We watched the first season. The lead actor is so bad we couldn't keep with it.
Started on Iron Fist last night, though. Two episodes in, so no real opinion, but I'm enjoying it thus far.
I really enjoy those channels for all of the shows they play from my childhood.M*A*S*H. Between MeTV, AMC, TV Land, and the current marathon on the Sundance Channel, my wife and I have seen more of this series in the last few weeks than we have since it ended in 1983. We're enjoying it, but I'm beginning to feel like I've been stationed at the 4077.
I don't know what CWish is, but I do think it is too much like Mad Max Fury Roadish.Into the Badlands.
An okay episode.
I worry that this show will become too CWish.
Most of what they air are shows I never watched or rarely watched, so a lot of them are new to me even though they're 40-50 years old. Of the shows I did watch way back when, it's my opinion that most of them haven't held up well over the years. I'm still trying to figure out how something like MacGyver ever became so popular, because it's complete rubbish.I really enjoy those channels for all of the shows they play from my childhood.
Yeah, many are very dated, but programs like The Andy Griffith Show, The Dick Van Dyke Show, and on occasion, Barney Miller are just as entertaining as they ever were.Most of what they air are shows I never watched or rarely watched, so a lot of them are new to me even though they're 40-50 years old. Of the shows I did watch way back when, it's my opinion that most of them haven't held up well over the years. I'm still trying to figure out how something like MacGyver ever became so popular, because it's complete rubbish.
Too much like something seen on the CW Network.I don't know what CWish is, but I do think it is too much like Mad Max Fury Roadish.
I still find The Dick Van Dyke Show and Barney Miller entertaining, but I've never seen the attraction to The Andy Griffith Show myself. We watch because my wife enjoys it, and Don Knotts is always entertaining as Barney Fife, but the episodes I prefer are the rarer ones featuring Hal Smith as Otis Campbell, Howard Morris as Ernest T. Bass, and Denver Pyle as the head of the Darling clan.Yeah, many are very dated, but programs like The Andy Griffith Show, The Dick Van Dyke Show, and on occasion, Barney Miller are just as entertaining as they ever were.
"All Our Yesterdays," the famous Season Three entry in the original Star Trek, with Kirk thrust back into a 17th-century-style past of a planet about to die in a nova explosion, and Spock and McCoy thrown into the planet's Ice Age. This is the one where Spock for some illogical reason takes on the barbaric characteristics of his Vulcan forebears of 5000 years before, and (it's implied) falls in love with an exiled political prisoner, Mariette Hartley. I say illogical . . . but it does provide a strong conflict between Spock and McCoy, and between Spock's rationality and his (still present, but always denied) animal nature. Otherwise there wouldn't have been much of a story.