www.hardpartyprodss.fora.pl Forum Index www.hardpartyprodss.fora.pl
squat party
 
 FAQFAQ   SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups   GalleriesGalleries   RegisterRegister 
 ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 

http://www.dtvtk3.com/ ,jimmy choo outlet ,jimmy c

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    www.hardpartyprodss.fora.pl Forum Index -> HARD PARTY PRODUCTION
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
cheapbag214s




Joined: 27 Jun 2013
Posts: 18622
Read: 0 topics

Warns: 0/5
Location: England

PostPosted: Fri 5:38, 20 Sep 2013    Post subject: http://www.dtvtk3.com/ ,jimmy choo outlet ,jimmy c

That there have been “talks,” because people talk about things, what’s the harm?, about a project. And that all of those things are as true now as they have been all the periodic times, regularly since 2006, that Hurwitz, Jason Bateman or another cast member has told the press that the movie is about to get signed, that there’s a script, that they are going to start shooting in [future date span here].It could all happen, of course, I hope it does,http://www.dtvtk3.com/, and it may well be that, behind the scenes, the possibility is more serious than it has been during all the earlier flurries of brief excitement. (I would like to see those Deadwood movies too!) But at this point I need to see more evidence than comments at an event that the Arrested cast happened to be together at. After so many false hopes, I will believe that an Arrested Development movie exists when I am watching the closing credits, and actually, I will probably need to check for evidence that the memories of the movie I just saw were not incepted.At minimum,[url=http://www.dtvtk3.com/]jimmy choo outlet[/url], I’ll wait for a signed commitment before I get excited. Until then, no offense to the good Hurwitz and company, but high hopes are not much sturdier than a Bluth Company model home facade.Art Linkletter, 1912-2010Art Linkletter died today at age 97. Over his decades as an entertainer, he had many roles—radio host, TV host, celebrity endorser, comic, anti-drug crusader—but his best-known work came in TV and radio shows based on a simple idea: that ordinary people are tremendously entertaining. In People Are Funny, Linkletter gave out prizes to people who were game enough to complete amusing stunts and challenges. And Linkletter’s House Party,[url=http://www.dtvtk3.com/]jimmy choo shoes sale[/url], a wide-ranging variety show for CBS radio and TV from 1945 to 1970 (it moved to TV starting in 1952), is remembered above all for its best-known segment: Kids Say the Darndest Things. Above, see a remembrance of the segment hosted by Bill Cosby (who hosted his own Darndest Things show after Linkletter).On the one hand, Darndest Things was the simplest thing in the world: get some outgoing kids on a stage and capture what came out of their mouths. But there was obviously an understated talent to what Linkletter did,[url=http://www.dtvtk3.com/]jimmy choo sale[/url], a combination of a soothing interview style and sharp casting. (In this online interview he recalls how he would write to teachers to get them to select students to appear on the show: “I would like to have you pick the ones you’d like to have out of the class for a few blessed hours. So, I got the extroverts, largely.”)We remember Linkletter and his shows as an example of a more innocent time in pop culture (though he had his own critics at the time). But it’s not a stretch to say that, in his way, Linkletter was one of the fathers of reality TV: or at least a certain stripe of reality TV, the one that—from America’s Funniest Home Videos to The Marriage Ref—is premised in the idea that ordinary life is entertaining. It’s a tough genre to pull off without seeming mean-spirited, and Linkletter did it for so long by making his audience see that he was laughing with, not at, his subjects.We can argue how well his successors did in the shows that followed after. But Linkletter did a lot to make TV what it is today, by being one of the first to recognize—and make big ratings out of—a simple idea: that people are funny.Art:21 — Art on TV? Could it Be?Laurie Simmons/Lari Pittman/Judy Pfaff/Pierre Huyghe — Photos: Courtesy PBSBefore I left for Athens I previewed the upcoming episode of Art in the Twenty-First Century, the PBS series that starts its fourth season Sunday. If you saw the first three, you know it’s the best thing on TV about contemporary art. Then again, it’s pretty much the only thing.Now there’s a depressing fact. Except for Charlie Rose, who doesn’t think it’s strange to devote shows to Frank Gehry or Richard Serra, television mostly ignores art and architecture. (Ok, let’s be fair to television. It’s asleep at every wheel.
相关的主题文章:


The post has been approved 0 times
Back to top
View user's profile
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    www.hardpartyprodss.fora.pl Forum Index -> HARD PARTY PRODUCTION All times are GMT + 2 Hours
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum

fora.pl - załóż własne forum dyskusyjne za darmo
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group
Regulamin