The Official #1 Tennessee @ Kentucky Thur-Sat Game Thread (Thur. 7PM EST SEC NETWORK) (Fri. 6:30PM EST SEC NETWORK+) (Sat. 2PM EST SEC NETWORK +)

Another one and done league. There just isn’t enough demand for spring football. The NFL and college are enough for the vast majority of fans.
Absolutely true, and everyone knows it.

Beyond that, the economic signs began pointing in early 2020 that we were heading into inflation, with a good chance of it becoming stagflation. Only the top 30% were going to have additional disposable income for entertainment, and even the affluent become more conscious of value in their purchases in tight times.

So what's the real intent? There must be some way someone's going to walk away from this predictable disaster with major cash or holdings.

Is it as simple as a tax write off on the loss (ala Mel Brooks' 1967 The Producers)? Was that TV contract a way of laundering money? Going back to Solyndra, it feels today that nothing is too crazy, too conspiratorial to be dismissed out of hand anymore.
 
I was always looking to see how he (Hitchcock) would insert himself into the film.
Thanks for reminding me of good memories! It was seeing him in his movies (usually on NBC's Saturday Night at the Movies back in the '60s) that first made me aware of movie directors and what they do.

If it was too scary a movie, I'd beg my folks, "Can I just watch it until Alfred appears?"

I recently read someone saying, "No one manipulated his audience more than Hitchcock, but he always showed them the strings so I guess it's okay."

You reading that, Google?
 
My gosh, you Sound like the hosts from TCM!😎
You and @TN_gal keep giving me suggestions and recommendations on some of your favs!
I like the silly/quirky stuff too, like forbidden planet and attack of the 50 ft woman!😂
GBO!!
You've got better taste than you credit to yourself. Forbidden Planet (I'm told, 'cause I'm not well read on great lit) is actually Shakespeare's The Tempest set on Mars. Nothing silly or quirky about that!

I share your guilty pleasure with old sci fi movies from the '50s. A few are still good cinema, like (the original versions of) The Thing, The Day the Earth Stood Still, and Invasion of the Body Snatchers. All have been remade, but panned.

Most though were cheaply made drive-in fare that got recycled on late-night weekend local TV a decade later, and again on Mystery Science Theater. But I still enjoy the innocence of The Blob, with Steve McQueen and Miss Crump as not-teenage delinquents. That was actually filmed on a shoestring budget, using equipment and actors from a small Christian film company near Gettysburg, PA. My wife used to eat at the diner featured in the climactic scene, before it burned down in Downingtown, PA.

It's fascinating to watch how the characters in The Thing have their own jobs and responsibilities within competing hierarchies, and how they interact, jostle, and eventually cooperate. The way the Captain works with his sergeant presents the military at its best. Likewise, it might be a revelation to kids today to see journalism before it could be done on a smartphone pulling quotes from Twitter, commissioned polls, and illegal leaks to write a real story. The Thing shows science, the military, and the press each trying to act in accord with the ethics of their specialty, in a compact, constantly changing situation, cut off from guidance from outside. The contrast to our current norms is stark.

A sci fi from late-60s British television that current events may push into a revival is the surrealistic series The Prisoner, created by and starring Patrick McGoohan, then of Danger Man fame (shown in America as Secret Agent Man). I think the first episode is available free online, and A&E packaged the series as a 10-volume set. I gradually assembled my set from the local McKay's Used Books.

Village of the Damned is an overlooked British gem of sci fi storytelling, starring the always-smooth George Sanders. (A post-production decision to add a gimmicky special effect sadly keeps it from being a classic today), and there's a strange, low-budget but fascinating movie called Red Planet Mars that some here might find interesting. Starring a pre-Mission Impossible Peter Graves, the script was evidently written as Christian sci fi. The plot has several neat twists, and the story has its moments despite some uneven acting and forced edits. But more intriguing than actually good.

And is there anything more unintentionally funny than Plan 9 from Outer Space, which reigned for nearly 30 years as the worst movie ever made?
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My apologies to the regulars for being such a film nerd today. I know why it happened, and I'll just say I appreciate everyone's tolerance.
 
3 for them to win the west. 5 for us to win it all Over AR.
We’ve got a four game lead. If we win three, they can’t catch us, even if they win out. For each of our wins, the Magic Number decreases by one. They’re winning games does nothing but maintain the number, but if they lose, the MN drops one.
 
Someone on here (sorry, I forgot who) is always asking me: What's for dinner? It's supper, and this is it. Tried to eat it all but couldn't. Found a new series (to me) to watch on Prime.

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Dadgum, Juanita! I was feeling pretty good about my dinner date with the box of unexpired Pumpkin Spice Shredded Wheat I found at the thrift store... 'til you posted this mouth watering, blue collar (if not authentic blue plate) special!

(nicely done steak, BTW)
 

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