I Poked One, it was Dead
Apr. 15th, 2009 01:54 pmFinished the first season of Flight of the Conchords, which is one of the most funny and original television shows out there today. In case you haven't heard of it, it's a show about the Flight of the Conchords - New Zealand's fourth most popular folk parody duo - trying to make it in big New York. Anyway, it's party dead-pan comedy, part musical. It's absolutely hilarious, I can't believe its take me so long to rent and watch the first series, and it's undone the damage of countless dimly-lit police procedurals over the years and made me want to live in New York.
I could ramble about how brilliant it is, but the best thing to recommend it is the show it self so watch this.
Plus love how it adds to recent trend of the deification of David Bowie with the Bowie episode (in David Bowie appears in Bret's dreams to give him self-esteem advice). If there's anything that telly has taught me anything about religion in the past few years, it is that god is a bunch of rock stars active circa the late 60s and early 70s (David Bowie notably in Life on Mars and Ashes to Ashes, Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix in Battlestar Galactica, and arguably, the Rolling Stones in House).
Also watched Red Dwarf: Back to Earth, which wasn't as funny as I remember the series being back in the day, but I liked it anyway and it did have moments of hilarity, and it was so good seeing those characters again.
Since I've got Battlestar Galactica on the brain, I couldn't help but notice the similarities between the two show's premises: the remains of humanity travelling to Earth with iconic made up swear-words. I think the world needs a Red Dwarf/Battlestar Galactica crossover right now. Kritten would get locked up as a Cylon and strike up a friendship with Caprica Six, Rimmer will got into sycophantic overload in the presence of Adama and Roslin and moan about how he can't get ahead because he's not an Adama to everyone that will listen and not in anyway to do with the fact he's got smeg-for-brains, Cat would despair at the fleet's lack of tuna and fashion sense and everyone in the fleet would freak out when they realise that their promised land is populated by Dave Lister. And of course it would all end with Roslin having all four of them airlocked and everyone pretending the incident never happened.
I could ramble about how brilliant it is, but the best thing to recommend it is the show it self so watch this.
Plus love how it adds to recent trend of the deification of David Bowie with the Bowie episode (in David Bowie appears in Bret's dreams to give him self-esteem advice). If there's anything that telly has taught me anything about religion in the past few years, it is that god is a bunch of rock stars active circa the late 60s and early 70s (David Bowie notably in Life on Mars and Ashes to Ashes, Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix in Battlestar Galactica, and arguably, the Rolling Stones in House).
Also watched Red Dwarf: Back to Earth, which wasn't as funny as I remember the series being back in the day, but I liked it anyway and it did have moments of hilarity, and it was so good seeing those characters again.
Since I've got Battlestar Galactica on the brain, I couldn't help but notice the similarities between the two show's premises: the remains of humanity travelling to Earth with iconic made up swear-words. I think the world needs a Red Dwarf/Battlestar Galactica crossover right now. Kritten would get locked up as a Cylon and strike up a friendship with Caprica Six, Rimmer will got into sycophantic overload in the presence of Adama and Roslin and moan about how he can't get ahead because he's not an Adama to everyone that will listen and not in anyway to do with the fact he's got smeg-for-brains, Cat would despair at the fleet's lack of tuna and fashion sense and everyone in the fleet would freak out when they realise that their promised land is populated by Dave Lister. And of course it would all end with Roslin having all four of them airlocked and everyone pretending the incident never happened.