What to watch on television? SUGGESTIONS??

Way too many I think:) there cant be too many more men left in the show for her to have a fling with, I only watch it to see how many times she can cry, I call it the crying show :)bit of a comedy really.
 
Actually there is a good tv documentary on tonight about Agatha Christie's life,hosted by David Suchet.
 
Sorry not able to use this as they want a credit card number they say its free but still want that to join or be
able to watch so won`t be doing it.. avast is not too happy me putting that web page on so thanks again .. looked good too ..

Must be looking at the wrong link,Avast here and NO problem,also nothing about credit card etc etc...this is the link,when vidoe opens click "Watch as a free user" sorry can`t be any more helpful that that:)
http://streamallthis.me/tv-shows-list.html
 
Woweee Kburra I love it now I clicked on your link and lo and behold downton abbey wonderful and so many
I can watch in bed at night now with my headphones on so won`t disturb hubby.. thanks so much for sharing..
I love it .! also love your car its a beauty and looks so classy..
 
I can't help here. We last had a television in the house (hooked up to a dish) in 2003. We live "in the bush" of a rural Virginia county, but have broadband internet. So my 23" Mac monitor brings all the TED talks, Netflix streaming, PBS and other worthwhile viewing we can handle.

If you're interested in links online for viewing various types of video, I can offer that. I have a watch list of sorts I could paste in a reply.

For me, a television-free home servers access into my home, head, heart and wallet so that those goods don't become fodder for mindless consumption and mindless thought-control.

It is difficult (and will soon become far harder) to avoid being marketed, commodified and influenced by external values and forces. So we are totally out of the loop when peer conversation shifts to Dancing with the Stars. I'm more often out in the pasture craning my neck with a pair of binoculars to see them. : > }
 
Sounds a good plan Fred, I don't watch the TV version either. I do have it on a lot but listen rather than watch it usually. The ads no longer register. I seem to have developed an anti-spam switch which blocks them out.
 
I guess I'm burned out on just about whatever is on TV except for really old movies and period pieces. I never get tired of Pride and Prejudice or Jane Eyre! As little as I like living in a mega-city area, having three public broadcasting channels is a bonus. I enjoy Downton Abbey, Poirot, Miss Marple, Doc Marten, Call the Midwife, Larkrise to Candleford and watch them over and over.

I also like to watch the House Hunters programs, just not the ones about the over-privileged looking for over-priced:D and like watching House Hunters International. There are way too many Americans who've never been out of this country (sometimes not out of their states or counties!) who seem to think that people in other countries live in shacks with dirt floors. My first encounter with that idea was when we came back to the Mainland after the war. We'd lived in Hawaii, but I was known as "that little Filipino girl" and was asked a lot about cooking in open pits and living in grass shacks! Even some of my teachers asked dopey questions like did we have running water, flush toilets and electricity!
 
I haven't read this whole thread, so maybe somebody's mentioned it, but I enjoy Downton Abbey on PBS a lot.

I also get a couple of the premium channels, which are well worth the few extra dollars a month. I get HBO and Showtime, but of them excellent. Their series are the best things on TV.
 
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Woweee Kburra I love it now I clicked on your link and lo and behold downton abbey wonderful and so many
I can watch in bed at night now with my headphones on so won`t disturb hubby.. thanks so much for sharing..
I love it .! also love your car its a beauty and looks so classy..

You`re welcome,glad all worked out.
 
=GeorgiaXplant;67475
......................I also like to watch the House Hunters programs, just not the ones about the over-privileged looking for over-priced:D and like watching House Hunters International. There are way too many Americans who've never been out of this country (sometimes not out of their states or counties!) who seem to think that people in other countries live in shacks with dirt floors. My first encounter with that idea was when we came back to the Mainland after the war. We'd lived in Hawaii, but I was known as "that little Filipino girl" and was asked a lot about cooking in open pits and living in grass shacks! Even some of my teachers asked dopey questions like did we have running water, flush toilets and electricity!

Wouldn't let that worry you GX, they asked us the same kind of questions when I was there in the early 80s. Someone on the tour bus asked if we had trains yet!
I ignored that and hoped the friend I was with didn't hear him as she'd have shredded him I think. (We worked for the Railway.)

Another dear man, and he really was too nice to tell off, from the Mid.West bet us we'd never seen a city as big as Vancouver before.
I just explained gently that Sydney, where we lived, was roughly 60 miles across at that time and I can still see the dropped jaw and hear "You doan saayyyy."
He obviously hadn't served in the S. Pacific and didn't take furlough there.

I watch those real estate shows too, some local, but mostly UK ones. I'm fascinated at the 'strange' houses they have over there. Especially the old heritage ones. Houses are old at 25 here and get renovated. We'd have bulldozed those old treasures and built sprawling bungalows with some windows and headroom. It was was a rarity to visit a house with stairs in it for me as a kid. Other than the old inner city terraces everybody built bungalows or lived in blocks of flats.
 
I watch those real estate shows too, some local, but mostly UK ones. I'm fascinated at the 'strange' houses they have over there. Especially the old heritage ones. Houses are old at 25 here and get renovated. We'd have bulldozed those old treasures and built sprawling bungalows with some windows and headroom. It was was a rarity to visit a house with stairs in it for me as a kid. Other than the old inner city terraces everybody built bungalows or lived in blocks of flats.


:lofl:
 
I watch those real estate shows too, some local, but mostly UK ones. I'm fascinated at the 'strange' houses they have over there. Especially the old heritage ones. Houses are old at 25 here and get renovated. We'd have bulldozed those old treasures and built sprawling bungalows with some windows and headroom. It was was a rarity to visit a house with stairs in it for me as a kid. Other than the old inner city terraces everybody built bungalows or lived in blocks of flats.

I live in a 3- storey house, but it is only 15 years old as yet.

We don't have as much room as you; that it why we go up; and we don't tend to have basements either.

Anyway, back to theMentalist!
 
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