Are you streaming ( or binge watching ) any series on Netflix, or any other service? Tell us about it.

a couple of the radiologist gals at work usually have stuff like love island on and these girls are sitting there in their tiny little bathing suits talking about this guy they like and how so and so is being really flirty blah blah blah (insert eye roll here). i always end up rolling my eyes and laughing.
 
I've only watched the first episode so far, took a while to find on my IPTV

Rainn Wilson and the Geography of Bliss is a 5-episode travel documentary series, but it is not on Netflix. The show premiered on Peacock in May 2023. Based on Eric Weiner's book, the series follows Rainn Wilson traversing the globe to explore the science of happiness and discover joy in diverse cultures.

 
That's a show I just couldn't get into. I couldn't even make it past the first episode.
One thing experience has taught me is that the opening few episodes of a new series often feel uneven while the cast settles into their characters. More than once we’ve abandoned a show early, only to return later and discover it had found its rhythm and become genuinely compelling. Of course, the opposite is also true, some early duds reveal themselves to be exactly that.
 
I just finished watching Virgin River. There is another new season that ends abruptly I like it a lot! It's about a Nurse Practitioner who goes to a very small town in North California.

It's about every person's life there. She marries Jack who is a devoted husband.

I liked it a lot! Interesting characters!
Brie and Brady are smokin' 🔥🔥🔥
 
Not exactly on point here but there’s a frustration with shows these days; so many modern shows are annoying because a “season” has shrunk to ten episodes, twelve or thirteen if we’re lucky. In the 60s and 70s, a season routinely ran well past twenty episodes, giving viewers time to settle in, build a rhythm with the characters, and feel immersed in their world. Now a new season arrives, barely gets going, and it’s over. Then it disappears for such a long stretch that by the time it returns, I’ve often lost the thread entirely, plot lines fade, characters blur, and the momentum that once made the show engaging just disappears.
 
...there’s a frustration with shows these days; so many modern shows are annoying because a “season” has shrunk to ten episodes, twelve or thirteen if we’re lucky...
I for one like the short seasons, 8 eps is my sweet spot. It allows for: 1) More variety, studios still have to fill a year of entertainment. 2) Better plots spanning the full season. 3) A better cast since they don't have to commit as much time.
 
One thing experience has taught me is that the opening few episodes of a new series often feel uneven while the cast settles into their characters. More than once we’ve abandoned a show early, only to return later and discover it had found its rhythm and become genuinely compelling. Of course, the opposite is also true, some early duds reveal themselves to be exactly that.
What you wrote is true Rich. I usually give a show two episodes, but sometimes I know it won't hold my interest by the time the first episode is finished. A lot of the time it has to do with casting. If I don't like anyone in the cast (or most of them) and don't feel I can even connect to the characters, I won't continue to watch. Lately I've watched a few shows in which actors I'd never heard of or seen before were the main cast. I liked the cast and portrayal of the characters, so continue to watch.
 
I watch Netflix most days. I love the crime/thriller series - especially the Scandi Noir stuff. We finished watching Detective Hole last night. Loved it. Very dark and sinister. I enjoy the other European dramas too but often get caught out with Spanish ones. Many of these are Mexican or South American and are more like glitzy soaps with their obligatory romantic undertones.

I am not sure what appeals to me about the foreign drams. Maybe the different location settings. Maybe the different actors. I am not sure. But using subtitles certainly helps disguise what could be poor quality dialogue or acting making them much more enjoyable.
 
I finished Veronica Mars. It was four seasons. Between Season 3 and 4 it jumped. End of Season 3 she was dating one guy, and in college, start of Season 4 she is living with one of the older boyfriends and it had fastforwarded into adulthood some years later. I was like what?? It was a good season, as interesting as always but all characters were older and had gone their separate ways some, etc. I kept waiting for what happened to be explained but it never really was... Then it ended in kind of a bit of an abrupt way at the end of season 4. it had kind of an ending I guess but it really didn't seem like an entirely planned one.

So I looked it up then and found I think it was let go after season 3 then they revived it some years later, hence, the change in age and such I guess from 3 to 4... Then I believe it was canceled again abruptly or something.

Normally I look them up before I watch them. This one I didn't. Do I wish I had? Not really because it was GOOD. Every season was good and it had many twists. Had I looked it up, I might not have watched it. I wasn't totally happy about the jump but once another mystery got going, I got over it, and was not entirely happy about how it ended but well, except for that every single episode was great.
 
I wasn't ready when it ended, didn't know I was on the last episode. That's on me. I then started Lincoln Lawyer as I've heard of it a few times and thought I'd check out out. I started the first episode but was exhausted by then and fell asleep so going to have to give it a watch some other night soon, maybe tonight. Will see.
 
I finished Veronica Mars. It was four seasons. Between Season 3 and 4 it jumped. End of Season 3 she was dating one guy, and in college, start of Season 4 she is living with one of the older boyfriends and it had fastforwarded into adulthood some years later. I was like what?? It was a good season, as interesting as always but all characters were older and had gone their separate ways some, etc. I kept waiting for what happened to be explained but it never really was... Then it ended in kind of a bit of an abrupt way at the end of season 4. it had kind of an ending I guess but it really didn't seem like an entirely planned one.

So I looked it up then and found I think it was let go after season 3 then they revived it some years later, hence, the change in age and such I guess from 3 to 4... Then I believe it was canceled again abruptly or something.

Normally I look them up before I watch them. This one I didn't. Do I wish I had? Not really because it was GOOD. Every season was good and it had many twists. Had I looked it up, I might not have watched it. I wasn't totally happy about the jump but once another mystery got going, I got over it, and was not entirely happy about how it ended but well, except for that every single episode was great.
I just started watching Veronica Mars — enjoying it so far. Appreciate the head's up about season 4.
 
Breaking Bad (2008-2013)

We recently re-watched all 5 seasons --62 episodes-- of Breaking Bad. It’s a landmark superior series with Vince Gilligan as both creator and showrunner. Although billed along with other descriptors as a black comedy, it’s a strain to recall more than a half dozen comedic scenes in the entire run. In fact I’d forgotten how basically grim the story is, which makes it a labor --but an enjoyable one-- the type of which we are treated to once in awhile.

It’s actually a powerhouse contemporary tale with a classic noir theme: a man faced with a compelling but treacherous choice that he knows is wrong, but he proceeds nevertheless, and ends up paying a price for it.

The notable cast: Bryan Cranston (Walter White), Aaron Paul (Jesse Pinkman), Anna Gunn (Skyler White), Dean Norris (Hank Schrader), Betsy Brandt (Marie Schrader, Skyler’s sister), R.J. Mitte (Walter White, Jr.), Giancarlo Esposito (Gustavo “Gus” Fring), Bob Odenkirk (Saul Goodman), Jonathan Banks (Mike Ehrmantraut), Jesse Plemmons (Todd Alquist), and Laura Fraser (Lydia Rodarte-Quayle).

Of these, Giancarlo Esposito, Bob Odenkirk, Johathan Banks, and Jesse Plemmons, were all catapulted into professional demand and celebrity following the great success of the series. Bryan Cranston and Dean Norris had already achieved notoriety from previous roles.

Walter White is an over qualified high school chemistry teacher who had missed out on fame and fortune from an earlier enterprise. After being diagnosed with stage 3 lung cancer, he realizes that his finances would not be enough to cover his medical costs nor his family’s expenses. He runs across a former student who has turned into a small time drug dealer. Walter hatches a plan to produce high quality methamphetamine which will award the two with phenomenal money.

They eventually start up with distributor Tuco Salamanca (memorably played by Raymond Cruz), but it spins out of control. That brings them into the orbit of Gus Fring, who is a surreptitious American drug kingpin looking to break away from Mexican cartels. With increased funding Walter and Jesse are set up in a state of the art laboratory from which they can produce large quantities of high purity meth, the sale and distribution of which provides them all with millions.

Along the way there are personal developments with Walter’s family, Jesse’s private involvements, Gus’s participation, including Mike’s story as Gus’s lieutenant, and the introduction of Saul Goodman as sleaze attorney for several of the characters. It’s a wild ride over 5 seasons, leading to a straightforward and satisfactory conclusion.

There are very few weakness in this epic. To my taste the chief shortcoming is the casting of Anna Gunn as Walter’s wife, Skyler. She and Walter simply did not fit. At no time did I believe their relationship, and it increasingly became a mystery as to how those two could have gotten together in the first place. The role of Skyler White was a thankless one given her mostly detached, unloving, and finally nasty relationship with Walter. They weren’t even matched physically as a couple. I think Laura Fraser would have been better cast as Skyler, and should have left the role of Lydia Rodarte-Quayle to someone else.

Because of the incongruity of the White’s relationship, it therefore became a stretch to understand why Walter was frequently consumed with the monomaniacal desire to provide for his family’s welfare, both in the present day and after his demise. We learn to accept the premise, but it feels vaguely false.

Despite these minor criticisms, Breaking Bad is one of the finest series so far in the 21st Century. It has spawned a prequel with some sequel elements (Better Call Saul) along with a vaguely feeling spinoff series, Pluribus, starring Rhea Seehorn. Creator Vince Gilligan, along with Noah Hawley (Fargo), and Taylor Sheridan (Yellowstone, Landman) have pretty much become the premier American series writers.

Doc’s rating: 9/10
 
I just started watching Veronica Mars — enjoying it so far. Appreciate the head's up about season 4.
It was worth it imo. It clearly was broken up or something in the last season or two. But each one stands pretty independently on its own as still very entertaining. It's fiction of course but it kept my interest lol.
 
One thing experience has taught me is that the opening few episodes of a new series often feel uneven while the cast settles into their characters. More than once we’ve abandoned a show early, only to return later and discover it had found its rhythm and become genuinely compelling. Of course, the opposite is also true, some early duds reveal themselves to be exactly that.
I have to agree with this.

I've found the same thing. I'd also say it isn't just settling into the characters, it is finding their rhythm with co stars and other actors and the show and director and so on. I've seen so many things that seem a bit stilted in the first few episodes and then it just kind of takes off...
 
on the watch free section of my tv i watched a movie last night called side effects. several big names in the cast. there was a couple sex scenes i didn't care for but otherwise was a good crime movie.
 
Back
Top