Mad_Buck / Member

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Mad_Buck Blog

Jaxiecracks, I'm Callin' You Out

If a thread in the forums is to be believed we now have a daily cap on level advancement of 11 submissions daily. That's right, 11 frigging submissions. This is simply unacceptable. I can do 11 submissions in five minutes time. If I'm not going to get credit for my work I don't think there's any reason to stay here. I'll just retire from my guides and go elsewhere. It seems as though a lot of other high level users feel the same way. I thought this site had advanced many miles from the Missribs reign of error where the two main priorities seemed to be fixing things that weren't broken and screwing over the higher leveled users.

Jaxiecracks, you're the comunity producer. Until this latest development I thought you were doing an outstanding job. But no more. You need to know that a lot of users are dissatisfied over the latest developments and it's up to you to remove this assinine submission cap. Don't give us this "other ways of advancing your levels" either. What would these be? Taking part in some Sopranos chat. The only way this site can achieve excellence is through continued submissions by dedicated users such as myself. Being an attention whore in the forums isn't going to help the site one bit. But, since we seem to have returned to a past era, I guess the thinking has changed among TPTB at TV.com. You should be ashamed.

RIP Roy Scheider

Roy Scheider, who starred in two classic films from the 1970's, Jaws and The French Connection, has passed away at the age of 75 due to complications from a staph infection. Fine actor who never really received the credit he should have. RIP, Mr. Scheider.

RIP Barry Morse

Barry Morse, best known to American TV viewers for his role as David Janssen's obsessed pursuer, Lt. Phillip Gerard, on The Fugitive passed away on February 2 at the age of 89. Morse was a fine actor who always gave it his best whether it be TV, radio, film, or stage. He will be missed by yours truly and hopefully many others as well. RIP.

Another Day, Another Guide

Picked up the guide for Bret Maverick, the 1981-82 revival of the classic 1957-62 series. James Garner reprised the role which had made him famous. Though the series had its moments it fell short more often than not of re-creating the magic of the original. A mediocre supporting cast and failure to pay enough respect to the original series were the show's main flaws. Still, anything in which James Garner appears is never all bad so once again I've purcheased the entire series from a bootlegger.

TU for Maverick

Many thanks to my main man, crazyrhythm, for naming me as TU for one of my all-time favorite series, Maverick. I hope to be worthy.

Episodes Purchased

Today, I purchased four episodes of The Alaskans and 25 episodes of He & She. Two shows for which I recently became editor but have never seen. I also began another Untouchables fanfic. What I don't have is a place to post my fanfic. Anyone know any good sites? I used to post them on this Untouchables Yahoo Group page but I've long since burned my bridges with that group and have no desire whatsoever to return.

He & She

Picked up my milestone 25th guide today. It's a sitcom from the 60's entitled He and She that starred real life husband and wife Richard Benjamin and Paula Prentiss. Even found a bootlegger on iOffer who had 25 of the 26 episodes for sale. Unfortunately, the one episode that's missing features a guest shot by the great Bruce Gordon. Some days I feel like cutting my own throat.

Bourbon Street Beat=Maverick

So I'm watching my next to last episode of Bourbon Street Beat tonight and the storyline seems a bit familiar. Then it hits me in the head like a ton of bricks. The show, a private eye drama, is using a recycled script from Maverick, a western. The same basic storyline only modernized and different, happier ending for one of the episode's main protagonists. A little basic research into the situation revealed that when the episode was filmed there was a writer's strike going on so Warner Brothers started recycling scripts like crazy. An episode of Cheyenne would be re-filmed as an episode of Sugarfoot, an episode of Maverick would be re-filmed as an episode of The Alaskans and, well you get the picture. I thought it all so ironic what with the current writer's strike. The moral of the story: when it comes to television, the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Only 14 Reviews

I wrote a review of Bourbon Street Beat and an episode from the series tonight and decided to count up all the reviews I'd written in 2007. Only 14. Not much compared to all the reviewing I did in 2005 when I first arrived at TV.com. I might have to change that but we'll see. In other news, Christmas came and went. I celebrated Christmas Eve by watching an episode of The Untouchables entitled The Night They Shot Santa Claus. If you're curious about the storyline of the episode the title pretty much says it all. And, oh yes, the villain gets away scot free at the end. Even Eliot Ness couldn't gain a conviction on the killer of Santa Claus.

In other news, I picked up another guide, The Alaskans. It was yet another Western from the Warner Brothers factory that gave us the likes of Maverick and Cheyenne. Except that The Alaskans only lasted one season and as close as it ever got to Maverick or Cheyenne in terms of quality was the fact that it used recycled scripts from those two shows. They were cheap at Warners in those days. The series is also notable for being star Roger Moore's least favorite out of all the American and British TV series' that he appeared in. Considering that Moore starred in some clunkers that's saying something. Nonetheless, I've never viewed an episode and for now it seems that none of the bootleggers have any copies so I'll have to go with other sources in editing the guide.

Hang in there, everybody, and I'll talk to you after New Year's. I hope.