Showing posts with label television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label television. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Needing a Downton Abbey fix? Try the BBC's "North and South"

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No, it's not set in the World War One era or the Twenties.  BUT...the BBC's 2004 series "North and South" is delightfully British, a really good story,features a feisty heroine and a handsome brooding hero...and even Downton Abbey's Mr. Bates (well, Brendan Coyle) in a featured role.

Not only that, it's just four episodes, so you're not making a major time commitment.

I had heard about "North and South," and at first confused it with the Civil War miniseries.  But this "North and South" is based on the novel by Elizabeth Gaskell  (who also happened to be the close friend and biographer of Charlotte Bronte.)

This from Wikipedia:


It follows the story of Margaret Hale (Daniela Denby-Ashe), a young woman from southern England who has to move to the North after her father decides to leave the clergy. The family struggles to adjust itself to the industrial town's customs, especially after meeting the Thorntons, a proud family of cotton mill owners who seem to despise their social inferiors. The story explores the issues of class and gender, as Margaret's sympathy for the town mill workers conflicts with her growing attraction to John Thornton (Richard Armitage).

Margaret Hale (Daniela Denby Ashe) 




Daniela Denby Ashe exudes a quiet loveliness as the heroine, Margaret Hale.  (BBC series never feel the need to plaster make-up on their Victorian characters, and Denby Ashe is luminous without it.)

But Margaret is the kind of young woman that made Victorians a bit uncomfortable...she's just a bit too passionate about things like social injustice, and a little too outspoken with her opinions.  All in all, although she can sometimes be quick to judge, she's an admirable character that you want to root for.

John Thornton (Richard Armitage)


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And yeah...what can I say about Richard Armitage as John Thornton?!

Well, John doesn't come off as a sympathetic character at first.  We (and Margaret) first see him beating up an employee for smoking on the job.  (We later learn that the employee had been warned before, and fire was the single greatest danger in a cotton mill, but the scene doesn't exactly endear you to mill owner John Thornton.)

Yep, that was a VERY bad first impression, and it keeps Margaret from wanting anything to do with him for some time.

Needless to say, the character redeems himself.  And as for Richard Armitage?  I'd read stuff raving about the actor...now I know what all the fuss is about.


Nicholas Higgins (Downtown Abbey's Brendan Coyle)

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Mr. Bates is one of my favorite characters on Downton Abbey, and he's a likable character here too...but very different from the strong-but-subdued Bates.

Coyle plays Nicholas Higgins, a union organizer passionate about getting better pay and working conditions for his co-workers at the cotton mill.

(Interestingly, the series is even-handed about unions--depicting the need for them, but also the quandary of workers who can't feed their families on bare-bones strike pay.)

Margaret Hale has befriended Higgins' daughter Bessy, and becomes friends with Higgins as well.  She strongly sympathizes with the plight of the mill workers...another thing that doesn't endear John Thornton to her.

I enjoyed seeing Brendan Coyle in a role where he could be more forceful, more eloquent and more rowdy than Mr. Bates.

Finally...a love story


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There's so much to keep John and Margaret apart, I began to despair of them ever getting together.  (I was also getting a bit annoyed with Margaret--seriously, you're NOT into him?!)

But I don't think it's too much of a  *spoiler* --to tell you that the payoff is rewarding, even if it comes at the very end.
***spoiler over***


"Look back...look back at me."--via 


(I watched North and South for free on Amazon prime.)






Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Oh, How Pinteresting: Downton Abbey Style

Yep, count me as one who has succumbed to the pleasure of watching the very British PBS TV show, Downton Abbey.  It pretty much appeals to everything in me that loves all things English.

Not only that, but from the Edwardian era in which is begins, to the 1920's in which it is now set, the fashions  worn by the characters are DELECTABLE.

I'm linking up with The Vintage Apple's Oh, How Pinteresting to show you some samples of Downton Abbey style!



Source: fabsugar.com via Cindy on Pinterest


Source: google.com via Cindy on Pinterest


Source: google.com via Cindy on Pinterest










Are you a fan of Downton Abbey? Let me know in my comments section!




Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Baby Boomer Quiz: A Trip Down Memory Lane





(A goodie from the archives of Notes in the Key of Life--this was earlier posted May 201.)

Remember "I'd like to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony"?

Remember reaching into a huge cooler of pop bottles chilling in ice-cold water? Remember taking a long swig of Coca-Cola that was so cold it had slivers of ice in it? Remember paying 20 cents a gallon for gasoline? Remember listening to top 40 AM radio?



If you do, you're probably a baby boomer.

My radio co-host when I was working at 101QFL, Darren Marlar, gave me this quiz several years ago on the air, and it was a lot of fun so I thought I'd share it!

BABY BOOMER QUIZ

Look at the items below. You'll know that you qualify as a true Baby Boomer if you remember...


1. "Cruising" on a Friday night, listening to the Top 40 on your AM radio.--(Oh, yeah! I don't even remember being aware of FM radio until I was a sophomore or junior in high school...and it definitely wasn't top 40.)


2. How much popcorn you made when you got that first microwave.


3. When there were only 3 TV channels -- and it was so hard to choose what to watch!--(At least you didn't need a remote!)


4. Where you were when JFK was shot...(or RFK)...(or MLK, Jr.)...


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5. When the "Domino Theory" meant something other than planning to have pizza for dinner.

6. Who shot J.R.?




7. How scary it was to open that first Apple II...(or Tandy)...(or Commodore)...to add a card to increase the RAM from 16K all the way up to 64K.


8. When your teenage son or daughter first told you about the Internet.--(I'm on the young side for that one--my kids weren't teen-agers yet, but I remember when news stories were trumpeting the soon arrival of what they kept calling "the information superhighway.)


9. When the Beatles sang "I want to hold your hand" to Ed Sullivan.--(Yep.)

10. The unbelievable taste of good ol' Ripple wine.--(Have to pass on that one.)

11. How "neat" it was to hear the Beach Boys actually sing surfing music at the beach, on your transistor radio.--(Transistor radios! Loved 'em. My sister had one that looked exactly like a Coke can. My mom said she almost threw it away a million times, thinking it really was a Coke can.)

12. When you bought your first car that actually had seatbelts installed.--(Not really...I always remember seatbelts being there.)

13. When you said that you'd never trust anyone over 30.--(Nope...that was the "hippie" era. I was still pretty young then.)

14. What a TV test pattern looked like, when the channel went off the air at midnight.--(Yep, and the national anthem playing which meant it was time to go to bed. That was actually a good thing--a point at which you could NO LONGER WATCH TV.)

15. When we gave up trying to win "hearts and minds" and settled for "peace with honor".

16. When the price of gas jumped up to 50 cents per gallon.


17. When everybody did the "bump" in their leisure suits at the disco.--(I never frequented discos, but I sure do remember that era. Eeesh...leisure suits. How could we have ever thought those were cool? I bet they take hundreds of years to decompose in the landfills...)


18. Making love, not war, on your way to Woodstock in your flowered VW van.--(Again, too early for me.)


19. Watching the first man walk on the moon with "one small step..."--(Yep, I was glued to the (black and white) TV when that happened.)


20. When Carnaby Street came to Main Street, and everyone wore mini-skirts and platform shoes.


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How many of those items do you remember?

Add up your score and compare with the grade levels below:

16 - 20 remembered: You qualify as a true Baby Boomer -- you were there and remember it all.

11 - 15 remembered: You're probably old enough, but they say that "memory is one of the first things to go..."

6 - 10 remembered: It's nice to have you youngsters join us here today.

Less than 6 remembered: Either you're real young or you once were a friend of Timothy Leary's -- wasn't he the one who said "If you remember the '60's, then you weren't really there?"

I have a few to add to the list

Remember when every girl wore their hair long, straight and parted down the middle? You could look at your high school yearbook and it would be rows and rows of girls with that look (except for the black girls, whose Afros were so big they sometimes didn't fit in the picture.)

With my naturally curly hair, oh what pains I took to obtain that look. I spent every night with my hair in a pony-tail on top of my head, rolled into two enormous rollers bigger than orange juice cans.

Remember, years earlier than that (circa 1968, '69) when everyone wore fishnet hose? The really cool girls had different colored ones to match with every outfit.

Remember when yarn ribbons were the must-have accessory for hair?

Remember Dippity-do?




Did you have a crush on either of the guys on Alias Smith and Jones? (Read about my crush on Pete Duel.)

Which Monkee did you think was the cutest?

Got any to add to the list?

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Semi-Wordless Wednesday: A Tribute to Actors from "Lost"

Matthew Fox--Dr. Jack Shephard


Everyone who knows me knows that I am an avid devotee of the show, "Lost." I firmly believe it was one of the best television shows of all time, and I still miss it!

So my Semi-Wordless Wednesday today is a tribute to some of the actors who played on "Lost." Some of my favorites are still missing, but here are a few.

How about you? Did you love "Lost" as well? Who are YOUR favorite characters?

Josh Holloway--James "Sawyer" Ford

Terry O'Quinn--John Locke

Yunjin Kim--Sun Kwon

Jorge Garcia--Hugo "Hurley" Reyes

L. Scott Calwell--Rose Nadler

Michael Emerson--Ben Linus

Emilie de Ravin--Claire Littleton

Evangeline Lilly--Kate Austen

Dominic Monaghan--Charlie Pace


Jeremy Davies--Daniel Faraday


Desmond Hume--Henry Ian Cusick

Naveen Andrews--Sayid Jarrah


I'm participating today in Semi Wordless Wednesday, hosted by Flip Flops and Pearls!


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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Biggest Loser: The unknown trainers remain unknown



Careful, SPOILERS if you haven't yet seen it


Click the player to listen to my 3-minute podcast, or just read the post:



(If you're not seeing the player, go here to listen to the podcast.)


Well, I told you this show likes to manipulate us. They dragged out the anonymity of the new trainers for one more episode. Honestly, it's not so much that I'm dying to see the new trainers--it's that I'm having a hard time getting to know the teams that are off the ranch with the new trainers.

Although I'll admit, the show did make a bit more of an effort to let us see those teams this time.

But I digress. I find myself siding with and pulling for the teams that ARE on the ranch, training with Bob and Jillian. Is that exactly what the show's producers want us to do? In past years, they've always highlighted every bit of drama between the contestants on the ranch--what better way to create drama than to have the two groups vying against each other?

Anyway, yes, I'm liking the ranch-teams best right now. I'm still loving Courtney. She has the spunk and motivation that have made me like other contestants in the past. I can also see her transformation with each passing week. Mark my words, she is going to get prettier and prettier as each pound drops off.

I also really like Jennifer, the blonde girl who had the struggle with worrying too much about her dad.

I've got to admit, though, that I was perturbed at the ranch teams' performance during that disastrous challenge. The fact that they couldn't agree on a strategy was disturbing. Also, are the guys on those team men, or mice? Interesting that not one of them "manned up" to say, "OK, THIS is what we should do." Actually, they just needed someone with leadership skills, man OR woman, and they just don't seem to have that.

Also, Arthur's confidence seems to get a bit out of control at times. He needs to dial that down a notch before it balloons into OVERconfidence. Fortunately for him, it paid off this time, as he lost a whopping 13 pounds and helped insure that the ranch teams won the week's weight loss challenge.

So no one had to go home, and I was happy about that.

I'd love to know your thoughts and feedback!

Go here to follow my podcasts!

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Brisco County Jr, where have you been all my life?!?



My son Jonathan has been instrumental in getting my husband and me hooked on several TV series--not the least of which, a little series called "Lost."

Most recently, though, Jonathan gifted my husband with an entire series on DVD. It's The Adventures of Brisco County Jr, and I'm loving it!

(Oh, and guess what? The series' co-producer and writer just happens to be Carlton Cuse, one-half of the "Darlton" team [with Damon Lindelof] responsible for "Lost.")

This website sums the series up:

"In the closing days of the 19th Century, the West has become nearly civilized, especially with the capture of the infamous Bly Gang. However, the evil John Bly manages to turn the tables on his captor, the famed marshal Brisco County Sr., and murders the lawman in making his escape. A group of wealthy robber barons hires the marshal's son, Harvard-educated lawyer Brisco Country Jr. (Bruce Campbell), to pursue Bly and his gang and bring them to justice.

Joining the fun is the robber baron's mouthpiece, Socrates Poole (Christian Clemonson), sent along to keep an eye on County. Meanwhile, the notorious bounty hunter Lord Bowler (Julius Carry) vows to beat Brisco to the reward. The three join forces, aided at times by a mysterious orb, a sassy saloon singer (Kelly Rutherford), Comet the wonder horse, and an ever-changing assortment of oddballs, in hunting down the members of Bly's gang.

And hey--that's just the pilot!"




You'll recognize Bruce Campbell, who plays Brisco, from Burn Notice--although, hello. Bruce was quite a looker in his younger years, I must say.

SO many things I love about this show, it's hard to think of them all. The tongue-in-cheek humor ("You hit the sheriff!" "Yeah, but I didn't hit the deputy."), terrific writing and colorful characters are way up there.

I love that John Astin plays a recurring character, as the wacky professor.




I even like the "sassy saloon singer," Dixie Cousins, played by Kelly Rutherford. (I love her speaking voice--it reminds me of the voices of Hollywood-golden-era actresses like Judy Garland and others.)

Julius Carry is awesome as "Brisco's faithful companion" (a phrase that infuriates him!) Lord Bowler, the bounty hunter.

Billy Drago gloriously chews up the scenery as the villain, John Bly. John is so wonderfully over-the-top bad, you can't help but love it.

I never saw one single episode of this show when it originally aired in 1993, lasting only one season. But I'm thoroughly enjoying it now. All the more reason that I'll be sad when I've completed all the episodes on DVD.
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