tv
Best geek tv online, on air, and in media.
If Sex in the city, than This is Us
I believe what we all really need at this time, in 2021, is more shows on human connection. It is truly soothing to watch people engage in social interactions on the big screen. I can speak for myself when I say watching people interact with each other in a pre-covid era brings a lot of joy to my heart. Simply to see people engaging less than 6 feet apart with complete strangers is refreshing. What a crazy year this has been and, it’s safe to say, we all feel a little bit lonely in 2021. These difficult times remind us all that family and friends is what matters most. Which is why I’ve been bringing back classics filled with friendly banter and humour to get my family through. From Friends, Two and half men, Weeds, Full House and Sex in the city. All these shows bring a lot of happiness in our household. I truly believe that if you enjoyed Sex in the city, then you should also binge watch This is us created by Don Folgelman in 2016.
By Jessica Bertrand5 years ago in Geeks
It took me 2 days to finish Bridgerton on Netflix...
I love period time shows. Some of my favorites are Versailles, The Crown, The Tudors, Downtown Abby, The Last Kingdom, and Sherlock. I have other favorites like Gilmore Girls, The Originals, Blacklist, Sabrina, Criminal Minds, The Magicians, and Virgin River, I am embarrassed to say, that these are my usual fall backs. I watch them while getting ready in the morning, cooking dinner, walking my laps around the living room- many I have seen two or three times. My youngest still knows to get the chocolate ready when I hit that final episode of Gilmore Girls and Rory tells Lorelai that she is pregnant- and then NOTHING! No follow on! Does she get back with Logan? Does she finally get together with Jess? Do Lorelai and Luke live happily ever after? Years later, this show still bothers me....can I please get some closure?!?!?!?
By Rose Loren Geer-Robbins5 years ago in Geeks
The Evolution of Telling a Story in Film & TV
Filmmaking and Storytelling is a work of art. As an author and a child at heart, I’ve always loved any marvelous storytelling. The essence of a good story is marvelous storytelling. Making the fantastical come to life. In novels, this is done through words, both descriptive and telling. In Film and TV, the basis of keeping people to continue watching a show is epic storytelling. Now a day’s films are often done in trilogies, and in order for those movies to work, it needs to have a story that people want to continue to watch.
By InkGalaxies~5 years ago in Geeks
Top 5 anticipated new Netflix series coming in March and April
We all love Netflix as it keeps on bringing us new series and movies and never let us hanging about what to watch next. So if you don't know what to watch in the following 2 months here are top 5 anticipated new Netflix series coming in March and April.
By Sarthak Aggarwal 5 years ago in Geeks
The X-Files/Goonies Mash-Up
When a show I love ends, sometimes it legitimately feels a little sad. You've watched the characters grow and change, and you likely relate to at least one or two of them. And then, just like that, they're gone. And you're looking for something to fill the void those characters left behind. That's what happened to me when X-Files was taken off the air.
By Katie Irving5 years ago in Geeks
I am a We: The Wachowskis take us from the Matrix to Sense8
In 1999, The Matrix blew the minds of audiences worldwide with its cyberpunk dystopian story of a computer hacker discovering the world he lived in was a simulated reality. From its revolutionary storytelling, incredible new age fighting choreography, and its popularization of the slow-motion tactic to enhance a scene, this film sealed itself into every science fiction lover's heart and became a phenomenon and a staple of the genre.
By yanina maysonet5 years ago in Geeks
Vampires, Weres, and Magic
If you're a lover of the supernatural, then look no further; your ultimate guide to fantastic TV and movies starts here. While my love of the fantasy genre started the day that I cracked open The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis when I was nine years old, it has since been fueled by a variety of television shows and movies. If, like me, you're obsessed with the idea of other worlds and sub-human species, then join me in this have-to-watch listing.
By Annie Fournier5 years ago in Geeks
Up Next for Review
I watch Gilmore Girls with my daughter the whole time she was growing up. It was a heartwarming, clean cut, all American, family drama with a touch of humor. The show was about how Lorelai Gilmore got pregnant at 16 and a year after the baby was born took her daughter and left home. They moved to Stars Hollow, Connecticut were she started out working as a maid for the Independence Inn and moved up to the executive manager. The first season focused on her daughter Rory getting into Chilton a very fancy and expensive private school. To get the money Lorelai had to make a deal with her mother for the money to pay the tuition Friday night meals with both her and Rory. Lorelai comes from a very well off family and she ran from the money and her parents both. It also focused on Rory and how the rich kids treated her because although her grandparents had money she did not and was there for not raise by their standers. Also the show focused on Lorelai and her love life or lack there of. There were many town folk who leaned a hand to the shows story and they all entertained us. By the end of the seventh season Rory has graduated from Yale and is starting a new job. Lorelai owns her own hotel but still has not found love but seems to be happy. People have loved this show so much that there was a made for TV movie call Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life. Now people want another one.
By Lynn Roldan5 years ago in Geeks
What is Avatar: The Last Airbender Really Based On?
The Difference in Identity and Geography in the Avatar Universe Growing up, in an American household within an American neighborhood (one that was also overwhelmingly white), I wasn’t really exposed to the intricacies and specifications of identity and race within media. It wasn’t something I often thought about, but it also meant that going into everything I watched, I would imagine them as if they were white. It wasn’t like an eight-year-old to go into too much depth with the shows he watched anyways, so it meant there wasn’t a lot of researching going on to dupe what I had begun to think. It also meant that no one else I had known as an eight-year-old really thought much about it either. We all kept our relation and view on the show quiet in all matters except enjoying it as it was. It was an unbiased view, but it still faltered on its own; as I wasn’t as educated enough as I am now to understand that not everyone I see in animated media is a white person.
By Tyler Barry5 years ago in Geeks
Life after The Office
Is a life without The Office really a life at all? When NBC took it's crown jewel off of Netflix it kind of felt like they had stolen something near and dear from me, and if I wanted it back, there was a 4.99/month ransom to be paid. We made the difficult decision, as a family, to carry on without our favorite show.
By Zachary Dean5 years ago in Geeks








