Night Channels has the deepest cult and counterculture cuts. Experimental and industrial music, cult film and television, cryptids, cats, raccoons and toads, anti-politics, existential thoughts, occult art, gothic literature, 420 memes, and much more. Br
Often referred to as social media for movies, one can also save costs when they opt for streaming as an entertaining corridor. This means money is spent on fewer big activities. So, cable television and satellite services, and renting movies in person, are no longer necessary. Although these ...
Law and TelevisionLaw and LiteratureLaw and FilmAs early as the seventeenth century, authors, particularly satirists, used the travel essay as a means to examine and critique societies, including their own. If an artist's government discouraged or banned political or social critique, he was ...
Jennifer Reeder is back with another Shudder original, and her latest looks to be every bit the probing, genre-bending and unapologetically idiosyncratic work the “Knives and Skin” and “Signature Move” filmmaker is known for. Reeder’s bold films always splash through me like a glass of so...
Ever wonder if a movie, television show, video game, etc. has any special scenes during or after the credits (aka Stinger, Egg, Credit Cookie, etc.)? Wonder no more, we're here to help! Feel free to contact us with submissions, questions or comments using this contact form, or via ...
Chilean-American actor Pedro Pascal is best known for his magnetic performances in television series such as Game of Thrones, Narcos, and The Last of Us. A versatile performer, Pascal's charisma has seen him excel in an array of roles, from suave spy to villainous rogue. He also garnered...
In a comedy that redefines the genre, this ambitious young television reporter becomes unexpectedly pregnant after a one-night stand and decides to keep the baby, prompting her to reevaluate her career goals and relationships. As she navigates her changing body and hormones, she bonds ...
Posted in 1960s, BBC, book, Fred Hoyle, television drama and tagged Azaran, Barry Linehan, Claude Farell, David Saire, Earl Cameron, Fred Hoyle, Intel, John Elliot, John Knight, Mary Crozier, Mary Morris, Mogul, Peter Halliday, science fiction on television, Susan Hampshire, the Andromeda ...
people listening in, an audience tuned in to a radio or a television. As I’d watched song after song on my longlist and then my shortlist, I’d noticed that several songs weren’t just played on radios, but on record players, on gramophones. That had to be a separate list, I dec...
This is a great metaphor for the societal evolution of fandom and manhood over the last twenty years. Update: neither is headed in the right direction. While episode 3 of the series finally started to behave like premium television, the entire enterprise is stillfan servicein the extreme. Now...