VH1’s The 20 – 11/21/15

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Each week, I check out VH1′s The 20 (formerly Top 20 countdown), and then I rearrange the songs based on my estimation of their quality.

Original Version
1. Shawn Mendes – “Stitches”
2. Drake – “Hotline Bling”
3. Taylor Swift – “Wildest Dreams”
4. Ellie Goulding – “On My Mind”
5. Elle King – “Ex’s & Oh’s”
6. The Weeknd – “The Hills”
7. X Ambassadors – “Renegades”
8. Alessia Cara – “Here”
9. Selena Gomez – “Same Old Love”
10. One Direction – “Drag Me Down”
11. Justin Bieber – “What Do You Mean?”
12. Meghan Trainor ft. John Legend – “Like I’m Gonna Lose You”
13. Demi Lovato – “Confident”
14. Adele – “Hello”
15. Pentatonix – “Can’t Sleep Love”
16. Calvin Harris & Disciples – “How Deep Is Your Love”
17. Conrad Sewell – “Hold Me Up”
18. DNCE – “Cake by the Ocean”
19. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis ft. Eric Nally, Melle Mel, Kool Moe Dee, and Grandmaster Caz – “Downtown”
20. Gwen Stefani – “Used to Love You”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. The Hills
2. Hello
3. Same Old Love
4. Downtown
5. Ex’s & Oh’s
6. Renegades
7. Hold Me Up
8. Confident
9. Here
10. On My Mind
11. What Do You Mean?
12. Hotline Bling
13. Used to Love You
14. Drag Me Down
15. Cake by the Ocean
16. Wildest Dreams
17. How Deep is Your Love
18. Can’t Sleep Love
19. Stitches
20. Like I’m Gonna Lose You

The Middle 7.8 – “Thanksgiving VII”

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Mike can do something over there while Brick reads. http://www.starpulse.com/news/index.php/2015/11/19/the-middle-season-7-episode-8-recap-th

The Muppets 1.8 – “Too Hot to Handler”

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“Mm. Boy toy.” http://www.starpulse.com/news/index.php/2015/11/18/the-muppets-season-1-episode-8-recap-c

SNL November 14, 2015 Recap: Elizabeth Banks/Disclosure

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SNL: Disclosure, Elizabeth Banks, Leslie Jones, Sam Smith, Lorde (CREDIT: YouTube Screenshot)

This review was originally posted on Starpulse in November 2015.

“SNL” often responds to its most controversial outings in subsequent episodes, but the Donald Trump spectacle is nary mentioned at all a week later, save for a quick hit on Weekend Update. And this is for the best, because Elizabeth Banks shall not be overshadowed. She has been a deserving host for at least a decade, and in her debut, she puts on a showcase monologue, and then she fades into the ensemble for an episode that is all over the place. Meanwhile, musical guest Disclosure makes it a party by inviting their friends Lorde and Sam Smith.

In lieu of an opening sketch, “SNL” acknowledged the terrorist attack at Paris’ Bataclan Concert Hall with Cecily Strong stating a message of solidarity in both English and French.

Elizabeth Banks’ Monologue (BEST OF THE NIGHT) – “Catching the directing bug” is a simplistic premise, and musical monologues are overdone, but Elizabeth Banks uses the setup to show off her personality – the wisest direction to go when making your “SNL” hosting debut. The flourishes that she adds by taking the reins away from Don Roy King are just weird and edgy enough to start this episode off with some individuality. She is a lady in control, unafraid to demand diversity and make hacky tricks like green screen and star wipes work like gangbusters. B+

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What Won TV? – November 8-November 14, 2015

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In this feature, I look back at each day of the past week and determine what shows “won TV” for the night. That is, I consider every episode of television I watched that aired on a particular day and declare which was the best.

NathanForYouAgain

Sunday – Bob’s Burgers
Monday – Fargo
Tuesday – Fresh Off the Boat
Wednesday – Arrow
Thursday – Nathan for You, with the new theatrical sensation
Friday – Jeopardy!
Saturday – Saturday Night Live, on which (Somebody’s got to say it!) Bruce Chandling spilled his guts yet again

VH1’s The 20 – 11/14/15

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Each week, I check out VH1′s The 20 (formerly Top 20 countdown), and then I rearrange the songs based on my estimation of their quality.

Original Version
1. Shawn Mendes – “Stitches”
2. Taylor Swift – “Wildest Dreams”
3. The Weeknd – “The Hills”
4. Drake – “Hotline Bling”
5. One Direction – “Drag Me Down”
6. Elle King – “Ex’s & Oh’s”
7. Justin Bieber – “What Do You Mean?”
8. X Ambassadors – “Renegades”
9. Ellie Goulding – “On My Mind”
10. Alessia Cara – “Here”
11. Selena Gomez – “Same Old Love”
12. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis ft. Eric Nally, Melle Mel, Kool Moe Dee, and Grandmaster Caz – “Downtown”
13. R. City ft. Adam Levine – “Locked Away”
14. Calvin Harris & Disciples – “How Deep Is Your Love”
15. Meghan Trainor ft. John Legend – “Like I’m Gonna Lose You”
16. Demi Lovato – “Confident”
17. Adele – “Hello”
18. Hailee Steinfeld – “Love Myself”
19. Pentatonix – “Can’t Sleep Love”
20. Conrad Sewell – “Hold Me Up”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. The Hills
2. Hello
3. Same Old Love
4. Downtown
5. Ex’s & Oh’s
6. Renegades
7. Confident
8. Hold Me Up
9. Here
10. On My Mind
11. What Do You Mean?
12. Hotline Bling
13. Drag Me Down
14. Wildest Dreams
15. Love Myself
16. How Deep is Your Love
17. Can’t Sleep Love
18. Stitches
19. Like I’m Gonna Lose You
20. Locked Away

The Middle 7.7: “Homecoming II: The Tailgate”

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Mike does remember 2015. http://www.starpulse.com/news/index.php/2015/11/12/the-middle-season-7-episode-7-recap-th

The Muppets 1.7: “Pig’s in a Blackout”

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There are no jeggings. http://www.starpulse.com/news/index.php/2015/11/11/the-muppets-season-1-episode-7-recap-e

This Is a Movie Review: Steve Jobs

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Steve-Jobs2015

The most quixotic quest in Steve Jobs does not come courtesy of the title character, but of his Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, who shows up at each of the three product launches that this film covers over 14 years to request acknowledgement for the team that worked on the Apple II computer, whose contributions Jobs keep insisting are irrelevant to the direction of the future. It is highly unlikely that the real Woz actually kept this up, or that all the other same set of people in his life kept showing up 5 minutes before Jobs was about to take the stage. That improbability is part and parcel of the artfulness that visionary creators like Aaron Sorkin and Danny Boyle always strive to convey. In the case of Steve Jobs, that structure is not just style, which is especially evident in the Seth Rogen-portrayed version of Woz’s Sisyphean streak.

The question of whether or not Jobs will express gratitude to accomplishments that are (supposedly) irrelevant to his promises is at the heart of whether or not great figures with personal shortcomings are necessarily wired that way. Michael Fassbender’s performance lends itself to either interpretation: perhaps Jobs would not have been the influencer he was if he had made more interpersonal compromises, or maybe he would have accomplished even more. What is undoubtedly true is that he saw the world like no else did, and it will take someone with a similarly unprecedented mind to solve the brilliant/decent binary-or-not conundrum.

This Is a (Quickie) Movie Review: Bridge of Spies

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Bridge-of-Spies

Bridge of Spies sneaks up on you. The 20th century conflict between the Americans and the Soviets was not just cold, it was also dry. Accordingly, Bridge of Spies is mostly procedural. Discussions of due process are elucidated, and negotiations are often portrayed as merely functional. This approach is boosted with impassioned integrity and deadpan existentialism (the best running gag is Mark Rylance as Soviet spy Rudolf Abel asking “Would it help?” when told he never worries). Then, the movie brings out its finishing move, throwing down with the scale of all that negotiator James B. Donovan (Tom Hanks) achieves, through the power of patience and keeping the faith.

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