Bad Girls And Pavarotti
12:10 a.m.: Sommore: A Queen With No Spades
1:15 a.m.: Liberal Arts
3 a.m.: Colewell
4:30 a.m.: Bad Girls from Valley High
Posted on October 30, 2020
Bad Girls And Pavarotti
12:10 a.m.: Sommore: A Queen With No Spades
1:15 a.m.: Liberal Arts
3 a.m.: Colewell
4:30 a.m.: Bad Girls from Valley High
Posted on October 30, 2020
By Jonathan Pie, TV Reporter!
“This all makes Thatcher the Milk Snatcher look like a nice lady.”
Posted on October 25, 2020
By The Sinclair Broadcast Group
Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: SBGI) reported Friday that Hulu has decided to drop Sinclair’s 21 regional sports network brands (RSN), YES Network and Marquee, depriving its subscribers of the excitement of watching their favorite local sports teams.
While Sinclair attempted to come to an amicable and fair agreement, Hulu was not willing to provide the RSNs reasonable compensation for their valuable local sports content.
Posted on October 23, 2020
By Thomas Chambers
It’s amazing how different the television-watching experience is for various sports.
I will theorize that Bears coach Matt Nagy should actually take into account the nature of television coverage in the course of a game. What a pioneer he would be! Yeah, right.
In major team sports, NHL hockey is the best. I believe the game is stopped only about twice per period and the intermissions are great. You can’t stop the game when the Patrick Kane line has one leg over the boards for a shift change.
I’ve always enjoyed watching professional bowling. These guys miss pins too, and they show whole games at a time. The current juggernaut is the Australian Jason Belmonte, a right-hander who doesn’t use the finger holes. The five-time bowler of the year is clutch. Different from the days of Chris Schenkel and Nelson Burton Jr., Earl Anthony and Johnny Petraglia when the gallery behind them was as quiet as a funeral, now they have a few dozen fans on the side of the left lane who constantly scream and never shut up. If Tiger Woods were a bowler, he’d stick his head in the ball return and wait for the next one up the chute to put him out of his misery. If the bowlers don’t mind those fans, neither do I, but the pandemic has thankfully removed them.
Posted on October 15, 2020
By Peter Lehman/The Conversation
If you’ve noticed an uptick of male frontal nudity in TV and in movies in recent years, you’re on to something.
In 1993, I studied patterns of male nudity in my book Running Scared: Masculinity and the Representation of the Male Body. After the old Motion Picture Production Code was replaced by a new ratings system in 1968, frontal male nudity in Hollywood movies in certain contexts was permitted. Drive, He Said, directed by Jack Nicholson in 1971, was an early film to include such a scene, while Richard Gere’s nude scene in 1980’s American Gigolo helped to transform the young actor into an international sex symbol.
Yet female nudity remained far more common in movies, and there was no frontal male nudity on mainstream television as of 1993.
Posted on October 12, 2020