They ended by shitting all over Trump, I think that's fitting enough, I'm okay with it.I kind of wish ODAAT got an official ending, but I guess the Pop season was already a miracle.
They ended by shitting all over Trump, I think that's fitting enough, I'm okay with it.I kind of wish ODAAT got an official ending, but I guess the Pop season was already a miracle.
Looking back at the season 3 and 4 finales, either one kind of works as makeshift endings (moreso season 3 than 4).I kind of wish ODAAT got an official ending, but I guess the Pop season was already a miracle.
I quit after season 3. And I was struggling through that. There were just way too many characters to keep up with. I heard the finale was awful too.
Because True Blood was terrible.
True.To be fair, True Blood treated all its characters like shit, even Sookie.
The Queen's Gambit (7 episodes – 1,455B minutes)
The Office (192 – 1.09B)
The Mandalorian (10 – 955M)
Schitt's Creek (80 – 768M)
Criminal Minds (277 – 635M)
Great British Baking Show (64 – 608M)
Grey's Anatomy (361 – 568M)
NCIS (353 – 543M)
The Blacklist (152 - 417M)
THE 100 (100 – 407M
YeaSo I'm watching the German Netflix series Dark and is on Episode 5 in Season 1 and I'm really liking it and getting into all the characters. Is it worth finishing the whole show, and do S2 and S3 get better or stay at the same level? Without spoilering it for me of course. :)
Movies are helpful in attracting subscribers, but television shows keep streaming customers paying month after month. To that end, Disney has an abundance of series on the way for its services.
Disney has indicated that some of the money for its new content blitz will come from programming budgets at its traditional television networks.
Only 14 months too late. By the time Disney+ actually has content worth subscribing for, those suckers with those pre-launch 3-years-subs will have had their subs run out.
Streaming will further kill movies. I expect a couple of big blockbusters each year but no middle level movies anymore.
I'll keep watching, but I wouldn't have missed it.Industry renewed for S2:
‘Industry’ Renewed For Season 2 By HBO
Mickey Down and Konrad Kay's banking drama Industry will return for a second season on HBO.deadline.com