The best pizza in town (at least home-delivery pizza) is from a place 
ironically named New York Pizza. It's more "thick crust" than "thin crust," and 
they sprinkle the crust liberally with garlic so it's much tastier than the 
thin, limp pizzas you get in other places here in Leiden. In general, Europeans 
tend to go for "minimalist pizza," with only a couple of toppings, but this 
chain also allows you to "build your own" and create truly monumental one-dish 
meals. 


And yes, it was fun. Many of my friends are ex-pats and all are...uh...shall we 
say...critical of the US, so seeing its politicians portrayed as they probably 
are in real life was right up their alley. Still, there were a few moments that 
no one was prepared for, such as the end of episode 1 of this new season. 
*Nobody* saw that coming.  



________________________________
 From: "doctordumb...@rocketmail.com" <doctordumb...@rocketmail.com>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, February 17, 2014 3:28 PM
Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Internet TV review: House Of Cards
 


  
Oops - yeah, I fucked up on that one -- Much of the time, when you do not set 
the stage for your viewing pleasure, it sounds like you are holed up in your 
room, in front of the tube. But obviously, not always. Sounds like a great 
time!! Can the Dutch make a decent pizza - is it thin crust, or deep dish?


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <turquoiseb@...> wrote:


Sounds to me as if you've never figured out that you can watch a TV series in 
the company of other people, in my case half a dozen friends who also liked the 
first season who took advantage of me being the first person in town to get the 
entire series.  We went through fairly extraordinary amounts of pizza and beer, 
and last I checked that constituted 'social interaction,' at least as it's 
practiced here in the Netherlands. :-)

Besides, watching characters on TV whom you suspect to be psychopaths beats the 
pants off of hanging around FFL and watching people *prove* that they're 
psychopaths. :-)



________________________________
From: "doctordumbass@..." <doctordumbass@...>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, February 17, 2014 3:01 PM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: Internet TV review: House Of Cards



 
It sounds, to me, as if you think sitting around all day, watching TV, is 
somehow superior to social interaction. Too bad - it isn't.


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <turquoiseb@...> wrote:


This weekend, while others on FFL argued about unprovable theoretical shit like 
the existence of God or tried to insult and demonize those who speak about 
actual spiritual experience when they can't because they've never had any :-), 
I, like millions of Americans and now others around the world, chose to focus 
on evil politicians guilty of murder and worse, government corruption so 
pervasive as to be taken for granted, and news
media only interested in seeking viewers, not truth. 

And that was just the Nightly News. Oh, and I also watched the second season of 
"House Of Cards."  :-)

Unlike most of these Netflixers (who were able to download their flagship 
original series all at once rather than have to wait a week between episodes 
and thus were binge-watching like crazy), I have actually seen the original UK 
series on which it is based, and thus can appreciate the differences. In this 
case, IMO the original was better, but the US version has its charms, too, and 
is far more accessible to an American audience. 

Part of the reason, of course, is Kevin Spacey. He obviously delighted in being 
able to play one of the most charmingly evil characters in film/TV history, and 
does so with mucho flair. He's best in those moments in which (using a trick 
stolen from the original series)
he "breaks character" in the middle of a scene, turns directly to the camera, 
and speaks to us in the audience, telling us what he's *really* thinking, as 
opposed to what he's saying. It's a cool trick, and is not overused in the 
series, so it provides a kind of "subtitles" when watching the machinations of 
one of the most evil politicians since Machiavelli. 

Robin Wright is also great as his wife, equally evil and self-serving in her 
own right. Kate Mara as a reporter who knows how evil Spacey's character is and 
is trying to prove it is good in a shorter role than she played in the last 
season. Gerald McRaney is tremendous as a 1% billionaire pulling all the 
strings from the background, and Michael Kelly is great as the Spacey 
character's loyal henchman and head "fixer." In terms of "new faces," however, 
my favorite is the extraordinary Molly Parker ("Deadwood"), who I would watch 
in a soap commercial, much less in one
of the major roles of a major TV series. Color me happy with the casting 
decisions. Other players are good, and the use of real-life commentators like 
Rachel Maddow and Morley Safer to present the "news" playing on TVs in the 
background or to conduct interviews adds to the impression of "realness." 

And, in another sense, the "realness" the creators of this series achieve is 
effective, because it's probably as close and as accurate a portrait of what 
"politics as usual" really IS as anyone is likely to ever see onscreen. While 
there are some critics (and I am one of them) who feel that Netflix's *other* 
major series ("Orange Is The New Black") is better in many ways, still I 
commend them for this one. It's easily as good as anything from HBO or 
Showtime, and infinitely better than almost anything on broadcast TV. Expect 
another round of nominations and wins for the second season, and expect to do a 
bit of binge-watching
yourself if you succumb and download this 13-episode season. 

My advice, however, is that if you didn't watch the first season, double your 
binge-watching time and start with it. I found myself having to go back and 
re-watch parts of it, just to remind myself who and what I was dealing with, 
and the evilnessitude they had specialized in previously. And a good thing I 
did, too, because I caught something I might not have otherwise. You know how 
some TV shows create an artificial "gap" between seasons, as if some 
unspecified amount of time has passed? Well, as far as I can tell the "gap" 
between season 1 of "House Of Cards" and season 2 is about five minutes of 
elapsed real time. So being "up to speed" on what happened last season will 
help you appreciate what's happening in this one even more. 

Good television. Not great television...that term is reserved for series like 
"Deadwood" and
"Breaking Bad." But damned good, and very watchable. It's like watching Lord 
and Lady Macbeth in the White House.




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