She has totally embraced the aging look and a lot of my wife's peers, those in the early 50's, have done the same.
I think she posed nude, while covering up the essentials, in a recent magazine.
ANd yes, she was great in The Bear. I didn't recognize her at first. That episode followed by Forks is among the greatest TV 90 minutes in history.
Slightly related.... I heard Roger Daltrey on a podcast say that US Servicemen stationed in England, bringing over records like Elvis and Chuck Berry and those guys, along with the old timer Blues legends feeling safer in Europe than in the South in the US contributed to the heavy influence of music during that time period in that location.
Throw in the radio consolidation has made things pretty stale commercially. Do people under 30 listen to the radio?
As a 10 year old I convinced my mom to take me to see that at Southland Mall because I knew Eddie as Buckwheat from SNL. The language didn't bother her because my dad cussed a lot but she didn't like the nudity. Of course I did and Jamie Lee Curtis will forever hold a special place for me.
I like how they leave LCA and are at the spot where Joe Louis Arena was.
I want to go back and watch that sequence to see if Eddie was really there or if they did some cool editing. From what I heard at the time, he was only here to shoot the opening scenes where he was driving around. Did they use covering shots of the game but the up close shots of them in the seats in a studio or somewhere else?
ARound 2006 or 2007, flipping through the channels, Trading Places was on, the R rated version. My son, 6 or 7 at the time, wanted to watch. I said "not this one..." He confidently says "But it's got Eddie Murphy, he does kid movies". And in his persepctive, he was right. So for a generation of people, those under 30?, Eddie Murphy is primarily Donkey and Nutty Professor and all of that.
Javy made some plays last night early on that I'm not sure another person we'd have put out there would have made. In a 1-0 game that matters.
Javy giveth and taketh.
I saw a tweet that talked about how Gen X identifies so much with Boomers in one sense. We were the latchkey generation, children of divorce, etc. So we were home alone a lot. We had 3-4 TV channels. Reruns were huge. So we grew up watching the 50s and 60s on TV, at least how they represented it, but we also saw the modern 70s and 80s. To us women and moms were both June Cleaver and Rhoda. Later generations didn't have that cultural link to the one above them like we did.
Seinfeld is the bookend to the time I dated my now wife. We started dating not long after it started airing consistently and it ended a week before our wedding. I don’t know what it means other than kind of representing my 20s slacker years.
I did see it said that he has something that I won't dare pronounce or spell, but it's a condition where the feet go numb. That's why his gait is the way it is. My wife says it's not even age related. Someone who is 35 can get it. While I can't say it's common, it's something she as a therapist is very familiar with and sees quite often in patients.
I don’t think the teams can do anything until Ballys ceases doing them. But as I said earlier I do have a friend in the industry, a contractor, who said there is buzz.
But see… I think voters are actually thinking about policy but it’s our overlords in the media who think they still have the power to dictate what people think. And when you push back on them they expose themselves as knowing their livelihood is threatened. But rank and file voters don’t really care about it and know Biden is old and will take the risk. It’s the pundits who have a problem. They need ratings and podcast hits and clicks.
That’s a good question. Laziness and just going with their echo chamber. I think it’s an element of a group of people realizing their time has passed and they get bitter about it. I saw a meme that explained that older people often bash the tastes of younger people as a reaction to understanding that what’s hip and popular and all of that is not about them anymore. The “grumpy old man” syndrome. I think that’s true with political punditry. They are used to setting the narrative and they can’t do that anymore. I will say it until I am blue in the face. They are not relevant anymore.