Over two nights and four distinct performances, The Fall Big Show was a hit thanks to the creative and witty minds of its Fleabaggers.
Professionalism And Play: Connery Did It Best
His posture, his accent, his appetite brought Fleming’s character to life. No one has ever, or will ever, play 007 as effortlessly as Sean Connery
Zero Sum Game: Jumping Genres In The Silver Age
The Golden Age of television channeled and burned the anti-hero, and in its wake the Silver Age has told more diverse, maybe even better stories.
Music In The ’90s: Angst, Frustration, And Earnest Expression
The 1990’s was a great time for honest art, and in retrospect, we find it most in the work of the decade’s bands.
Online Streaming Can Save TV Programs, But Are They Putting Them In Peril Too?
With smaller viewership, TV companies must find something to cling to in order to remain competitive in their timeslot. And this means dumping dead weight
Forte And His Margarita Pool Return To ‘Last Man On Earth’
The show brings back all the things viewers loved about the first season and promises big things as the narrative leash stretches very literally into space.
How We Like Them Apples: Beantown On The Silver Screen
By the light of a cigarette engulfed in smoke or the jeers of a crowd spilling over the sidewalk, we are handed a piece of a place in a film.
Yeats Exhibit Reflects On Family, Country, And Youth With Still Eloquence In O’Neill
Nestled in third floor of O’Neill, the W.B. Yeats exhibit offers a moving snapshot of the 20th century Irish literary lion.
FX’s ‘Executioner’ Has All The Blood, But No Guts
FX’s newest program mimics HBO’s ‘Game of Thrones’ in many ways, but fails to live up to its level of fantastic fiction.
Netflix’s ‘Narcos’ Redefines The Biopic Genre For The Small Screen
Netflix original ‘Narcos’ follows the rise to prominence of Colombia’s most notorious drug lord, Pablo Escobar, and the men trying to bring him down.