If I quoted every typo on the internet, I'd never get anything else done.
Just don't confuse "role" with "roll," okay? That drives me nuts!![]()
So, um, are you writing the next Space Vixens book? Because I'd totally buy that.
If I quoted every typo on the internet, I'd never get anything else done.
Just don't confuse "role" with "roll," okay? That drives me nuts!![]()
I completely agree with both points. Ambiguous terms obfuscate rather than illuminate. And, more often than not, both the producers and the audience confuse success with quality-- in visual media, at least, the reverse is more likely to be true.I've always thought that there was vocabulary problem at work here, in that we tend to use the same words--bomb, flop, disaster--to describe both commercial and artistic failures, which are very different concepts. With the result that we often end up talking past each other.
Granted, there are plenty of shows that fail on both levels, and there may even be a causal link sometimes, but they aren't the same thing --and it can get confusing when we throw the terms around interchangeably.
Just because something bombed doesn't mean it sucked, and vise versa.
If I quoted every typo on the internet, I'd never get anything else done.
Just don't confuse "role" with "roll," okay? That drives me nuts!![]()
So, um, are you writing the next Space Vixens book? Because I'd totally buy that.
The action-packed buddy cop show is set in the near future when all LAPD officers are partnered with highly evolved human-like androids. It centers on one such pairing, cop John Kennex (Urban) and his android partner Dorian (Ealy). Kennex is described as a respected police officer who has shut down emotionally after a tragic mission left him critically injured.
It sounds like the Cowboys and Aliens fiasco. Space Vixens? Talk about a common denominator. They loved Salieri too. Who knows what's going to sell as that is no indication of quality. The last TOS book by that new guy sounds horrible. I think it is becoming purposeful. spoil the water so the audience will beg for anything better. No offense, Greg, but your stories haven't sent me over the moon either. So political clout and style kicks the ass of quality and artistic and moral merit every time, huh? This is why I don't buy books or go to the movies anymore.
"I've got a lot on my plate and already have deadlines. I'm excited about that stuff. As for different genres, it will be surprising," he said [in February]. "I did the horror and sci-fi genre; that's been new to me on The Walking Dead. I do have a lot of material in that space and I'm excited about a lot of stuff that's coming up."
The Shield set in space is Riddick.
I'll admit I've never watched The Sheild, but I know about and based on that I have no idea what The Sheild has in common with the Riddick movies, both of which I have seen.
The Shield set in space is Riddick.
I still don't see where they are even close.Except that one is in space. It's true that Riddick doesn't work for anyone other than his own sense of justice but he's like a one man A-team in space, whereas the shield guy supposedly works for the good guys but is bad. The same just reversed slightly. Which means I guess it's not the same but close.
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