I finally got around to finishing Carnival Row. Overall, I thought it was just ok. I remember enjoying the first season more. It felt like the series should have been so much more.
I was just thinking about doing so this evening. Good timing!I just watched Sweet Tooth on Netflix . It's the story of a virus destroying most of the world population. In parallel most babies are born as some strange animal human mutants.
The story plays out mostly 10 years after the above and is about one of those child mutants. I was quite sceptical at first but the series really grew on me.
I would certainly recommend trying it out for 3 episodes or so to see if it could be for you.
Yeah, there's a few absolutely shocking scenes across Mad Men, that really stick out since 99% of the rest is so laid back and slow. That was a fun and gruesome one.Never bring a lawn mower at work (Mad Men).
Then end was quite unexpected for me, but you'll see soon.I just started the final season of Mad Men.
I finished the series. I'm not sure what the final scene is suggesting, but I liked it all the way through. It does leave you thinking.Then end was quite unexpected for me, but you'll see soon.
It does.It does leave you thinking.
I loved the moment just before then, with the dark fridge analogy.
Apparently the ad you mention was a real ad made by Mccann-Erickson.It does.
How do you interpret it? Well, maybe a question for later. I'm giving my interpretation in the spoiler below.
I'm not sure and I'll have to watch it until the end again, but I think that once he's heard the fridge man, he just realizes that he's only liked for his talent. The last scene is an ad he could very well have made after deciding that advertising was his life after all and jumping back on the wagon.
It seems like every week comes with a new Game of Thrones prequel (or sequel) in the works, and this week is no different: A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms: The Hedge Knight, based on George R.R. Martin's Dunk and Egg books, is coming to HBO.
The logline reads: "A century before the events of ‘Game of Thrones,’ two unlikely heroes wandered Westeros… a young, naïve but courageous knight, Ser Duncan the Tall, and his diminutive squire, Egg. Set in an age when the Targaryen line still holds the Iron Throne and the memory of the last dragon has not yet passed from living memory, great destinies, powerful foes, and dangerous exploits all await these improbable and incomparable friends."
Here's everything you need to know about A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms