying to improve her home, no matter how frustrating. In each episode, you can see a small part of his wishes that things might be different, but his attitude is to accept and appreciate the life he has.
Bikram GaihrePublished 3 years ago in BeatCharacter Review: Jesse Pinkman
As the story unfolds Jesse grows into one of the most famous characters in the character. Creator Vince Gilligan has joked that more than 10 celebrities from the Breaking Bad Universe will appear, notable as many of the characters are imported from the dead, and all the signs point to a sequel that would be a Jesse-centric car (pun intended) instead of a real El Camino. Jesse. In the final episode of Breaking Bad’s final season, which focused on Walter White, it is fitting that Jesse, who has been the lead character in the show since the first episode, is recognizing his film appeal.
Hemanta BhattaraiPublished 3 years ago in BeatCharacter Review: Walter White
Walter Hartwell "Walt" White Sr., better known by his secret name and business name Heisenberg, is the American drug lord. She has been a chemist and chemist at high school in Albuquerque, New Mexico, who was diagnosed with chronic lung cancer and began making crystal methamphetamine. To protect the financial future of his family, he started making meth Jesse Pinkman, a former student.
Hemanta BhattaraiPublished 3 years ago in BeatCharacter Review: James Wilson
Wilson seemed to be the only one willing to tolerate the House and his usual anger. Of his patients, Wilson provided Kritter with information about the house.
Hemanta BhattaraiPublished 3 years ago in BeatCharacter Review: Dr. Gregory House
Dr. Gregory House has his fair share of episodes that end up losing a patient’s life. We see personal details of the House and sad revelations about his real team over the years, and the new team that comes up with new stories and motivations, not Rich and Remy Hadley. The Huntington actor, whose diagnosis has received a lot of attention in season five, made Wilde (thirteen, her number one name in the first House game) somehow unpopular with viewers, but still has a special bond with the House.
Hemanta BhattaraiPublished 3 years ago in BeatThe Three Movies
Because perspective is consistently abstract and relies enormously on the individual's social foundation, prior encounters, and social class, American truth is seen by various gatherings of people in particular ways. These methods of insight may even be incongruent, so to react to the contention in qualities and the subsequent biases and segregation, attempt an investigation of these fundamental factors and clarify the most hazardous focuses.
Remember When Nine Inch Nails Mastermind Trent Reznor Wanted to Create a TV Series?
Nine Inch Nails mastermind Trent Reznor first teased us with the idea of making a TV mini-series about his album, Year Zero, as far back as 2008. The album concept of exploring the world after a nuclear war between the United States and Iran gained popularity and attracted the likes of frequend NIN collaborator David Fincher and even head honchos over at HBO and BBC. There was even confirmation by Reznor himself that a Year Zero series was in the development stages at HBO and BBC, but even that update was 10 years ago.
Jenika EnochPublished 3 years ago in BeatAmerican Idol Upset Me
Hear me out; I'm a massive fan of American Idol even though I am Canadian. I have been a loyal viewer since Kelly Clarkson's big win in 2002. That is nineteen years of Idol love. Today is my very first rant to the world ever in my life. Don't get me wrong, I rant, just never on a world platform. So, here goes.
Melissa BezborotkoPublished 3 years ago in Beat