Welcome

Welcome to my ever-evolving blog. It started out as a blog on Beachbody workouts and products, mainly when I was a Beachbody coach. I no longer coach, not because I don't believe in Beachbody's programs (I subscribe to Beachbody on Demand and use their workouts every day), I am just not a salesperson and hated that aspect of it. I am more than willing to answer questions about my experiences with their products and the various workouts, and I feel freer to do so without the appearance of giving a biased review of something.

I have also started adding reviews for various things I have purchased like movies, books, CDs, and other products. This was brought about by a fight with Amazon in which all of my reviews were removed over a completely bullshit allegation that I posted a review that violated their terms of service. After going back and forth with the morons in the community-reviews department (even after they admitted that my posts did not violate their guidelines) they restored my account (which took them six months to do), but I have been posting my reviews on my blog to have them preserved in case something like that happens again. And here, I will post uncensored reviews so I will swear from time to time and post reviews that may be longer than Amazon's character limit. Everything I post here on any topic or product is my personal opinion, and I take no compensation for any product reviews I post. I am a member of Amazon's vine program and because I get those products for free, I keep those reviews on Amazon only, but everything I have purchased with my own money, whether from Amazon or some other store/website/outlet, I will post here.  

I also plan to do some longer blog posts on various topics, such as how to learn physics, how to get through calculus, and longer reviews of workout programs as I do them. Basically, whatever strikes me as interesting at the time.  As you can see if you navigate around the blog, I had many years in between postings. During that time I was going back to school to get an engineering degree, and learning material that I avoided my first time through college was a different experience and one that gave me a lot of insight into how to do well in those classes, which I will try to impart here for those who are looking to get a science or engineering degree. 

Saturday, November 16, 2024

Workout Update: 654 Cardio/Lift 4 Hybrid: Day 6

Day 6 was a rest day for Lift 4, so I did the 645 cardio routine in the afternoon. I did a higher-impact version of the workout since I was not doing a second workout. 

Blu-Ray/Movie Review: Prison Break Season 3

 


+++Warning, this contains spoilers from season two, but no major season three giveaways+++

The 13-episode third season of Prison Break aired during the 2007/2008 TV season. It does yet another reset of the show, this time finding the group again in over their heads, with Michael, T-Bag, Alex, and Bellick in Sona, the prison in Panama where the inmates literally run the asylum. Apparently, the prison is modeled after a real prison in Brazil where the guards stay outside the prison, and inside it is a "Lord of The Flies" scenario. We know that The Company wanted Michael in prison, and we learn within the first episode that it is because they want him to break someone out. From there, the rest of the season is a take on the season one breakout, but with Michael having to plan on the fly and improvise, with Lincoln and Sucre trying to help him from the outside.

This season was a bit uneven due mainly to it being cut short by the 2007 writer's strike, getting just 13 episodes instead of the standard 22. Sarah Wayne Callies was pregnant and in a contract dispute, which led to a significantly reduced role for her character. There are new characters introduced the main ones being Jodi Lynn O'Keefe who plays Susan B. Anthony/Gretchen who is basically a cleaner for The Company, Chris Vance as Whistler, another prisoner, Danay Garcia, as his girlfriend Sophia, and Robert Wisdom as Lechero, the inmate who basically runs the prison in Panama. As with the prior two seasons, there are quite a few twists and turns, and not every character is who they seem.

The Blu-Ray set is a four-disc set. For those who get the blu-ray set, the extras are all on the final disc. There are no commentary tracks, as for the first two seasons. There is a 25-minute behind-the-scenes featurette and a 40-minute director's take feature, which is basically the director of each episode doing a scene breakdown from that particular episode. You can play all 13 at one time or one by one. The extras are rounded out by a short between-takes feature, which basically has some actors saying what they do between takes and a feature on the breakout episode. It is over an hour's worth of extras, so for those who like watching the bonus material, it definitely makes picking up the blu-ray set worth it.

Friday, November 15, 2024

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Daredevil Season 2

 


The 13-episode second season of Daredevil was released on Netflix in 2016. This season packs a lot in, but it really boils down to the two new characters, Frank Castle (AKA, The Punisher), played by John Bernthal, and Electra, played by Elodie Yung. The first part of the season was about Castle going off and killing members of various gangs involved in killing his family, and Daredevil trying to take him down. Mixed in was the storyline involving Elektra, an old flame of Matt Murdock, which ultimately becomes the focus of the last few episodes and leads into The Defenders series, which brings all the characters from the Netflix Marvel series together. Wilson Fisk also makes a couple of appearances from prison and makes clear he is not totally out of the picture. Of course, a key aspect of the story is Matt's balance of real life as a lawyer (made even more complicated by the fact that Foggy now knows his secret), his feelings for Karen (which become even more complicated because of Elektra), and his vigilante activities.

Like season 1, the show is very violent. There are many fight scenes and lots of blood, not to mention language and sex that you do not get in the MCU movies or Agents of Shield. So, it is definitely a more adult show. It continues to be well-written and acted, and with just 13 episodes the season goes by quickly. For those who get the blu-rays, it is just a MOD set. There are no extras or bonus material. So, really, the only reason to get the discs is if you have a collection of the other movies and TV shows and just want this to have it complete or are one of those who prefer physical media over streaming. But, if you only get discs with a lot of bonus material and extra features, you will probably just want to stream this.

Workout Update: 654 Cardio/Lift 4 Hybrid: Day 5

 Day 5 was the legs workout in Lift 4 (which is a 50/50 workout) and then the 645 cardio routine in the morning. As has been the case with all the Lift 4 workouts, I started this round using my ending weight amounts from the last round. The exercises were still challenging, but not as challenging as in the other three workouts this week, probably because in the final two weeks of the program, you do weighted leg workouts both weeks as opposed to alternating between a weighted workout and a HIIT workout.

Workout Update: 654 Cardio/Lift 4 Hybrid: Day 4

Day 4 was a lower-impact version of the 645 cardio routine in the morning and the shoulders workout, which is an interval workout, in the evening. I again used my ending weight from the last round as the starting weight for this round, and it was still extremely challenging. I do like the interval workouts in Lift 4 more than the 50/50 workouts, since you are only doing the HIIT moves for 30 seconds in intervals.  

Workout Update: 654 Cardio/Lift 4 Hybrid: Day 3

Day 3 was the rest day for Lift 4, so I just did the 645 cardio routine in the morning. Nothing all that exciting to report from it. I did do a higher-impact version of the workout since there was no second workout in the evening.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

DVD/TV Series Review: Grounded For Life Season 2

 


Grounded for Life was one of the shows on Fox that was always on the brink of cancellation, yet ended up with a five-season run (although a couple of those seasons were partial seasons, so in episode count, the series had about 4 "full" seasons worth of episodes). The 22-episode second season aired during the 2001/2002 season. 

The feel of the second season was much like the first, with the episodes telling a self-contained story, picking up the story in the middle (or later) of the story, and then catching the audience up using flashbacks. This season tackled topics like pregnancy scares, the teenage sex talk, Claudia taking up smoking again, adolescent love, both requited and unrequited, etc. The show told serious stories with a comedic twist, without going over the top into stupid, hokey comedy.

The best part of the show is that it depicted real people in relatable situations. The cast did not look like a bunch of supermodels, and the people were not depicted as perfect like a lot of sitcom families are. It filled in the studio audience's reactions with laugh tracks, but that never bothered me. I know some people hate shows with laugh tracks, so if that is you, it is worth keeping in mind.

As with the first season release, this DVD set is fairly bare-bones. It contains the 22 episodes on three discs. The discs are in paper sleeves inside the case, which sit in a rectangular cutout. It is actually a pretty good setup to keep the discs from getting scratched up. There are no captions, which may be a pain if you are hard of hearing or watch TV while working out on a treadmill or elliptical or something like that. There are about 25 minutes of extras, including an interview with Kevin Corrigan, a gag reel, an interview with Jake Burbage and Griffen Frazen, a sizzle reel of season-two highlights, and a segment on Ashton Kutcher's guest-starring role. Other notable guest stars in season two include Stephan Root, Natasha Lyonne, and football players Jim McMahon and Willie Gault during a Superbowl episode.

Chances are anyone who knows about the show after all this time will be a fan trying to track down the DVDs. They are getting harder to find at a reasonable price as they are now out of print. So, if you are a fan and you see the sets at a good price, snap them up because they may not be around that much longer, and I have not (as of this writing) seen the show on any of the streaming services. The DVD release is not great, but it is likely the best that will ever be put out for the show.

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

DVD/TV Series Review: The League Season 7

 


The 13-episode seventh and final season of The League aired during the fall and winter of 2015. As was the case with prior seasons, it centered around the group of friends who played in a fantasy football league. In a very large sense, it was almost one of those sitcoms about nothing in particular, just events that occurred in the characters' lives. But, the focus was always on the weekly matchups in the league, and a lot of smack talking.

This season was largely similar to the others, mixing a couple of ongoing storylines (one significant one involving Andre and another involving a bet between Kevin and Jenny) with procedural stories of the week. It continued to be a very raunchy comedy and is definitely not something that will appeal to everyone. Overall, I thought the episodes were weaker in this season than in the prior seasons, but I do think that was partly due to the show generally running out of steam. There was only so much mileage that a show like this would have, and by the time this season rolled around, it was ready to end.

The DVD is a single-disc set. The extras are the same as in prior seasons for those who get the DVDs. Musical numbers, a gag reel, deleted scenes, and an alternate jokes reel (sometimes another gag reel). A decent amount for a 13-episode season of half-hour (mostly) long shows. As has been the case for the prior few seasons, there are no separate broadcast and extended/uncensored versions of the shows. The extended versions are included (for the episodes that had them); otherwise, they are the broadcast versions of the shows.

As I said above, the show is not for everyone. There is a lot of swearing, references to drug use, and sex. In the uncensored episodes from prior seasons, there were some nude scenes, but not much in this season (aside from a couple of butt shots). It is definitely not a kid-friendly show. But, if you like the more adult humor a cable series can get away with, it is definitely a show worth checking out.

Workout Update: 654 Cardio/Lift 4 Hybrid: Day 2

 On Day 2, I did 645 cardio in the morning and Lift 4's back and biceps circuit in the evening. I again used the same amount of weight for the exercises that I ended the last round with. Even so, because the workout switched up from the last two weeks of the program, it was very challenging, and I struggled to finish the 10 reps in the third set. 

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Lethal Weapon Season 3

 


The 15-episode third and final season of Lethal Weapon aired during the 2018/2019 TV season. The show started out with so much promise and ended with mostly a whimper. As many people are likely aware, Clayne Crawford was fired from the show after the second season due, in part, to his behavior on the set and, in part, to his ever-degrading relationship with Damon Waynes. It appears that Crawford was a hothead and Waynes kind of a jackass who did not really even want to do the series in the first place (which makes it kind of surprising that the series was not canceled after season two, and that they decided to go forward with him in the lead role).

The series picks up just after Riggs gets shot at the end of season two, and we find out within the first episode that he died, then there is a six-month time jump and we find out that his brother committed suicide, and that was it for the Riggs storyline (aside from a couple of throwaway lines during the season that mentioned him). The series then focuses on the new Lethal Weapon, an ex-CIA agent named Wesley Cole (played by Sean William Scott), who is new to the department trying to put his past behind him and connect with his 12-year-old daughter.

It is mostly again, a case-of-the-week series, but there are a couple of storylines that play out across multiple episodes. I do think Scott did a great job with the character of Cole. Given that he has mostly played Stifler or slight variations of Stifler his entire career (with a couple of exceptions), this showed he has a range beyond the raunchy comedies. Maggie Lawson (best known for the series Psych) was another good addition to the cast as Cole's ex-wife who is trying to put her past with Cole behind her, yet still, have an amicable relationship with him for the sake of their daughter. One major defection from the cast (aside from Crawford) was Jordana Brewster, who basically left the show after a couple of episodes.

It is a fairly standard MOD set for those who get the blu-ray set. The fifteen episodes are spread over three discs. It has captions and a true "play all" mode that allows you to pick back up where you stop, even in the middle of an episode. There are no extras like commentary tracks, making-of, deleted scenes, or behind-the-scenes material. It did try to keep a similar feel to the prior two seasons, and I think the writers and cast did the best they could, given the mess they had going into the third season. However, it was not the same show without the character of Riggs.

Monday, November 11, 2024

Workout Update: 654 Cardio/Lift 4 Hybrid: Day 1

It has been a while since I posted a workout update. I finished CE and then returned to Lift 4 as my primary program. Although, I will fully admit I kind of half-assed it. So, I am doing it again from day 1, starting with my ending weights. Day 1 was the chest and triceps workout, and it was still very tough. Even using the same amount of weight that I had been using for a couple of weeks, I was struggling by the third set of each round. I am really going to focus on form and tempo this time through, and will try to modify less during the cardio portions. I did the 645 cardio workout in the morning but did the lower-impact version of it since I knew I would have cardio in the evening.

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Prison Break Season 2

 


+++ Warning, this contains spoilers from season 1, but no major season 2 giveaways+++

The 22-episode second season of Prison Break aired during the 2006/2007 TV season. It picks up immediately after the events of the Season 1 finale, with the plane having taken off and the escapees running through the field to get away from the enclosing police. It then shifts the series to a cat-and-mouse game between the authorities, led by a new antagonist, FBI agent Alexander Mahone (played by William Fichtner), and the escaped convicts. There is a ton of cast turnover this season, with some cast members being written out of the show entirely and some having their roles drastically reduced (the best example of which is Stacy Keach). Some roles (such as Agent Kellerman and CO Bellick) are expanded. In the second season, the show has no qualms about killing off characters, no matter how important. Like with the first season, almost every episode ends on a cliffhanger, putting one or more characters in danger. So, being able to watch the entire show in one, two, or three sittings, as opposed to having to wait months to see how everything plays out, is very satisfying.

The Blu-Ray set is a six-disc set. It is much like the first season release, with the one exception that if you use the play all mode and stop in the middle of an episode, it will NOT pick up where you leave off when you restart the player. So, I just watched them episode by episode. The extras include commentary tracks on select episodes (sometimes more than one track per episode) and, on the final disc, about 50 minutes of making-of featurettes.

Overall, the writing and acting in the show continued to be very strong. I think all the actors do a good job making the audience love or hate their characters, as called for, and the writers do well to show that the characters are not all bad, or all, good, and the actors do a great job bringing out the human side in even the worst characters. The overarching conspiracy was given a larger focus this season, but you can tell some things needed to be tweaked because of actor availability or lack thereof in season two. But, it seems that the show was able to follow the overall outline that it has been using pretty well.

If you liked or loved the first season of the show, then chances are, even though the show takes a much different track after the escape, you will probably feel the same way about the second season. Conversely, if you did not like the first season then there is probably nothing in this one that is going to lure you back. It is definitely a serialized show, so you cannot just jump into it without seeing it from the beginning without being pretty lost. Plus, without all the character development, you will definitely not get the full effect. So, for those who did not see the show when it originally aired and are thinking about bingeing the show now, I would say start at season one, and see how you like it. If you do, then season two is definitely worth picking up.

Sunday, November 3, 2024

DVD/TV Series Review: The League Season 6

 


The 13-episode sixth season of The League aired during the fall of 2014.  The show's format continued in the same vein as the similar seasons. The primary storyline in each episode was set around the weekly fantasy football matchups, and intertwined were stories involving the characters' lives.  As in past seasons, there were cameos by NFL players. This year, most player cameos occurred during a hilarious sequence at the combine that kicked off the season. The jokes were very similar to the past seasons, and an argument can certainly be made that this season is when the show started to get stale. I think overall, there were fewer laugh-out-loud moments than in past seasons. Jay Glazer and Darren Sproles were among the celebrity cameos this year, and there was another Rafi and Dirty Randy-centric episode, which, as in past seasons, was co-written by Jason Mantzoukas and Seth Rogan. Brenda Song, Rob Huebel, and Zach Woods also had guest roles this season. 

The DVD set is a two-disc set. The extras are the same as in the past seasons. Those include deleted scenes, Taco Tones (musical numbers that appeared in the episodes), an alternate joke reel, and a gag reel. Also, you do not have to choose between broadcast and extended versions of the episodes. The extended/uncensored episodes are automatically included when available and replace the broadcast versions. So, if you only get DVD sets when there are a lot of extras, you get quite a bit. Ultimately, the show is still funny but less funny than in the early seasons. Most of the jokes are played out at this point and are generally not as clever or edgy as they were. That said, if you have liked the show up to this point, it is still worth watching as long as you realize it may not be as enjoyable as the prior seasons were.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Lethal Weapon Season 2

 


The 22-episode second season of Lethal Weapon aired during the 2017/2018 TV season. Most fans know that the friction (to put it mildly) between Wayans and Crawford led to Crawford's firing and Riggs's writing off of the show. I will not spoil how the season ends, but needless to say, it ends on a very big cliffhanger.

Much of the season is devoted to Rigg's past, specifically at the hands of his abusive father. There are a lot of flashbacks throughout the season. Riggs still has guilt issues over the death of his wife, but the storyline that ended the first season (with Rigg's going to Mexico to get revenge) is resolved pretty much in the first episode. Two of Riggs' friends from his youth are brought into the story this season, one of which becomes a new love interest. I will not go into details to spoil anything for those who have not watched, but it follows the same formula as a weekly procedural that deals with the case of the week, with a larger story arc that spans the course of the season. This season's guest and recurring stars include Michelle Hurd, Ernie Hudson, Joanna "JoJo" Levesque, Adrian Pasdar, Scottie Pippen, and Swoosie Kurtz.

The Blu-Ray set is a four-disc MOD set. They allow for a play-all mode that lets you pick up where you left off, which is better than the "regular" blu-ray sets for the other WB shows. The only extras are deleted scenes for select episodes. There are no commentary tracks on any episodes or behind-the-scenes material, most likely due to the on-set tension that occurred throughout the season. You could tell that by the end of the season, Crawford and Wayans were being kept away from each other as much as possible while filming, and it seemed like every effort was being made to have them together in as few scenes as possible. Even so, they managed to maintain their on-screen chemistry. You could not tell that they were (reportedly) screaming at each other until "action" was called on set.

It is unfortunate that the two leads hated each other because it was a great show, with the two iconic movie characters cast perfectly. Like the first season, it paid homage to the movie franchise and characters without being a carbon copy. Whether it is good or bad going forward into season 3, it will not be the same without the character of Riggs. Chances are it will not survive after season 3, which is a shame because it was really a show that could have had a good 5-6 season (or more) run in it.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Prison Break Season 1

 


Prison Break was the hot new show in primetime when it debuted in 2005. The 22-episode first season aired during the 2005/2006 TV season. It starred Wentworth Miller, Dominic Purcell, Sarah Wayne Callies, Robert Knepper, Amaury Nolasco, Wade Williams, Rockmond Dunbar, and Peter Stormare. Robin Tunney, Muse Watson, and Stacy Keach. The show's premise is that a man named Lincon Burrows (played by Dominic Purcell) is on death row in IL. He is set to be executed within a month for the murder of the Vice President of the United States. He maintains his innocence and insists that he was framed. When he exhausts all his legal options, his brother, Michael (played by Wentworth Miller), a structural engineer at the engineering firm that worked on renovating the prison his brother is in, hatches an elaborate plan to break Lincon out. This involves Michael getting imprisoned, which is basically the opening to the pilot episode. The plan plays out throughout the season and involves many supporting characters to a greater or lesser degree as the season goes on. The show is a serialized drama, where each episode builds on the next. It involves multiple threads and storylines that all end up intertwining. Obviously, the plan to break out does not always go smoothly, and It is often a two-step forward, one-step back scenario, which definitely helps with the tension and drama of the show.

The show is very well written and acted. Miller and Purcell are definitely the leads, but there is a very large ensemble cast, and the show does a great job balancing character storylines and screen time so that there are episodes in which Miller and Purcell take a back seat. The supporting cast in season one includes Sarah Wayne Callies as the prison doctor who is (unknowingly) integral to the plan to break out and Stacey Keach as the prison warden. The show does a great job of giving all the characters, inmates, guards, and the like, gray areas so that they are not all good and not all bad, and the entire cast does a great job portraying that.

The Blu-Ray set is a six-disc set. The A/V quality of the set is outstanding, and it contains a lot of extras. Those include commentary tracks on select episodes (sometimes more than one commentary track for an episode), deleted scenes, and about an hour's worth of behind-the-scenes and making-of material that includes cast interviews and showrunners, how they came up with Michael's tattoos, and a featurette on the history of Joliet prison where the show is filmed. So, if you like watching the bonus material, you get a lot here.  Overall, the show is a good serial drama with great acting and writing. The showrunners had the entire plot planned out, and you get the idea that, even when twists are thrown in, it is not just ad-hoc and done purely for shock value. Given that it is set in a prison, there is a lot of violence as well as themes of racism, sex, abuse, etc., but it does not come off as gratuitous. It is definitely a good, binge-worthy show and worth checking out.

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

DVD/TV Series Review: The League: Season 5

 


The 13-episode fifth season of The League aired during the fall of 2013. By the fifth season, the show had found its format and mostly stuck to it. Most of the episodes are centered around the weekly matchups between the fantasy football league members, along with one or more side stories involving the characters' personal lives. That format is shaken up a bit this year. First, we learn that there is an out-of-town member of the league named Ted, played by Adam Brody. Second, there is a totally off-beat episode featuring Rafi and Dirty Randy written by Jason Mantzoukas and Seth Rogan, in which the primary characters barely appear. Along with Brody and Roga, this season's guest stars include Ali Larter, model Erin Heatherton, NFL players Greg Jennings and Vernon Davis, Aziz Ansari, and Lizzy Caplan,

The DVD set is a two-disc set containing uncensored/extended episodes, deleted and extended scenes, alternate jokes, a gag reel, and the musical numbers (again called Taco Tones) that appeared during the season. Ultimately, the show continues to be a good adult comedy. It is definitely on the raunchier side and has a lot of swearing, sexual content, and drug references. An argument can be made that the show was starting to get stale by the fifth season, and the writers definitely recycled some jokes (although the side stories did remain pretty fresh). While it is not as good as it was in the first couple of seasons, there are some very funny moments and the show is still worth the time to watch. 

Monday, October 28, 2024

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Mr. Robot Season 4

 


+++Warning, this will contain prior season spoilers, but no major giveaways from the final season+++

The 13-episode fourth season of Mr. Robot aired during the fall and winter of 2019. This ended up being the final season of what was, in my opinion, along with shows like The Americans, Breaking Bad, and Better Call Saul were the best cable dramas of the 2010s. It is nearly impossible to discuss the season's overall plot without giving too much away. Much of the season is about fleshing out Zheng's/Whiterose's story, including a backstory, and Elliot's takedown of both Whiterose's plan (which has been referred to throughout the series) and the group of the 1% of the 1% who run the country. Some of the cast is relegated to more of a recurring status this season (e.g., Portia Doubleday) while the roles of other cast members are expanded (e.g., B.D. Wong, who is terrific playing a dual role). The showrunners did an excellent job tying up all the threads and storylines, mainly in the second half of the final episode, making it clear (seemingly anyway) that the bulk of the story was planned out from the beginning.

The Blu-Ray set is a four-disc set. As with the prior season releases, the show looks great in the HD format, with great views of NY, especially the NYC skyline. The extras are pretty thin, which is the only drawback for me, but really only enough to knock the set down half a star. There are deleted/alternate/extended scenes for every episode and a seven-minute gag reel. There are no commentary tracks, behind-the-scenes material, or series retrospective, which is a shame because there is a lot to be said about how the series ended. It would have been nice to hear the thoughts of Sam Esmil, Remi Malik, and the rest of the cast.

Overall, the season and series were wonderful. It continued to be well-written and acted, and the characters were developed until the final episode. The series still earned a hard TV-MA rating, mainly because of the language and violence. Ever since Tyrell's wife was killed off, and his character took a different arc, the sex was toned way down, but there is liberal use of the f-word, so if swearing gets to you, you will not like the show. The series continued to take chances not only in the character development but also in things like having a dialogue-free episode, which I can only remember being done in season four of Buffy The Vampire Slayer. If you liked or loved the prior seasons, you will enjoy the payoff to the series that this season gives you. On the other hand, if you were not a fan of the prior seasons, this will not do anything to make you like it. I definitely recommend it for those who are looking for a great but very different drama, with the proviso that you absolutely have to watch the series from the beginning to be able to follow what is going on.

Sunday, October 27, 2024

DVD/TV Series Review: Grounded For Life Season 1

 


Grounded For Life was an early 2000s sitcom about a young, middle-class, or lower-middle-class family living in Staten Island, NY. It starred Donal Louge, Megyn Price, Lynsey Bartilson, Griffin Frazen, Jake Burbage, Kevin Corrigan, Richard Riehle,  Bret Harrison, and Miriam Flynn. The 15-episode first season aired during the winter and spring of 2001. The show's premise is that a couple named Sean and Claudia Finnerty, played by Donal Logue and Megyn Price, have a kid just out of high school (and eventually two more kids) and are still growing up as they raise a family. They make plenty of mistakes and learn about life and parenting along the way.

Like most family-based sitcoms, pretty much every episode has a self-contained story that involves some conflict that has to be resolved by the end of the episode. The twist that the series puts on it is that the show starts the story halfway to two-thirds of the way into the story, so the conflict or disaster has either happened or is ongoing, then tells, through flashbacks, what led up to the point where the episode starts. It was a fairly unique way of storytelling for sitcoms up to that point and kept it from being a cookie-cutter, carbon copy of what had come before.

The rest of the main cast included Kevin Corrigan as Sean's slacker brother, Richard Riehle as Sean's dad, and, Lynsey Bartilson, Jake Burbage, and Griffin Frazen, as the kids Lilly, Henry, and Jake. All the actors and actresses did a great job and had chances to steal scenes they were in. Lynsey Bartilson did a great job playing a moody teenage girl (with a great shriek when she got mad) who often scared the adults who had the responsibility to punish or lay down the law with her.

The DVD set is a four-disc set. The DVD release is bare-bones, with just the episodes and a handful of extras. The Mill Creek releases (which are not easy to find since they are out of print) are getting harder and harder to find at a reasonable price. They were put out years after the series ended as TV series releases on DVD were getting very scaled back, so you will not get commentaries, captions, or extremely in-depth behind-the-scenes material. That said, the extras included are still more than a lot of the sets are putting out these days (the end of 2019 as I write this), where many DVDs or, in the even rarer case, blu-ray releases just provide the episodes and nothing else. They include character profiles for Sean, Claudia, and Lilly, a chat with the show's creators, a short gag reel, and highlights from the first season episodes. Probably just over a half-hour's worth of material.

Overall, the show was very good, and a bit underrated. It is kind of shocking Fox kept it on the air as long as they did, given the network's reputation for giving shows a quick hook if they do not get great ratings immediately. While I do not think the show was ever a ratings monster, it was well-written and acted, and came across as a lot more "real life" than some family-centered sitcoms do. It also tackled subjects like sex, bullying, and even religion in a humorous yet respectful way, and is definitely worth a look. Just a note that it was filmed partially in front of a live audience and partially without, and does use laugh tracks for the parts that were not filmed live (much like The Big Bang Theory). So, if you are one of those people who absolutely hate laugh tracks in sitcoms, it is something to be aware of.

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Better Call Saul: Season 1

 


Better Call Saul is the series spun off from the iconic crime-drama Breaking Bad. It is centered around the "criminal" lawyer Saul Goodman. It was created by Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould, the co-creators of Breaking Bad. It stars Bob Odenkirk, Rhea Seehorn, Jonathan Banks, Michael Mando, Patrick Fabian, and Michael McKean. The first season's recurring cast includes Kerry Condon, Julie Ann Emery, and Jeremy Shamos. The ten-episode first season aired in the winter and spring of 2015. The first episode starts out after the events of Breaking Bad, where we see that Saul is indeed working as a manager at a Cinnabon (paying off on the line from Breaking Bad when Saul was about to skip town) in Omaha, Nebraska, under the name Gene. He lives a drab life as a fugitive, longing for his old life. Then, the series flashes back to Albuquerque in 2002, before the events of Breaking Bad (the time period most of the series is set in). We see Saul working under his real name, James/Jimmy McGill, as a struggling solo practitioner who is working on public defender cases for $700 a pop, living and working out of a storage room in a nail salon, trying to drum up clients, and being a caregiver for his brother, Chuck (played by McKean) who was a named partner in one of the largest firms in Albuquerque (HHM) but is not a shut-in because of a hypersensitivity to electromagnetic fields. Chuck has disconnected all the electricity from his house using a lantern and gas stove, and relying on Jimmy to fill a cooler with food and ice. Jimmy's best and seemingly only friend is an associate at HHM named Kim, and Mike Ehrmantraut (played by Banks, reprising his role from Breaking Bad) is working as a toll booth operator at the courthouse. Like Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul is mostly a serial that slowly tells the story of how Jimmy transforms into Saul Goodman. It also has some story-of-the-week procedural elements that are usually secondary to the serial arcs.

The Blu-Ray set is a three-disc set, with the episodes and the bonus content spread across the three discs. The set has a lot of bonus material, including deleted scenes, a gag reel, a conversation between Odenkirk and McKean about their respective careers and their characters on the show, and some behind-the-scenes material. Each episode has a commentary track featuring Gilligan and/or Gould, the writer of the episode, the director and/or a producer, and one or more cast members. The seventh episode has a second commentary track just featuring Julie Ann Emery and Jeremy Shamos in character as their characters, Betsy and Craig Kettleman hilariously reacting to the episode. The episodes can be watched in a "play all" mode or from their own episode pages (which is where the commentary tracks and deleted scenes are accessed). You can stop the disc and pick up where you left off when you resume playing, even when watching the bonus material.

The series is a wonderful spin-off of Breaking Bad. It is well-written and very well-acted. Throughout the season, we see Jimmy transform from a small-time con artist, turning his life around to secretly get a law degree, pass the bar exam, become a very good lawyer, and sowing the seeds of who he would become as Saul Goodman. Odenkirk is fantastic as the series lead, but all the actors are wonderful. While we know the fates of some of the characters (and there are more than just Banks and Odenkirk who reprise their roles from Breaking Bad), the show pulls off the balance of setting up what will come later with telling its own story and standing on its own. Like the parent series, it is very much an adult drama. There is a lot of swearing, violence, and a bit of sexual content. The bonus material contains spoilers, so if you did not watch the series when it aired, you want to watch the episodes before you listen to the commentaries or watch the behind-the-scenes material. Ultimately, the show is an excellent mix of legal, crime, and character-driven drama with some humor. You do not need to have seen Breaking Bad to get what is going on in Better Call Saul, but some things will make more sense if you have. If you have watched Breaking Bad, this is a must-watch. Even if you have never seen a single episode of Breaking Bad, however, this is absolutely worth your time to watch.

Friday, October 25, 2024

DVD/TV Series Review: The League Season 4

 


The 13-episode fourth season of The League aired during the fall and early winter of 2012. Chances are, anyone reading a review of the fourth season of the series will know what it is about, so I will not spend much time on the substance of the storylines. The season follows a similar format to the first few seasons, but there are more callbacks to earlier episodes, jokes, etc., in this season than in the prior seasons. But, for the most part, it is all about the group's weekly matchups and the trash-talking that went along. There are many more cameos by NFL players, including in the season premiere, which was filmed at the Cowboy's training camp. There are also a couple of hilarious episodes set around Jenny and Kevin's new baby.

The DVD set is a two-disc set. The extras are similar to those included in the prior seasons' DVD releases. A gag reel, an alternate jokes reel, deleted scenes, and Taco Tones (mostly replays of the musical numbers). There is no longer an extended episodes option on the episodes menu. The DVDs have uncensored versions of the episodes, meaning some f-bombs and nudity are mixed in. So, not that the show was a good one for young kids to watch anyway, but even less so since you cannot play the broadcast versions vs. the uncut versions.

Overall, the series remains very funny. The writing and acting are still top-notch, and for a show that is centered around fantasy football, it is enjoyable for those who do not play fantasy football, or even like football all that much. Although, I do think it helps to do both. It is definitely one of the better adult sitcoms of the recent past.

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Blu-Ray/Movie Collection Review: The Karate Kid I & II (Collector's Edition)

 


This is a collector edition Blu-Ray featuring the first two Karate Kid movies starring Ralph Macchi and Pat Morita, 1984's The Karate Kid and the 1986 sequel, The Karate Kid Part II. The first movie was an adaptation of the proverbial 98lb weakling being bullied, said weakling being played by Ralph Macchio. He plays Daniel Larusso, who is forced to move from NJ to CA with his mother when she gets a new job. They live in a run-down apartment with an odd janitor (played by Pat Morita) from Okinawa named Mr. Miyagi. As Daniel starts a new school, he tries to win the affection of Elisabeth Shue's character Ali, whose ex-boyfriend Johnny ( played by William Zabka) is not over her and takes to beating the snot out of Daniel regularly. Daniel checks out the local karate Dojo, the Cobra Kai Dojo, only to discover that Johnny is the head student there. It is run by a crazy ex-military vet (played by Martin Kove) who encourages bullying behavior. When the Cobra Kai kids jump Daniel outside the apartment complex, Miyagi saves him and starts training him in Karate.

The first movie has many great themes, such as family, friendship, bullying, self-defense, etc., that still hold up 30-plus years later, even if the cheesy music montages and over-acting that were the hallmarks of 1980s movies have long since gone out of style.

The second movie, other than the first few minutes, takes place six months after the events of the first movie. In it, Daniel and Miyagi travel to Okinawa when Miyagi gets word that his father is near death. When they arrive, they are caught up in a decades-old honor feud and grudge that Miyagi's ex-best friend Sato (played by Danny Kamekona) still has for him. While there, Daniel falls in love with a local woman named Kumiko (played by Tamlyn Tomita), the niece of Miyagi's old love interest, Yikie (played by Nobu McCarthy). Sato's nephew, Chozen (played by Yuji Okumoto), feels disrespected by Daniel and the two battle throughout the movie, culminating in a very good fight at the end of the movie.

I will not give away more about either movie in case anyone reading this has not seen either one. These are definitely the two best movies of the four that were made. A case can be made for the argument that Part II is as good or better than the original. However, I think most people believe the original movie is the best. 

The Blu-Ray set is a two-disc set, with one disc for each movie. The blu-ray transfers are okay for both movies, but not a total HD restoration. I don't think one was necessarily needed for these movies, but it would have been a nice touch. The first movie has the most extras. Each one has a "Blu-Pop" version of the movie in which pop-ups with information about the movie appear throughout the movie (kind of like the old pop-up video show on VH1 for those old enough to remember that). The first movie has a two-part making-of feature of about 45 minutes combined and a cast and crew commentary track. The second movie just has the Blu-Pop version and a short making-of featurette.

Overall, the movies are good and hold up relatively well. There are certainly parts of each movie that are dated 30+ years down the line, but they are generally good movies with good messages and will definitely evoke a nostalgic feeling in those of us who were kids in the 1980s.

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

DVD/TV Series Review: The League Season 3

 


The 13-episode third season of The League aired during the fall and winter of 2011. This is the season where the show really hit its stride. It did not deviate (much) from the format of the prior seasons, although it did focus more on what I would call the "side" stories that were going on with the various characters unrelated to the fantasy football stuff. And, the show did more callbacks to events that occurred in earlier episodes, as opposed to having each episode be stand-alone. All of the series regulars returned for the third season. There were many notable guest stars during the season, including Jeff Goldblum as Ruxin's dad, Sarah Silverman as Andre's sister, Eliza Dushku as a Krav Maga instructor in the class Kevin is taking, Ray Liotta as Ruxin's boss, as well as a few NFL players.

The DVD set is a two-disc set. As with the prior seasons' DVD releases, you have the option of playing all the episodes as they aired or going into the "episodes" portion of the menu and playing the extended versions of the episodes. The extras include deleted scenes, alternate jokes, a gag reel, and "Taco Tones" with the various musical numbers from the season.

Overall, the show is very funny if you like the brand of humor and does not take itself too seriously. You do not have to be a football fan or play fantasy football to enjoy the show, but I think it helps to understand some of the jokes if you at least have a passing familiarity with the NFL. The actors seem to all get along with each other, which really helps in an ensemble show like this, and they have fun with the characters. It is well written and acted and is definitely worth checking out.

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Mr. Robot: Season 3

 


+++Warning, this has spoilers from seasons 1 and 2, but no major season 3 giveaways+++

The 10-episode third season of Mr. Robot aired during the fall and early winter of 2017. This season brings the show back into the "real world" after spending much of season 2 in Elliot's head while he was in prison. It is still about the fallout of the 5/9 hack of E Corp. and setting up a much more massive phase-two attack that was hinted at last season. This season reveals more about the Dark Army and the various operatives they have working for them. It also reveals what Wellick did during season 2, for which he was mostly absent. I will not go into too much of what happens this season because it is hard to do so without giving too much away. I will say that the various characters, even the "good" ones, continue to be morally ambiguous (at best). And some even take a turn for the worse.

The Blu-Ray set is a three-disc set. The extras are okay but not extensive. There are deleted scenes for some episodes, a gag reel, and a couple of behind-the-scenes featurettes. It is definitely not a show that will appeal to everyone. But, if you liked the first couple of seasons (especially season 1), you will probably like this. The blu-rays have unedited episodes (which basically means the f-word is not bleeped out as it is when it airs on TV), and there is violence, sex, and drug use. And, even though the show is set in the past, it does manage to take a few shots at t***p, whom, if you follow the show's creator on Twitter, you know he despises. So, if any of that would turn you off to a show, you probably want to skip this. For everyone else, it is well written and acted, even it is a bit (and sometimes more than a bit) weird. Definitely worth checking out.

Monday, October 21, 2024

DVD/TV Series Review: The Gifted Season 2

 


++++Warning, this contains season 1 spoilers, but no major season 2 giveaways++++

The 16-episode second season of The Gifted aired during the 2018/2019 TV season. It ended up being the series' final season, as it was canceled without getting a full season run. It is a bittersweet end because the season was very good, and the writers were clearly setting up a third season that would have taken the show in a different direction, but the show was canceled after the season aired. However, it provided a decent ending to the initial storyline that was the focus of season one.

This season can best be summed up by mutants vs. mutants vs. humans. One team of mutants consisted of the inner circle, formed after Lorna and Andy decided to go with the triplets and split from the mutant underground. Both groups faced a threat from a group of anti-mutant humans, eventually led by Jace after his dismissal from sentinel services, who are basically a group of vigilantes who hunt down mutants. Peter Gallagher (of The OC and Covert Affairs) comes in part-way through the season to play an anti-mutant television personality who stirs up trouble. In large part, the entire season is a metaphor for today's political climate.

Every episode provides a back story for each main character told through flashbacks. It is the main vehicle for character development this season. I will not give too much of the story away, but the crux of the season is about stopping an all-out war between mutants and humans.

The DVD set is a four-disc set. It is a basic MOD set with no extras of any kind and no subtitles. The set has 16 episodes, which can be played individually or in a play-all mode. So, the only reason to get this is if you bought season one on DVD and want it to have both seasons. Otherwise, there is no benefit that you will get with the DVDs versus streaming the show.

Sunday, October 20, 2024

Book Review: Foreign Agent (Scot Harvath Series # 15)

 


Foreign Agent, published in 2016, is the 15th novel in Brad Thor's series of action-thrillers centered around Scot Harvath. The plotline involves a series of attacks against Americans in the Middle East who were planning to move against the social media director of ISIS. It is discovered that the attacks were planned and bankrolled by the Russians, and Harvath is sent to Syria to take out those responsible. The secondary plotline involves a mole inside the US government working for the Russians, who fed them the information that led to the attacks. 

The hardcover version of the book is moderately long, coming in at just over 330 pages. It reads like the other books in the series, so it will read as quickly or as slowly as the others have. You do not need to have read the prior books to understand the plot of this one. While Thor does refer to events in the prior novels occasionally, the series' books mostly have standalone storylines. The thing you lose by not reading the previous books is the character development of the established characters. Thor relies on the earlier novels to provide the backstories of the established characters and only fleshes out the backgrounds of new characters. There are a handful of new characters in this book, some of who may appear in later novels and others who probably will not. Ultimately, the book is a well-written action thriller. This one is worth reading if you are a fan of the genre (and the spy novel genre) and/or Thor's prior novels.