Memed from
tahirire
Tell me you want to play and I'll pick up to three of your fandoms. Then update your journal and answer the following questions:
1. What got you into this fandom in the first place?
2. Do you think you'll stay in this fandom or eventually move on?
3. Favorite episodes/books/movies, etc?
4. Do you participate in this fandom (fanfiction, graphics, discussions)?
5. Do you think more people should get into this fandom?
( My life in fandom: Hercules, Numb3rs, Supernatural )
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Tell me you want to play and I'll pick up to three of your fandoms. Then update your journal and answer the following questions:
1. What got you into this fandom in the first place?
2. Do you think you'll stay in this fandom or eventually move on?
3. Favorite episodes/books/movies, etc?
4. Do you participate in this fandom (fanfiction, graphics, discussions)?
5. Do you think more people should get into this fandom?
( My life in fandom: Hercules, Numb3rs, Supernatural )
TV viewing of the season
Sep. 24th, 2010 09:21 amSo, this week we checked out Hawaii 5-O, which we thought cool enough to tune in next week. We stumbled upon Mike and Molly, which was quite cute.
The Whole Truth will take some getting used to, simply because I'm a bit more interested in crime drama than courtroom drama, but it has promise. And Rob Morrow's character in this one is completely different from Don Eppes. (As a Don-girl, I kinda miss him.) I made the comment that Jimmy really needs to cut down on the caffeine. Heh! And Maura Tierney's short, dark hair gives her a striking resemblance to Maggie O'Connell in NoEx. Also in the show is the gal who played Simone on Pushing Daisies, and a guy who looks really familiar, though I would only know him from one-shot guest appearances on my crime dramas.
Oh, and there's this other show returning tonight. Something about really good-looking brothers who saved the world from an apocalypse or something and one brother finding a home life and another returning from the Pit/the dead/the cage. Or something . . .
Sounds interesting. I might tune in.
And disconnect the phones while I'm at it.
The Whole Truth will take some getting used to, simply because I'm a bit more interested in crime drama than courtroom drama, but it has promise. And Rob Morrow's character in this one is completely different from Don Eppes. (As a Don-girl, I kinda miss him.) I made the comment that Jimmy really needs to cut down on the caffeine. Heh! And Maura Tierney's short, dark hair gives her a striking resemblance to Maggie O'Connell in NoEx. Also in the show is the gal who played Simone on Pushing Daisies, and a guy who looks really familiar, though I would only know him from one-shot guest appearances on my crime dramas.
Oh, and there's this other show returning tonight. Something about really good-looking brothers who saved the world from an apocalypse or something and one brother finding a home life and another returning from the Pit/the dead/the cage. Or something . . .
Sounds interesting. I might tune in.
And disconnect the phones while I'm at it.
Only Love: Some rambling thoughts
Aug. 11th, 2006 11:34 amYesterday, thanks to a post on numb3rs.org , I was able to Tivo Only Love, a movie which looks to have been a 2-part made-for-TV miniseries starring Rob Morrow, Marisa Tomei, and Mathilda May, circa 1998. (Marisa gets top billing, but imo it should be Rob. You'll see why later.) The imdb user reviews are mediocre at best, so I really didn’t want to pay money for it. Yay that it aired on WE so I could Tivo it.
When Geo got home from work about mid-way through my viewing, he asked what I was watching. I told him a Rob Morrow movie from several years back, Only Love. It’s based on an Erich Segal book. “Egh,” Geo says. “The guy who wrote Love Story. Be sure you’ve got your insulin.”
For more rambling thoughts, ( proceed. Be warned: Spoilers abound. )
( Upon further reflection )
And finally, yay for Fridays!
When Geo got home from work about mid-way through my viewing, he asked what I was watching. I told him a Rob Morrow movie from several years back, Only Love. It’s based on an Erich Segal book. “Egh,” Geo says. “The guy who wrote Love Story. Be sure you’ve got your insulin.”
For more rambling thoughts, ( proceed. Be warned: Spoilers abound. )
( Upon further reflection )
And finally, yay for Fridays!
Northern Exposures
Aug. 3rd, 2006 02:57 pmIt came! It came! The copy of Northern Exposures I purchased came today!
Due to my newfound appreciation for Rob Morrow, I've been checking out some of his other work. I remembered him from NX, of course, when Numb3rs premiered, and I'd seen him in Quiz Show when it was first released to the theaters. But I never fully appreciated his work until I was re-introduced to NX several months ago by way of my bro's DVDs. (RM's performance in his independent film Maze clenched him as my most recent thespic infatuation.) So as I was looking into the availability of his other projects, I came across . . . what's this? . . . he's authored a book? A book of photography? Of Northern Exposure? Well, I must check this out.
So I checked with our library. *snerk* Yeah, right. Like I'm going to find anything esoteric at our library, unless it happens to be on the best seller list.
So when Geo and I went to DC recently, and he had a meeting at the Library of Congress and told me I should request a couple things to read while I was waiting, I opted for Northern Exposures. I wanted to actually see the book before I paid money to buy it.
And I was pleasantly surprised! It's a small book, a softcover, but it's a delightful "family album" of Mr. Morrow's castmates and the crew that made NX a reality (if anything in Cicely can be considered "real" *g*).
In the introduction, Morrow gives a brief but insightful account of how the book came into being, starting with his interest in photography. His description of setting up a darkroom in his apartment brought to mind the many times I as a child sat on my father's lap in his darkroom watching him develop photos. To this day, the smell of photo chemicals reminds me of my childhood. Morrow tells about how he used his downtime between shots to take photographs, and how his particular favorites often end up as gifts to the subjects of the photos.
The photographs in this book are all black and white, taken during the show's 3rd and 4th seasons. Some of the pics are intriguingly artistic, with very creative lighting and shot composition. Some are whimsical. Some are candids of cast and crew, either at work or hamming it up for the camera. Some are simply portraits of the people that made up this production "family." Having worked on an independent movie myself, I was particularly interested to see the costume/wardrobe crew, and the set pieces that made up the environs of Cicely. The captions, too, show goodnatured insight into the people who worked on the show.
And I especially like the self-portrait of the author, whom you'd never recognize if you didn't know who it was.
Overall, it's a nice little read if you're interested in behind-the-scenes views of TV production, if you're a fan of the show, the author, or photography in general.
It also leads me to believe that RM is a very intelligent and creative man and a passionate artist. I mean, I had that impression already from what I've seen of his work and what I've read and seen in interviews. This book says the same thing in a different way.
Now I have to decide if I'm going to spring for the autographed copy I found.
Due to my newfound appreciation for Rob Morrow, I've been checking out some of his other work. I remembered him from NX, of course, when Numb3rs premiered, and I'd seen him in Quiz Show when it was first released to the theaters. But I never fully appreciated his work until I was re-introduced to NX several months ago by way of my bro's DVDs. (RM's performance in his independent film Maze clenched him as my most recent thespic infatuation.) So as I was looking into the availability of his other projects, I came across . . . what's this? . . . he's authored a book? A book of photography? Of Northern Exposure? Well, I must check this out.
So I checked with our library. *snerk* Yeah, right. Like I'm going to find anything esoteric at our library, unless it happens to be on the best seller list.
So when Geo and I went to DC recently, and he had a meeting at the Library of Congress and told me I should request a couple things to read while I was waiting, I opted for Northern Exposures. I wanted to actually see the book before I paid money to buy it.
And I was pleasantly surprised! It's a small book, a softcover, but it's a delightful "family album" of Mr. Morrow's castmates and the crew that made NX a reality (if anything in Cicely can be considered "real" *g*).
In the introduction, Morrow gives a brief but insightful account of how the book came into being, starting with his interest in photography. His description of setting up a darkroom in his apartment brought to mind the many times I as a child sat on my father's lap in his darkroom watching him develop photos. To this day, the smell of photo chemicals reminds me of my childhood. Morrow tells about how he used his downtime between shots to take photographs, and how his particular favorites often end up as gifts to the subjects of the photos.
The photographs in this book are all black and white, taken during the show's 3rd and 4th seasons. Some of the pics are intriguingly artistic, with very creative lighting and shot composition. Some are whimsical. Some are candids of cast and crew, either at work or hamming it up for the camera. Some are simply portraits of the people that made up this production "family." Having worked on an independent movie myself, I was particularly interested to see the costume/wardrobe crew, and the set pieces that made up the environs of Cicely. The captions, too, show goodnatured insight into the people who worked on the show.
And I especially like the self-portrait of the author, whom you'd never recognize if you didn't know who it was.
Overall, it's a nice little read if you're interested in behind-the-scenes views of TV production, if you're a fan of the show, the author, or photography in general.
It also leads me to believe that RM is a very intelligent and creative man and a passionate artist. I mean, I had that impression already from what I've seen of his work and what I've read and seen in interviews. This book says the same thing in a different way.
Now I have to decide if I'm going to spring for the autographed copy I found.