Um... you have noticed that it is a bit of Canadian highway, right...
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The thought that somebody would even consider making a Def Leppard biopic itself seems pretty funny to me.
I guess they were pretty huge in the US.
Originally posted by ad hoc View PostSeinfeld more or less managed it, but other shows have ended up making their main arseholes at least arseholes with a soupcon of humanity.Last edited by Jah Womble; 15-09-2020, 09:18.
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Originally posted by Jah Womble View PostThe thought that somebody would even consider making a Def Leppard biopic itself seems pretty funny to me.
I guess they were pretty huge in the US.
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Each to his own, I guess. The last line of this para from that link made me smile:
"An exasperated Joe Elliott is discussing, and wearily denying for the umpteenth time, the existence of what he calls in a mock-horror-flick voice “the Curse of the Leppards,” the apparent pox of bad luck ‘n’ trouble that has dogged his band for nearly 10 years. The evidence is grimly convincing – drummer Rick Allen left with only one arm after an auto accident on New Year’s Eve, 1984; guitarist Steve Clark found dead in his London home on January 8th, 1991, from a fatal mixture of alcohol and drugs.
There have been other, less-publicized calamities, as well. Founding guitarist Pete Willis was fired for alcoholism during the sessions for the group’s 1983 breakthrough album, Pyromania. The band’s producer, Robert John “Mutt” Lange, was seriously injured in a car accident during the making of the star-crossed follow-up record, Hysteria, and Elliott himself was laid up with a nasty case of the mumps during the vocal overdub stage."
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Originally posted by Amor de Cosmos View Post
The "white telephone" bit is because a certain kind of film from that era took place among the very wealthy who lived in mansions or hotels that almost always featured white telephones. Many were comedies, though not all feature the fast paced dialogue that defines screwball comedy.
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Originally posted by pebblethefish View Post
Sorry to go back a few pages, but when I read "white telephone comedies" I assumed they were about vomit. Does no one else use "talking to god on the big white telephone" as a euphemism for throwing up?
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Originally posted by Jah Womble View PostEach to his own, I guess. The last line of this para from that link made me smile:
"An exasperated Joe Elliott is discussing, and wearily denying for the umpteenth time, the existence of what he calls in a mock-horror-flick voice “the Curse of the Leppards,” the apparent pox of bad luck ‘n’ trouble that has dogged his band for nearly 10 years. The evidence is grimly convincing – drummer Rick Allen left with only one arm after an auto accident on New Year’s Eve, 1984; guitarist Steve Clark found dead in his London home on January 8th, 1991, from a fatal mixture of alcohol and drugs.
There have been other, less-publicized calamities, as well. Founding guitarist Pete Willis was fired for alcoholism during the sessions for the group’s 1983 breakthrough album, Pyromania. The band’s producer, Robert John “Mutt” Lange, was seriously injured in a car accident during the making of the star-crossed follow-up record, Hysteria, and Elliott himself was laid up with a nasty case of the mumps during the vocal overdub stage."
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Originally posted by ad hoc View Post
Yes, I'm not sure how long you can get away with having a totally unsympathetic arsehole character. Seinfeld more or less managed it, but other shows have ended up making their main arseholes at least arseholes with a soupcon of humanity. BBT has both Sheldon and Howard who are both really appalling human beings, but it couldn't have had the longevity it did if it had not been for the writers adding a touch of humanity to them.
(mind you it's really only the barest touch, especially in the case of Howard)
Sheldon also improves greatly, but even to the very end, the writers couldn't resist bringing out his inconsiderate-dick side, not only because it sets up jokes, but because it gives them a chance for him to realize what a dick he was being, to set up the character arc. But it was on for 12 years. The arc should have been done by then. Still, I cried a bit in the last scenes. There are many reasons for that, though.
In that way Young Sheldon is a better show. Because it's a single-camera/not-live show, it doesn't have to have a joke every five seconds and, being a prequel, it knows where it's going so the arc, such as it is, is laid out already. They don't have to repeat it over and over not knowing when or how the show will end.
The idea of his character is that he's got an eidetic memory and an IQ of about 180 but cannot really read social cues or understand how other people experience the world. He also has traits of OCD - so, more or less, what was once called Asbergers. I'm not sure how realistic that is, but based my experience with a few people I have met in real life, it's not completely far fetched. He's actually less of an asshole than some of the people I've met IRL who kind of resemble him because at least Sheldon seems to want to get along with people and, fortunately, he's had a lot of people in his life who are patiently trying to help him do that.
And I think there's actually a lot to be said for somebody who cares about all kinds of stuff like which seat is the best in the room and having a favorite prime number and all of that. It shows they are paying attention to everything, even if they don't understand a lot of it. If we all did a bit more of that, we'd probably get more out of life. Of course, trying to impose your top five list of favorite cereals or lectures on what Hulk would be like if he were made of sponge is tiresome.
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Originally posted by Jah Womble View PostI know it - I don't use it that often. 'Calling God on the great white telephone' was a popular expression when I was in the sixth form (ie, an absolute lifetime ago).
(That, and 'calling for Hughie'.)
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Originally posted by Various Artist View PostMy brother's oddly descriptive variant on it is "Shouting into the porcelain telephone", which I always feel has a certain je ne sais quoi.
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I was massively into Def Leppard in about 1989. I must have listened to Hysteria a thousand times or so. I even read a book about the band. It was before Steve Clarke died because I remember hearing that news and being really shocked by it, but I was listening to Metallica on repeat by then.
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