Gavin McInnes tells lazy Hollywood writers to stop killing children to get viewers invested in their stories.
*Warning: Spicy Language.
Gavin McInnes tells lazy Hollywood writers to stop killing children to get viewers invested in their stories.
*Warning: Spicy Language.
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I’m big McInnes fan, but I really don’t care what Hollywood does anymore.
“Hey, Hollywood! Stop killing our imaginations with excessive computer-graphics, zero plot and seizure-inducing dialog!”
First he tells them he doesn’t like it, then he tells them that it works.
Two guesses as to what they’re going to do in response to that.
stop with the shaky camera thing already. I won’t take medication to be able to watch a movie. Also, turn down the volume. There is no need for painfully loud sound.
How many times can they kill Kenny on South Park before he’s really dead? Talk about child abuse.
Can we be done with zombies soon? What is it, about a decade they’ve been selling zombies? They need to lay off the coke and shrooms.
TP FEBRUARY 28, 2017 AT 4:49 AM…stop with the shaky camera thing already.”
I agree totally. Also why is everything so dark? Have you ever been in a gov’t building that wasn’t lit up like the sun? Or that greenish/yellow color. What the hell is that? Same on the sound. So many times the music overwhelms the dialog you can’t understand it. Fire the entire sound dept!
But mostly how about just bringing back some likable characters who aren’t a bunch of freaks and perverts!
As to the glut of freaks and pervs on the boob tube these days… I’ve grown to love the family on Blue Bloods. A group as real as any RC or praying Christian family I’ve ever known. Tom Selleck is an avowed believer and even gives God the glory for his life in interviews. The series has an aura of decency in an ethical four generations family that prays together over Sunday dinner every week. The issues that arise, usually two or three per episode, some flow through several episodes, are as real as those in the news or real crime stories. Decency prevails as we watch the kids grow up in this close knit family. To enjoy a good binge on it go to Netflix. And for the same type of moral story telling try Longmire, set in the Idaho/Wyoming beauty with Lou Diamond Phillips as the Sherrif’s Native American sidekick, troubled people are both of these guys but also ethical and brave. Good series also on Netflix, and A&E I think.