What are you watching on TV right now?

And who is watching The Mandalorian? We canceled Disney when the free year ran out. Should we re-up for long en-ugh to catch up on baby Yoda.

I am trying to make up my mind about whether or not I will start it. I am about to sign up for Disney+ so I can finally watch the last Star Wars movie. Will probably make it a day-long affair and rewatch the first two of the latest trilogy, and then watch the last one. Then the plan was to cancel before the free trial is over. So I'm still not sure if I want to cram in the Mandalorian or not, and then get hooked on it and have to keep the streaming account open ;)

I know a few other people hooked on those Hallmark Christmas movies, but I gotta say it's a bit of a mystery to me. I mean, I get the attraction of television pulp fiction - everyone needs their version of mindless entertainment sometimes - but if it doesn't have Bing Crosby in it, I'm not interested ;)

 
Top 5 Favorite Christmas movies. I watch 1 & 2 every year on Christmas Eve. They are permanently on out dvr.

5. Home Alone - so much fun!
4. Miracle on 34th St (the old one with Maureen O’Hara because I used to watch it with my nana)
3. Elf (Princess and I love it)
2. White Christmas (still get sniffly at the General inspecting the troops)
1. It’s A Wonderful Life (always a tear when he has friends again)
 
1. Holiday Inn
2. It's a Wonderful Life
3. A Charlie Brown Christmas

Not sure I have any others. I think I have seen White Christmas but don't remember it.
 
On The Umbrella Academy, you have me intrigued. I need to look this up.

On House:
If they have House end with all of this being a delusion in his mind from a drugged-up mental state or from him being in the induced coma for his leg, I’ll be quite mad. I’ll start writing fan fiction, LOL.

I never thought about the writers being “consistent” with Cuddy going all in and then retreating just as fast. I agree, I think the relapse should have been the beginning of the end for the relationship, not an abrupt ending. Cuddy, as both one of House’s closest friends and a doctor, should have known that ending the relationship so quickly, after he had just taken more Vicodin, and in the manner that she did would have led to him going down a hole of drugs.

(All this said, I don’t mean to blame her completely, because she is definitely a victim of House. She can get out of relationships if she wants, but she actively chose to go into a relationship knowing that he was an addict and then got mad at that. I’m conflicted with how I feel.)

Also, the whole 18 months in jail for ramming a car into a house. I know he said he “took the first deal” that came along, but this is House we’re talking about. The Sherlock Holmes of doctors. He’s smarter than that, so I call bull.

I totally agree, I liked House before (even though he was a jerk), but now I don’t really have any feelings toward him. He used to have some moments in all the assholiness where he was a decent person. I feel like that’s not really there anymore, and you’re spot on, he regressed right back to where he was. I get that people may do that, but it was still frustrating because it felt forced.

I think I’m still sour over the whole ending it with Cuddy. I just remember in one of the episodes.. there was a visually and emotionally appealing scene where House was in Cuddy’s office, late in the day, everyone left, and they were discussing work. Cuddy at her desk, House laying back in the chair, camera was far away looking in on this moment. It just felt real and natural. I felt like it was worthy of a series-ending scene.

The House/Wilson dynamic is interesting. I do like them together.

If I had my own show, I’d want to end it as a fairly normal episode, maybe a bit emotional. I’d want the audience to know the show ended, but I would make it like any other episode.

I’m assuming House will not end like that, LOL.

I just checked and second season of The Umbrella Academy was just released in July of this year. It was renewed for a 3rd season this month, which means it won't be released for a while. This is why I tend to watch shows after they're already done! And once I'm hooked on a show, I can't pace myself, so I'm sure I'm going to be done with both seasons in the next week. The episodes are longer, but there's only 10 episodes in a season.

Anyway.

Yes, Cuddy absolutely has the right to decide when enough is enough, and she did say at the beginning that she basically just had to know if it was something that would work or not. So his relapse could have been the moment when she realized it was not going to work. They had been attracted to each other since they first met in med school and have been dancing around it ever since, so it seemed like she decided she couldn't really move on with someone else until she'd given it a try with House. She totally knew all of his issues and his addiction, but decided to go ahead anyway. But what I don't like about the abrupt nature of both the start and finish of the relationship is that sure, the two events were consistent with each other, but they were inconsistent with the rest of her character. She wasn't particularly impulsive. She was methodical and thoughtful about her decisions. Of course some people are that way with career but are messier with their personal lives, but it still seemed like the writers were sacrificing character development for drama, and I don't like when that happens.

I liked their "normal" moments, too and still a bit salty about how they ended. But 'normal' apparently doesn't do well in the ratings. :/

As for the finale, all I will say is that a) it is not a delusion (though we do still get some hallucination scenes), and b) it's just a normal episode. I'm conflicted. We'll talk when you get there :)

Overall, I enjoyed the show very much, even if it did become a bit too formulaic with the cases (it's totally X disease! Nope, it's not. Cue controversial test/diagnoses/breaking and entering. Oh, it's totally disease Y! Nope, not that either. Cue ball tossing/staring at wall/eating lunch with coma guy. Dramatic finish! Puzzle solved! Patient is alive! Or sometimes dead!). But I do feel it overstayed its welcome, and I would have preferred a slow, steady character evolution for him rather than the roller coaster for the sake of gratuitous drama. All of the characters were sort of complex, but they could have been so much more interesting if the writers paid more attention to them.
Leo, I’ll be responding to this tomorrow. We have 2 episodes left for tonight.

Also finished up Great British Bake Off. The final episode always makes me tear up.
 
Top 5 Favorite Christmas movies. I watch 1 & 2 every year on Christmas Eve. They are permanently on out dvr.

5. Home Alone - so much fun!
4. Miracle on 34th St (the old one with Maureen O’Hara because I used to watch it with my nana)
3. Elf (Princess and I love it)
2. White Christmas (still get sniffly at the General inspecting the troops)
1. It’s A Wonderful Life (always a tear when he has friends again)
These are in my top favorites, as well.

1. Holiday Inn
2. It's a Wonderful Life
3. A Charlie Brown Christmas

Not sure I have any others. I think I have seen White Christmas but don't remember it.
With #1, when we watched it, we knew what was coming, but just couldn’t get over it.
 
@limr I can’t believe Holiday Inn is your favorite but you’ve never seen White Christmas!


@waday great minds think alike lol.
 
@limr I can’t believe Holiday Inn is your favorite but you’ve never seen White Christmas!


@waday great minds think alike lol.

I did see it once but don't remember it very well. And I am a bit of a sucker for Fred Astaire :) There was the one number that was problematic, but then there was Astaire dancing with fireworks and Crostby singing the actual song White Christmas that wasn't even in the move White Christmas.
 
On The Umbrella Academy, you have me intrigued. I need to look this up.

On House:
If they have House end with all of this being a delusion in his mind from a drugged-up mental state or from him being in the induced coma for his leg, I’ll be quite mad. I’ll start writing fan fiction, LOL.

I never thought about the writers being “consistent” with Cuddy going all in and then retreating just as fast. I agree, I think the relapse should have been the beginning of the end for the relationship, not an abrupt ending. Cuddy, as both one of House’s closest friends and a doctor, should have known that ending the relationship so quickly, after he had just taken more Vicodin, and in the manner that she did would have led to him going down a hole of drugs.

(All this said, I don’t mean to blame her completely, because she is definitely a victim of House. She can get out of relationships if she wants, but she actively chose to go into a relationship knowing that he was an addict and then got mad at that. I’m conflicted with how I feel.)

Also, the whole 18 months in jail for ramming a car into a house. I know he said he “took the first deal” that came along, but this is House we’re talking about. The Sherlock Holmes of doctors. He’s smarter than that, so I call bull.

I totally agree, I liked House before (even though he was a jerk), but now I don’t really have any feelings toward him. He used to have some moments in all the assholiness where he was a decent person. I feel like that’s not really there anymore, and you’re spot on, he regressed right back to where he was. I get that people may do that, but it was still frustrating because it felt forced.

I think I’m still sour over the whole ending it with Cuddy. I just remember in one of the episodes.. there was a visually and emotionally appealing scene where House was in Cuddy’s office, late in the day, everyone left, and they were discussing work. Cuddy at her desk, House laying back in the chair, camera was far away looking in on this moment. It just felt real and natural. I felt like it was worthy of a series-ending scene.

The House/Wilson dynamic is interesting. I do like them together.

If I had my own show, I’d want to end it as a fairly normal episode, maybe a bit emotional. I’d want the audience to know the show ended, but I would make it like any other episode.

I’m assuming House will not end like that, LOL.

I just checked and second season of The Umbrella Academy was just released in July of this year. It was renewed for a 3rd season this month, which means it won't be released for a while. This is why I tend to watch shows after they're already done! And once I'm hooked on a show, I can't pace myself, so I'm sure I'm going to be done with both seasons in the next week. The episodes are longer, but there's only 10 episodes in a season.

Anyway.

Yes, Cuddy absolutely has the right to decide when enough is enough, and she did say at the beginning that she basically just had to know if it was something that would work or not. So his relapse could have been the moment when she realized it was not going to work. They had been attracted to each other since they first met in med school and have been dancing around it ever since, so it seemed like she decided she couldn't really move on with someone else until she'd given it a try with House. She totally knew all of his issues and his addiction, but decided to go ahead anyway. But what I don't like about the abrupt nature of both the start and finish of the relationship is that sure, the two events were consistent with each other, but they were inconsistent with the rest of her character. She wasn't particularly impulsive. She was methodical and thoughtful about her decisions. Of course some people are that way with career but are messier with their personal lives, but it still seemed like the writers were sacrificing character development for drama, and I don't like when that happens.

I liked their "normal" moments, too and still a bit salty about how they ended. But 'normal' apparently doesn't do well in the ratings. :/

As for the finale, all I will say is that a) it is not a delusion (though we do still get some hallucination scenes), and b) it's just a normal episode. I'm conflicted. We'll talk when you get there :)

Overall, I enjoyed the show very much, even if it did become a bit too formulaic with the cases (it's totally X disease! Nope, it's not. Cue controversial test/diagnoses/breaking and entering. Oh, it's totally disease Y! Nope, not that either. Cue ball tossing/staring at wall/eating lunch with coma guy. Dramatic finish! Puzzle solved! Patient is alive! Or sometimes dead!). But I do feel it overstayed its welcome, and I would have preferred a slow, steady character evolution for him rather than the roller coaster for the sake of gratuitous drama. All of the characters were sort of complex, but they could have been so much more interesting if the writers paid more attention to them.
I agree about Cuddy being so rash and quick to jump in and jump out of a relationship. Anyways, enough of her, since she’s out of the picture now, thanks to contracts.

Your show formula is spot on. I actually don’t mind shows like that, as long as they occasionally change it up. Like, the one episode that was (I think?) about Wilson where they had really funny background scenes of House’s team scrambling around, on top of patients trying to keep them alive, or running through the halls, was really good.

With regards to my feelings on Season 7 and 8, I think they generally stand. I would have been more than happy to have Season 6 be the last, BUT I did enjoy the latter half of Season 8. I completely agree that the show should have paid more attention to the other characters, as well. They seemed to have a show every now and then that fully focused on a single character, but I guess I’m not necessarily a huge fan of that process. I’d rather see their background come out gradually and slowly. For example, I felt like we learned so much about Masters when they had an episode focus solely on her character, which was also the LAST EPISODE TO FEATURE HER as a doctor under House. Why would they do that? Perhaps she would have been a better asset throughout her time on the show had they released this information slowly from the beginning. I mean, they did some, but I felt like Masters could have been a really good replacement for Cameron, but they got rid of her and brought in Adams. Meh.

I still think Park was out of place (although I was happy to see her evolve), and I don’t think they did Adams justice—I kind of think they just wanted to replace Cameron and Masters and chose some bland version with no heart.

I did warm up to Foreman as head of the hospital, but I think they should have involved him a bit more in the cases, like they did with Cuddy. He took on so much responsibility for House during the parole, but then took a back seat during DDX and treatment? I would have expected him to be on top of House as much as Cuddy was... except... not in that way...

Chase... I actually think I liked him the best, because he showed the most character development. I think they did that on purpose though, because I think they delved the most into his character and background than any other. I LOVED Kutner, but they shouldn’t have done what they did. It didn’t make sense, and really rocked the whole show. Taub was hilarious, and I really like him. Loved Thirteen’s character, as well—happy with where they ended it. Cameron was good, but I wish they would have evolved her a little differently.

I really liked Amber’s role on the show, as well as Masters. I did not like Terzi at all, glad she left the show, not sure of her purpose, other than to help other characters’ arcs. Her character didn’t make sense to me, although I get that it made sense to the show.

Regarding House’s character development... The whole stuffing the season tickets down the drain... that made me roll my eyes so hard I almost strained them. I guess I don’t understand the plumbing in the building, since various places had issues but then ALL of the tickets were found together with his fingerprints on them and they were legible with his name? Aside from the plumbing, flushing tickets down the drain was not very “House”. Finding someone that Foreman despised and giving the tickets to that person (so they’d have to sit next to each other every game) would have been. Or, finding a way to keep Wilson alive past the 5 month mark and then convincing Foreman to give them to Wilson. I don’t know. Anything other than “flushing them” and then giving the “remains” to the police. Seemed like a cheap and lazy way to end it and to get House back to jail. (Also, the whole jail/parole looming over his head was drawn out way too long. It should have ended when he took the ankle monitor off.)

And don’t get me started on how Dominika went from getting her green card to citizenship; those are two different processes, but I guess being married to an immigration attorney probably made me more sensitive to this, haha. I liked their relationship, and was thoroughly annoyed when House threw out her papers notifying her of the oath. But, I understand it goes back to his self-destructive ways, and that it shows that House couldn’t change (which was inline with his own thoughts on people in general). Still, would have been nice to see him change and evolve.

Regarding the last couple of episodes (and the last episode), I actually enjoyed them. I felt like they really started to get back into their groove. I liked the last episode, hallucinations and all. Seeing Kutner was great. Probably spent a little more time going back and forth than I would have liked, but I did enjoy it. I also enjoyed seeing the “where is everybody now” at the end.

My wife and I both knew that he wasn’t going to die. We had talked about how we thought it was going to end, and just knew that he (1) wasn’t going back to jail and (2) wasn’t going to die. Loved his text to Wilson at the funeral (totally read it in House’s voice), and just like House to actually be in attendance at his own funeral. I liked the ending with House and Wilson driving off into the distance on their motorcycles. Definitely made me tear up.
 
Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers
Go Packers! ;) The Bears were a disappointment this year after starting strong. But then football season was weird this year, anyway, so everyone gets a Covid pass.

5. Home Alone - so much fun!
4. Miracle on 34th St (the old one with Maureen O’Hara because I used to watch it with my nana)
3. Elf (Princess and I love it)
2. White Christmas (still get sniffly at the General inspecting the troops)
1. It’s A Wonderful Life (always a tear when he has friends again)

1. A Christmas Carol:
a) 1938 version, starring Reginald Owen and Gene Lockhart
b) 1951 version starring Alastair Sim.

I love things from both versions. Each pulled slightly different things from the Dickens novel, making both unique. I've given up trying to find them every year now - it's always modern versions that don't quite pull on the nostalgia heartstrings that is a requirement for my holiday watching. ;) I'm going to have to find them online and have DVD's.

2. It's a Wonderful Life
3. A Christmas Story
 
Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers
Go Packers! ;) The Bears were a disappointment this year after starting strong. But then football season was weird this year, anyway, so everyone gets a Covid pass.

5. Home Alone - so much fun!
4. Miracle on 34th St (the old one with Maureen O’Hara because I used to watch it with my nana)
3. Elf (Princess and I love it)
2. White Christmas (still get sniffly at the General inspecting the troops)
1. It’s A Wonderful Life (always a tear when he has friends again)

1. A Christmas Carol:
a) 1938 version, starring Reginald Owen and Gene Lockhart
b) 1951 version starring Alastair Sim.

I love things from both versions. Each pulled slightly different things from the Dickens novel, making both unique. I've given up trying to find them every year now - it's always modern versions that don't quite pull on the nostalgia heartstrings that is a requirement for my holiday watching. ;) I'm going to have to find them online and have DVD's.

2. It's a Wonderful Life
3. A Christmas Story

The Alastair Sim is my mom’s favorite.
 
Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers
Go Packers! ;) The Bears were a disappointment this year after starting strong. But then football season was weird this year, anyway, so everyone gets a Covid pass.

5. Home Alone - so much fun!
4. Miracle on 34th St (the old one with Maureen O’Hara because I used to watch it with my nana)
3. Elf (Princess and I love it)
2. White Christmas (still get sniffly at the General inspecting the troops)
1. It’s A Wonderful Life (always a tear when he has friends again)

1. A Christmas Carol:
a) 1938 version, starring Reginald Owen and Gene Lockhart
b) 1951 version starring Alastair Sim.

I love things from both versions. Each pulled slightly different things from the Dickens novel, making both unique. I've given up trying to find them every year now - it's always modern versions that don't quite pull on the nostalgia heartstrings that is a requirement for my holiday watching. ;) I'm going to have to find them online and have DVD's.

2. It's a Wonderful Life
3. A Christmas Story

The Alastair Sim is my mom’s favorite.
Is everyone just going to overlook the Muppet version with Michael Caine?

When they sing “when love is gone”, pass me the tissues.

 

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