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lazyjane posted:The American Shameless, for anyone who hasn't seen it. Far too attractive. Well, not Macy, but (what I think are) the sons and the elder daughter. What's the nearest American equivalent to the Gallaghers council-house look?
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 13:55 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 04:03 |
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they look like American actors
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 13:59 |
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I always thought the "Scottish people have it hard" routine was pretty old hat and lazy until I was told that Kevin Bridges was born in '86. He's a year older than me. That's not the face of a man in his early 20s.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 15:06 |
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Ddraig posted:I always thought the "Scottish people have it hard" routine was pretty old hat and lazy until I was told that Kevin Bridges was born in '86. He's a year older than me. Holy crap, I was born in '78 and look younger than him.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 15:30 |
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http://www.avclub.com/articles/hbo-picks-up-white-house-comedy-from-in-the-loop-w,47015/ ianucci going abroad to flog american thatcher romcom
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 18:42 |
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Born agoon. posted:Far too attractive. Well, not Macy, but (what I think are) the sons and the elder daughter. What's the nearest American equivalent to the Gallaghers council-house look? Lip in particular looks miscast in comparison to the UK show - he doesn't look rough enough around the edges. And Ian, for that matter, looks like he's about 12. It is very weird to be watching key moments from the first episode or so with completely different faces. Hmm.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 19:08 |
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I just started Skins, and have a question about the educational system in the UK. I'm assuming these kids are in an equivalent to high school here in the US (usually, ages 15-18), but they say that they're in college? In the US, 'college' is just like 'university,' so I don't really understand the school they're at, I guess. Also, do teachers really swear at their students as much as they do in this show?
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 22:23 |
Aatrek posted:I just started Skins, and have a question about the educational system in the UK. I'm assuming these kids are in an equivalent to high school here in the US (usually, ages 15-18), but they say that they're in college? In the US, 'college' is just like 'university,' so I don't really understand the school they're at, I guess. Until recently you could leave school at sixteen, our colleges are government funded community college things. We have Universities which are more traditional hardcore education establishments like the US ones though. And no, none of my Community College Professors swore.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 22:31 |
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College can be a place children go when they're 16-18 for what used to be the first stage of "further education". Recently they made it mandatory for everyone to be in education until they're 18, so you can either go to college, stay in a school that goes up to that old, or be in some form of apprenticeship. If they were at university, they'd say they were at uni. edit - Some of my teachers swore, generally not at us, but they'd occasionally swear while talking about things.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 22:34 |
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Oh, that's very different. We go to high school through age 18, generally, and then move on to higher education. If we go to college (aka 'uni'), it's usually a two to four year enrollment right after high school.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 22:58 |
Aatrek posted:Oh, that's very different. We go to high school through age 18, generally, and then move on to higher education. If we go to college (aka 'uni'), it's usually a two to four year enrollment right after high school. Our Middle and High Schools are combined into a neat public school package of suffering and unhealthy school dinners know as Secondary School. Not sure how the private school system works.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 23:11 |
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SeanBeansShako posted:Our Middle and High Schools are combined into a neat public school package of suffering and unhealthy school dinners know as Secondary School. Pretty much the same, but with more Latin and buggery.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 23:20 |
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Skins is entertaining and all, but it feels like there's a lot that I can't really relate to as a middle-of-the-road American, like hanging around and drinking at bars at age 16, or taking school trips to Russia for a history class. The Russian girl who learned to speak English through Friends references is pretty funny, though.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 01:21 |
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I haven't watched Skins (keep meaning to) but I know a few Swedish girls who speak English with American accents because they mainly learned from watching US shows.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 01:29 |
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Aatrek posted:Skins is entertaining and all, but it feels like there's a lot that I can't really relate to as a middle-of-the-road American, like hanging around and drinking at bars at age 16, or taking school trips to Russia for a history class. As someone who did both those things I still feel comfortable saying that Skins is what every 16 year old Brit wants everyone to think their lives are like, rather than how they actually are. I was about 16 (and a bit of a waste) when the show started so it had some relevance initially, but it soon became so absurdly over-the-top that I just couldn't watch it. It's like everyone's compulsive-liar of a childhood friend making up stories about themselves and then turning them into plotlines. At its peak I also remember a sickening amount of middle-class teenagers who felt the need to aspire to the show or compare their lives to skins in some way, so much so that it became something of a running joke. Also I've been to a few of the clubs they film in and naturally none of them are nearly so wild as they'd have you believe. God I hate that programme.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 01:53 |
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Skins is the life Jay from the Inbetweeners says he has Inbetweeners is the life he does have.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 02:03 |
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Every single character in Skins is a massive, massive oval office and I loving hate them
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 02:25 |
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^^^ this is true. I stopped watching skins because it made me want to stab teenagers even more than usual.Aatrek posted:like hanging around and drinking at bars at age 16 Loads of British kids will do this if they can get away with it. GCSE (exams you take at 16) results day is hilarious for watching the kids in the bars getting utterly shitfaced on three alcopops, and the old paedos circling around the inebriated young girls.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 02:31 |
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c0burn posted:Every single character in Skins is a massive, massive oval office and I loving hate them This loving Tony kid is just filling me with rage, and I'm only up to episode seven.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 02:40 |
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Tony is the villain, at least in the first seriesibroxmassive posted:Skins is the life Jay from the Inbetweeners says he has Basically this, it's unrealistic but in a very familiar way rather than the soap opera-y way of something like The OC, it's the kind of stuff that totally happened to this kid in Enfield comp, my cousin goes there and he told me right, etc. The characters attitudes and personalities are much more accurate too- like Tony is exactly the kind of prick I can imagine thinking was really cool in college.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 02:50 |
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Those twins would both get it though.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 02:58 |
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Did no-one watch the Psychoville Halloween special last night? I thought they did an excellent job of having a perfect balance between horror and comedy.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 10:26 |
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ibroxmassive posted:Skins is the life Jay from the Inbetweeners says he has This is the most perfect description of those two shows.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 11:24 |
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Brown Moses posted:Did no-one watch the Psychoville Halloween special last night? I thought they did an excellent job of having a perfect balance between horror and comedy. Yeah I thought it was great. Especially the clown's story, those kids were actually pretty drat creepy. And I loved the insane conspiracy stuff at the end, I clearly need to rewatch the first series now because I have no idea what the gently caress is going on. In a good way.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 11:31 |
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Aatrek posted:Skins is entertaining and all, but it feels like there's a lot that I can't really relate to as a middle-of-the-road American, like hanging around and drinking at bars at age 16, or taking school trips to Russia for a history class. As has been mentioned, Skins is a fantasy of being a British teenager, watch the simply amazing Inbetweeners for a much more realistic version which you will probably be able to relate to more easily. It really is an excellent and very well observed comedy.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 12:08 |
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lazyjane posted:The American Shameless, for anyone who hasn't seen it. Brown Moses posted:Did no-one watch the Psychoville Halloween special last night? I thought they did an excellent job of having a perfect balance between horror and comedy.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 13:04 |
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c0burn posted:Every single character in Skins is a massive, massive oval office and I loving hate them These are sentiments that I can get behind
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 14:32 |
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Chris wasn't a oval office. Skins was great and I could relate to the characters far more than the Inbetweeners. Inbetweeners always played it too safe and sanitised to reflect what I experienced as a child. Skins was far closer to the bone but with everything massively exaggerated. The weird dealer and all the petty relationship bullshit that they do to each other in spite of their being friends was very well done. The messed up lives of the kids and how their attitudes are influenced by their parents and teachers was pretty cool to see happen and evolve over time. 3rd and 4th not so much but it was still enjoyable. They just messed up the relationship dynamic between characters. Inbetweeners is too self-aware whereas Skins, although cognizant of its own fantasy, plays it straight.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 16:35 |
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ibroxmassive posted:Skins is the life Jay from the Inbetweeners says he has This is brilliant. I bet when you thought of this you smiled to yourself about how right it is. The Trip is starting tonight. On the one hand I like both Coogan and Brydon, on the other if the clips they've shown for it are actually some of the highlights it's going to be boring as gently caress. Also Dispatches sounds too brutal for me tonight: The hollow-eyed teenagers in this harrowing film are like little ghosts, flitting from place to place, invisible to an uncaring world. Nick Read's film follows a handful of teens in different British cities, who have either left or been thrown out of chaotic homes by parents whose nurturing skills are kindly described on the commentary as "inconsistent". On the streets, where they are way down the list of local council housing priorities, they're vulnerable to violence and sexual abuse and, of course, drug addiction. Robyn, 16, was forced to inject herself with heroin when she was 11 and now roams Edinburgh, occasionally sleeping in a graveyard. "You just get used to a quality of life," she says matter-of-factly of a life that has no quality at all. I know for a fact that I'll switch over to football at the first ad break and not have the fortitude to go back.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 16:59 |
Just reading about Dispatches is making me more depressed than usual. Also, something rare TV wise is up on YouTube but I'm not sure about the rules. Should I keep it mum?
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 17:27 |
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SeanBeansShako posted:Just reading about Dispatches is making me more depressed than usual. Spill the beans, drat you (AFAIK, if it's up on Youtube, it's fair game until they take it down)
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 17:47 |
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Lot 49 posted:This is brilliant. I bet when you thought of this you smiled to yourself about how right it is. I think the last thing Brydon and Coogan were in together was Cruise of the Gods which wasn't that great. I'm not getting my hopes up, but it would be nice if it was good.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 17:48 |
Gram-O-Phone posted:Spill the beans, drat you Get Some In, late seventies comedy about National Service RAF Airmen on YouTube now up to series five.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 17:57 |
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marktheando posted:Yeah I thought it was great. Especially the clown's story, those kids were actually pretty drat creepy. And I loved the insane conspiracy stuff at the end, I clearly need to rewatch the first series now because I have no idea what the gently caress is going on. In a good way. In and of itself it was good, but it didn't really change anything that was going on. Most of the stories were either dubious or revealed to be false at some point or another: Joy's and Mr. Jolly's were made up, David's was a dream and Oscar's was a friend-of-a-friend urban legend. But that's probably for the best: one of the things I liked best about Psychoville was that (almost) everything had a rational explanation, not just "it was ghosts".
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 19:19 |
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SeanBeansShako posted:Get Some In, late seventies comedy about National Service RAF Airmen on YouTube now up to series five. Never heard of it. Is it actually good?
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 19:21 |
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Whybird posted:In and of itself it was good, but it didn't really change anything that was going on. Most of the stories were either dubious or revealed to be false at some point or another: Joy's and Mr. Jolly's were made up, David's was a dream and Oscar's was a friend-of-a-friend urban legend. But that's probably for the best: one of the things I liked best about Psychoville was that (almost) everything had a rational explanation, not just "it was ghosts". Yeah the structure of it kind of reminded me of the old Simpsons Halloween specials, they were always amazing. Well they were before the Simpsons became poo poo of course. But the stuff at the end with the spy-types after the jewellery actually happened right? Certainly seemed that way since they appeared in the preview teaser thing for the next series.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 19:29 |
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Brown Moses posted:Did no-one watch the Psychoville Halloween special last night? I thought they did an excellent job of having a perfect balance between horror and comedy. But we now have iplayer, so I'll let you off.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 19:57 |
goatface posted:Never heard of it. Is it actually good? I'm enjoying it more than Dads Army, which is a classic. They seem very accurate about the time the tv program is set in (mid fifties).
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 20:28 |
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SeanBeansShako posted:I'm enjoying it more than Dads Army, which is a classic. They seem very accurate about the time the tv program is set in (mid fifties). Never heard of it, but seeing as my grandfather is the biggest Dad's Army fan in the world and also served in the RAF for national service in the 50's, I'm gonaa buy him the boxset for xmas right now.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 20:55 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 04:03 |
Junkenstein posted:Never heard of it, but seeing as my grandfather is the biggest Dad's Army fan in the world and also served in the RAF for national service in the 50's, I'm gonaa buy him the boxset for xmas right now. My old man loves it apparently despite being former RAF Infantry, so your granddad is going to enjoy it.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 20:59 |