SoCal
Supernatural Fight Club
Posts: 6,543
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Post by SoCal on Jul 2, 2013 18:49:02 GMT -5
So, Junior is a real nut case. And his would be girlfriend is trapped in an underground bunker. And now she's chained to the bed. Jeez.
We also found out that Barbie was just there to collect money from the guy he eventually killed. Will his lost dog tags give him away?
The radio station may be able to hear some things from the outside.
Does the military outside the dome really not see/hear anything from inside the dome?
So, the semi-crooked sherriff is dead. What will happen to his end of the nefarious aquisition of propane along with the mayor?
Love the high school geeks who got out of their trigonometry exam and are trying to figure out the dome.
So far, so good.
What do the rest of you think?
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Mistermoonlight
Administrator
Crystal the Monkey Fan Club
"The dreamers ride against the men of action. Oh see the men of action falling back."--Leonard Cohen
Posts: 8,508
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Post by Mistermoonlight on Jul 2, 2013 20:13:31 GMT -5
Julia: Why haven't you told anybody? Dodee: We're not a news station. I thought it was that they didn't want to scare people any more than they already were. But in this situation, you pretty much have to be the news station. Julia did the right thing. I might as well go ahead and make all my comments in this one post. I like those kids who got out of their trig test. Of course, one is such a math nerd that he took a much harder trig test and passed. See, you do use this stuff in the real world. I have no idea what he did, even though I took a course called "trig". The preacher was safe (there's your fundamentalist, Moon). Then he ends up trapped in the burning house? I don't get it. There are people on this show who know something. It should be interesting finding out what. Here's why that line was funny to me. Back when I started in radio, most were full-service stations, playing popular music as well as oldies, and they all had news departments. These news folks would go to city council meetings and get the police blotter each morning, even in small communities. If you wanted to know what was going on in your town, or even in the world at large, radio was the fastest way to get it. That all changed in the 1980s, when suddenly corporations could own many stations in many markets, and individual owners began to sell out. We saw the beginning of niche formats: one station was all-oldies, another all-news, another formatted specifically to female listeners, etc . . . Whereas in the old days we had five minutes of national news per hour, followed by another 3-5 minutes of local news, the music stations tended to eschew any news at all (since there were other stations in the market doing news all the time.) The newspaper editor is expecting a full-service station, married to the community, and when the radio engineer says 'that's not our format' it's kind of an inside subtle joke on radio as an industry. Stephen King knows it. He owns 3 radio stations in Bangor, Maine. (By the way, the preacher, Lester Coggins, is also a character in the novel, although I never imagined him as creepy looking.) I'm beginning to wonder now, if not making the radio station batshit crazy (as it was in the book) in the mini-series, along with the people working there, is not kind of an homage to a medium that King loves at heart.
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 2, 2013 22:36:08 GMT -5
In the first 15 minutes, we learn important information about the dome.
It is invisible, indestructible and inescapable.
Although it will explodes pacemakers. it does not affect wind-up watches
The bottom of the barrier is a long way down, according to the guys who are digging near it.
Fire is ineffective against the surface.
There is no radioactive activity radiating from the dome.
The dome is blocking cell phones, TV and internet.
Tennis balls bounce off the surface of the dome.
Teens can draw a door on the dome.
Teenagers can use Trig to determine the boundaries of the dome.
Teenagers keep their sense of humor near the dome; adults do not.
The dome prevents military personnel from observing beautiful naked women.
Air traffic around the town has been re-directed.
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darwin
Phantom Zoner
Posts: 158
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Post by darwin on Jul 2, 2013 22:47:18 GMT -5
In the first 15 minutes, we learn important information about the dome. Yes.It is invisible, indestructible and inescapable. True, true and true.Although it will explodes pacemakers. it does not affect wind-up watches It probably would not do my spinning bow tie any good though...The bottom of the barrier is a long way down, according to the guys who are digging near it. Logistically...they had to try...Fire is ineffective against the surface. But not water...so that is...different.
A good rainstorm could still get through?There is no radioactive activity radiating from the dome. So it can't make a HULK or a Spiderman...The dome is blocking cell phones, TV and internet. Either that...or they didn't pay the bill...and the dome is a handy excuse.Tennis balls bounce off the surface of the dome. Repeatedly.Teens can draw a door on the dome. Taggers...they're everywhere!!!!Teenagers can use Trig to determine the boundaries of the dome. I would have used geometry...since I can't spell triga...trigi...the other thing.Teenagers keep their sense of humor near the dome; adults do not. Except for Barbie...who makes jokes.The dome prevents military personnel from observing beautiful naked women. I think she was kidding about this...otherwise...my willing suspension of disbelief becomes ACTUAL disbelief.
I am good with the whole mysterious dome falling out of nowhere, but military guys ignoring a naked pretty redhead?
Nope.Air traffic around the town has been re-directed. Until the air force starts dropping guys with sleds for fun.
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Post by TheFlashFan on Jul 2, 2013 22:50:38 GMT -5
gun shots fly off the dome and hits the person next it too not good at all.
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 3, 2013 7:42:21 GMT -5
So, Junior is a real nut case. And his would be girlfriend is trapped in an underground bunker. And now she's chained to the bed. Jeez. We also found out that Barbie was just there to collect money from the guy he eventually killed. Will his lost dog tags give him away? The radio station may be able to hear some things from the outside. Does the military outside the dome really not see/hear anything from inside the dome? So, the semi-crooked sherriff is dead. What will happen to his end of the nefarious aquisition of propane along with the mayor? Love the high school geeks who got out of their triginomitry exam and are trying to figure out the dome. So far, so good. What do the rest of you think? I think it is extremely good and exciting. Junior is a nut case. I am thinking the psychiatrist’s daughter is also a nut case with her morbid predictions. I am not sure that Barbie actually killed Shumway. It looked like an accidental discharge to me, Your Honor. ...yes, I will swear to that in court. I know the military guys can see into the dome because Barbie was able to get the fire truck driver to stop. However, they do not seem to be able to hear. I like the high school kids too. They are making an adventure out of it.
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 3, 2013 7:50:32 GMT -5
In the first 15 minutes, we learn important information about the dome. Yes.It is invisible, indestructible and inescapable. True, true and true.Although it will explodes pacemakers. it does not affect wind-up watches It probably would not do my spinning bow tie any good though...The bottom of the barrier is a long way down, according to the guys who are digging near it. Logistically...they had to try...Fire is ineffective against the surface. But not water...so that is...different.
A good rainstorm could still get through?There is no radioactive activity radiating from the dome. So it can't make a HULK or a Spiderman...The dome is blocking cell phones, TV and internet. Either that...or they didn't pay the bill...and the dome is a handy excuse.Tennis balls bounce off the surface of the dome. Repeatedly.Teens can draw a door on the dome. Taggers...they're everywhere!!!!Teenagers can use Trig to determine the boundaries of the dome. I would have used geometry...since I can't spell triga...trigi...the other thing.Teenagers keep their sense of humor near the dome; adults do not. Except for Barbie...who makes jokes.The dome prevents military personnel from observing beautiful naked women. I think she was kidding about this...otherwise...my willing suspension of disbelief becomes ACTUAL disbelief.
I am good with the whole mysterious dome falling out of nowhere, but military guys ignoring a naked pretty redhead?
Nope.Air traffic around the town has been re-directed. Until the air force starts dropping guys with sleds for fun. Taggers!!! I'm with you on the guys ignoring a pretty lady. That would be taking science fiction to another level of disbelief. I wonder if the military guys could tell that the water was getting through. If anyone is thirsty, wait for rain; then lick the dome. It was so unfair that the bullet hit the officer who was doing his duty rather than the one who was having a meltdown. Jim Rennie was fixated on the way Barbie disarmed the cop.
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Mistermoonlight
Administrator
Crystal the Monkey Fan Club
"The dreamers ride against the men of action. Oh see the men of action falling back."--Leonard Cohen
Posts: 8,508
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Post by Mistermoonlight on Jul 3, 2013 9:58:01 GMT -5
Thought you might find this interesting. Stephen King has penned a letter to fans of the novel who are also watching the mini-series: A Letter From Stephen:
For those of you out there in Constant Reader Land who are feeling miffed because the TV version of Under the Dome varies considerably from the book version, here’s a little story.
Near the end of his life, and long after his greatest novels were written, James M. Cain agreed to be interviewed by a student reporter who covered culture and the arts for his college newspaper. This young man began his time with Cain by bemoaning how Hollywood had changed books such as The Postman Always Rings Twice and Double Indemnity. Before he could properly get into his rant, the old man interrupted him by pointing to a shelf of books behind his desk. “The movies didn’t change them a bit, son,” he said. “They’re all right up there. Every word is the same as when I wrote them.”
I feel the same way about Under the Dome. If you loved the book when you first read it, it’s still there for your perusal. But that doesn’t mean the TV series is bad, because it’s not. In fact, it’s very good. And, if you look closely, you’ll see that most of my characters are still there, although some have been combined and others have changed jobs. That’s also true of the big stuff, like the supermarket riot, the reason for all that propane storage, and the book’s thematic concerns with diminishing resources.
Many of the changes wrought by Brian K. Vaughan and his team of writers have been of necessity, and I approved of them wholeheartedly. Some have been occasioned by their plan to keep the Dome in place over Chester’s Mill for months instead of little more than a week, as is the case in the book. Other story modifications are slotting into place because the writers have completely re-imagined the source of the Dome.
That such a re-imagining had to take place was my only serious concern when the series was still in the planning stages, and that concern was purely practical. If the solution to the mystery were the same on TV as in the book, everyone would know it in short order, which would spoil a lot of the fun (besides, plenty of readers didn’t like my solution, anyway). By the same token, it would spoil things if you guys knew the arcs of the characters in advance. Some who die in the book—Angie, for instance—live in the TV version of Chester’s Mill…at least for a while. And some who live in the book may not be as lucky during the run of the show. Just sayin’.
Listen, I’ve always been a situational writer. My idea of what to do with a plot is to shoot it before it can breed. It’s true that when I start a story, I usually have a general idea of where it’s going to finish up, but in many cases I end up in a different place entirely (for instance, I fully expected Ben Mears to die at the end of ’Salem’s Lot, and Susannah Dean was supposed to pop off at the end of Song of Susannah). “The book is the boss,” Alfred Bester used to say, and what that means to me is the situation is the boss. If you play fair with the characters—and let them play their parts according to their strengths and weaknesses—you can never go wrong. It’s impossible.
There’s only one element of my novel that absolutely had to be the same in the novel and the show, and that’s the Dome itself. It’s best to think of that novel and what you’re seeing week-to-week on CBS as a case of fraternal twins. Both started in the same creative womb, but you will be able to tell them apart. Or, if you’re of a sci-fi bent, think of them as alternate versions of the same reality.
As for me, I’m enjoying the chance to watch that alternate reality play out; I still think there’s no place like Dome.
As for you, Constant Reader, feel free to take the original down from your bookshelf anytime you want. Nothing between the covers has changed a bit.
Stephen King June 27th, 2013 www.stephenking.com/promo/utd_on_tv/letter.html
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skylander
Smallville High Graduate
God Friended Me
Posts: 657
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Post by skylander on Jul 3, 2013 12:29:15 GMT -5
Thought you might find this interesting. Stephen King has penned a letter to fans of the novel who are also watching the mini-series: A Letter From Stephen:
*** If the solution to the mystery were the same on TV as in the book, everyone would know it in short order, which would spoil a lot of the fun (besides, plenty of readers didn’t like my solution, anyway). *** Although I never thought of letting SK know what I thought of his solution, I am happy that others did. I enjoyed everything about the story except his solution. I do not know what the solution will be now, but I will probably prefer it to the one in the book. He mentioned Angie's death. I wondered how network TV would present that to gentle viewers. Removing Junior's perversion from the story was a good call. I hope the NEW characters become as popular as Daryl became in TWD.
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darwin
Phantom Zoner
Posts: 158
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Post by darwin on Jul 3, 2013 13:57:54 GMT -5
Until the air force starts dropping guys with sleds for fun. *Note to clarify: The air force starts dropping guys with sleds for fun - RIDE THE DOME!!!!Taggers!!! I'm with you on the guys ignoring a pretty lady. That would be taking science fiction to another level of disbelief. Yes! The report to their commander would go something like: SHE just took off her clothes! I COULD NOT believe it (each of the 64 times I looked)I wonder if the military guys could tell that the water was getting through. If anyone is thirsty, wait for rain; then lick the dome. I just got a sudden image of RALPH from A CHRISTMAS STORY walking away from his friend who had his tongue stuck to a cold metal pole.It was so unfair that the bullet hit the officer who was doing his duty rather than the one who was having a meltdown. Yes.VERY unfair...but then it wouldn't be a Stephen King story if it was fair.
That lone lady cop is suddenly outnumbered and outgunned.But Barbie will step up and help I am sure.Jim Rennie was fixated on the way Barbie disarmed the cop. You saw that too!
I thought it was just me seeing things.
Big Jim looked...worried....perhaps a little scared...
...a hero in the mix....and a CAPABLE one at that.
Too bad he didn't see the short work Barbie made of his son.
I enjoyed that scene. Except that the girl did not get saved like I was expecting from the preview (read that in).
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darwin
Phantom Zoner
Posts: 158
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Post by darwin on Jul 3, 2013 18:36:33 GMT -5
Here's why that line was funny to me. Back when I started in radio, most were full-service stations, playing popular music as well as oldies, and they all had news departments. These news folks would go to city council meetings and get the police blotter each morning, even in small communities. If you wanted to know what was going on in your town, or even in the world at large, radio was the fastest way to get it. That all changed in the 1980s, when suddenly corporations could own many stations in many markets, and individual owners began to sell out. We saw the beginning of niche formats: one station was all-oldies, another all-news, another formatted specifically to female listeners, etc . . . Whereas in the old days we had five minutes of national news per hour, followed by another 3-5 minutes of local news, the music stations tended to eschew any news at all (since there were other stations in the market doing news all the time.) The newspaper editor is expecting a full-service station, married to the community, and when the radio engineer says 'that's not our format' it's kind of an inside subtle joke on radio as an industry. Stephen King knows it. He owns 3 radio stations in Bangor, Maine. I really enjoy your explanations in regards to the radio/broadcast angle as well as the informative letter you supplied from Stephan King. Back in university, one of the communications courses I took required some time spent in, I would say, one of the ...supplimentary...broadcast booths...and record a segment with music and news and announcements and commercials and banter...a recording which was to be graded. My respect for people who did this day in and day out grew a thousand fold. I did it all...and then had to edit the tape to make it sound decent! No "do-overs" on the real thing! Then later I worked at a locally owned television/radio station JUST before they sold out...first the radio station and then the television station. I did videotape editing...then moved to the TV studio and ran cameras and lights and prompters... ...then I was a writer and producer for commercials and corporate videos... but many of my TV commercials ALSO had a radio version.... I never tried the master control room. But the guys I worked with...and grew up watching and listening to them...told me so many wonderful stories about learning as they went...figuring it ALL out on the fly...and improvising...and they could do it ALL...every aspect...including some repairs to equipment...and also dealing with reels of movie film for broadcasting movies on the weekend and dealing with projectors... I was in awe of them! But we were all glad for the engineers that got hired.
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SoCal
Supernatural Fight Club
Posts: 6,543
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Post by SoCal on Jul 3, 2013 21:27:07 GMT -5
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Post by TheFlashFan on Jul 3, 2013 21:31:54 GMT -5
can't wait for the 3nd episode next week.
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 4, 2013 17:25:25 GMT -5
*Note to clarify: The air force starts dropping guys with sleds for fun - RIDE THE DOME!!!! Nice catch phrase!Taggers!!! I'm with you on the guys ignoring a pretty lady. That would be taking science fiction to another level of disbelief. Yes! The report to their commander would go something like: SHE just took off her clothes! I COULD NOT believe it (each of the 64 times I looked)I wonder if the military guys could tell that the water was getting through. If anyone is thirsty, wait for rain; then lick the dome. I just got a sudden image of RALPH from A CHRISTMAS STORY walking away from his friend who had his tongue stuck to a cold metal pole. FunnyIt was so unfair that the bullet hit the officer who was doing his duty rather than the one who was having a meltdown. Yes.VERY unfair...but then it wouldn't be a Stephen King story if it was fair.
That lone lady cop is suddenly outnumbered and outgunned.But Barbie will step up and help I am sure. Let's hope so.Jim Rennie was fixated on the way Barbie disarmed the cop. You saw that too!
I thought it was just me seeing things. Nope!
Big Jim looked...worried....perhaps a little scared...
...a hero in the mix....and a CAPABLE one at that.
Too bad he didn't see the short work Barbie made of his son.
I enjoyed that scene. Except that the girl did not get saved like I was expecting from the preview (read that in).When Big Jim left and returned with the backhoe(?), I thought he did that so he could be a hero like Barbie. Junior should realize now that a face-to-face challenge with Barbie will not be won. No one seems to be looking for Angie yet but they know she is inside the dome.
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 4, 2013 17:33:14 GMT -5
Good girl! Jensen Ackles would make an outstanding Barbie. And seeing him undressed would take Julia's mind off of her missing husband - at least for a little while.
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 4, 2013 17:43:51 GMT -5
'Under the Dome' ratings add over 3 million viewers with live plus 3-day By Andrea Reiher June 29, 2013 1:32 PM ET
The numbers for the "Under the Dome" premiere were already terrific (for a lot of shows, but especially for a summer drama), with the new CBS series earning 13.5 million viewers and a 3.3 rating in adults 18-49 -- the biggest summer TV premiere since 2007 and the biggest summer drama premiere since 1992.
Now the live + 3-day ratings are in, which means the ratings include households that watched the show on the DVR within three days of the premiere, and things are looking good for Chester's Mill, Maine.
The show added over 3 million viewers, for a total of 16.7 million viewers. It also added a whole point in the 18-49 demo, putting the number at 4.3.
Star Mike Vogel tells Zap2it the stars couldn't be happier.
"We are [thrilled]," says Vogel. "Traditionally, summer has been a wasteland to dump episodes of things, everyone just assumed you can't put new programming on. But what cable's done is show us that people will tune in for content, what they like and what they connect with."
"If we can sustain [the ratings], I think it's a groundbreaking thing for network television."
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 4, 2013 17:50:34 GMT -5
can't wait for the 3nd episode next week. S01, E03 Manhunt Mon 7/8/13, 10:00PM-11:00PM CBS
After a former deputy goes rogue, Big Jim asks Barbie to help keep the town safe; Junior determines to escape the dome by going underground.
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SoCal
Supernatural Fight Club
Posts: 6,543
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Post by SoCal on Jul 4, 2013 19:03:45 GMT -5
S01, E03 Manhunt Mon 7/8/13, 10:00PM-11:00PM CBS
After a former deputy goes rogue, Big Jim asks Barbie to help keep the town safe; Junior determines to escape the dome by going underground. Thanks, Anti, for the "preview" of next week's episode. One can only hope Junior dies in any tunnel he tries to dig under the dome.
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 4, 2013 19:07:57 GMT -5
S01, E03 Manhunt Mon 7/8/13, 10:00PM-11:00PM CBS
After a former deputy goes rogue, Big Jim asks Barbie to help keep the town safe; Junior determines to escape the dome by going underground. Thanks, Anti, for the "preview" of next week's episode. One can only hope Junior dies in any tunnel he tries to dig under the dome. I know...but what about Angie being stuck in the shelter?
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SoCal
Supernatural Fight Club
Posts: 6,543
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Post by SoCal on Jul 4, 2013 19:30:53 GMT -5
Hmmmmmmmm, you've got me on that one. How about Junior just get severly injured and crawls back to the bunker and Angie decks him and escapes? And then Junior dies.
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 4, 2013 19:33:46 GMT -5
Hmmmmmmmm, you've got me on that one. How about Junior just get severly injured and crawls back to the bunker and Angie decks him and escapes? And then Junior dies. Works for me!
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SoCal
Supernatural Fight Club
Posts: 6,543
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Post by SoCal on Jul 4, 2013 20:51:58 GMT -5
Yay! Junior dies! It has been decided.
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darwin
Phantom Zoner
Posts: 158
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Post by darwin on Jul 4, 2013 21:09:39 GMT -5
You saw that too!
I thought it was just me seeing things. Nope!
Big Jim looked...worried....perhaps a little scared...
...a hero in the mix....and a CAPABLE one at that.
Too bad he didn't see the short work Barbie made of his son.
I enjoyed that scene. Except that the girl did not get saved like I was expecting from the preview (read that in). When Big Jim left and returned with the backhoe(?), I thought he did that so he could be a hero like Barbie. THAT could be! I never thought of that.
I DID however say...just before Big Jim showed up with the backhoe...
...they should just knock down the house.
That made the MOST sense...but I think I was just feeling fiesty.Would be fun. IN a NON-destructive saving the town practical sense.Junior should realize now that a face-to-face challenge with Barbie will not be won. The NEXT step in the bully handbook is to gather friends...or pay them to help beat on him. ALWAYS the same. They are NEVER smart. No one seems to be looking for Angie yet but they know she is inside the dome. Her parents are gone...her brother is doing trig...
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 4, 2013 21:19:07 GMT -5
When Big Jim left and returned with the backhoe(?), I thought he did that so he could be a hero like Barbie. THAT could be! I never thought of that.
I DID however say...just before Big Jim showed up with the backhoe...
...they should just knock down the house.
That made the MOST sense...but I think I was just feeling fiesty.Would be fun. IN a NON-destructive saving the town practical sense. Watching buildings being demolished is exciting. People always gather round to watch. It is not as much fun when explosives are used because that is too quick.Junior should realize now that a face-to-face challenge with Barbie will not be won. The NEXT step in the bully handbook is to gather friends...or pay them to help beat on him. ALWAYS the same. They are NEVER smart. You think like Stephen King because that is what Junior did in the book.No one seems to be looking for Angie yet but they know she is inside the dome. Her parents are gone...her brother is doing trig...You are right...no one will become worried about her for awhile.
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darwin
Phantom Zoner
Posts: 158
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Post by darwin on Jul 4, 2013 21:24:23 GMT -5
Her parents are gone...her brother is doing trig... You are right...no one will become worried about her for awhile. And then LIMITED places to look, as you mentioned before: TOWNSPEOPLE - Well the ONLY place we HAVEN'T looked it Big Jim's bunker - THERE SHE IS!!!!! and YOU will appreciate this... MOST fun was a martial arts class doing demolition for charity.
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Mistermoonlight
Administrator
Crystal the Monkey Fan Club
"The dreamers ride against the men of action. Oh see the men of action falling back."--Leonard Cohen
Posts: 8,508
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Post by Mistermoonlight on Jul 4, 2013 21:26:58 GMT -5
'Under the Dome' ratings add over 3 million viewers with live plus 3-dayBy Andrea Reiher June 29, 2013 1:32 PM ET The numbers for the "Under the Dome" premiere were already terrific (for a lot of shows, but especially for a summer drama), with the new CBS series earning 13.5 million viewers and a 3.3 rating in adults 18-49 -- the biggest summer TV premiere since 2007 and the biggest summer drama premiere since 1992. Now the live + 3-day ratings are in, which means the ratings include households that watched the show on the DVR within three days of the premiere, and things are looking good for Chester's Mill, Maine. The show added over 3 million viewers, for a total of 16.7 million viewers. It also added a whole point in the 18-49 demo, putting the number at 4.3. Star Mike Vogel tells Zap2it the stars couldn't be happier. "We are [thrilled]," says Vogel. "Traditionally, summer has been a wasteland to dump episodes of things, everyone just assumed you can't put new programming on. But what cable's done is show us that people will tune in for content, what they like and what they connect with." "If we can sustain [the ratings], I think it's a groundbreaking thing for network television." Groundbreaking. They suddenly remember the network mini-series concept (that's been around since the 1970s) and boldly decide to try it during the summer. Geniuses. Let's look at just a few of the TV shows that debuted in the summer and became huge hits: Network TVSeinfeld(Series debuted Thursday, May 31, 1990 on NBC) The Prisoner (Debuted Saturday, June 1, 1968 on CBS) Survivor (Debuted Wednesday, May 31, 2000 on CBS) American Idol (Debuted Tuesday, June 11, 2002 on Fox) The Johnny Cash Show (Debuted Saturday, June 7, 1969 on ABC Cable TVThe Wire(Debuted Sunday, June 2, 2002 on HBO) Mad Men (Debuted Thursday, July 19, 2007 on AMC) The Real World(Debuted Thursday, May 21, 1992 on MTV) Oz(Debuted Saturday, July 12, 1997 on HBO) Six Feet Under (Debuted Sunday, June 3, 2001 on HBO) Sex and the City (Debuted Saturday, June 6, 1998 on HBO) Vogel should know better.
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Post by TheFlashFan on Jul 4, 2013 21:36:47 GMT -5
keep it up need to keep this show going most of shows I got on my DVR are food shows like them too though.
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Post by KyleEl on Jul 5, 2013 13:24:25 GMT -5
These news folks would go to city council meetings and get the police blotter each morning, even in small communities. If you wanted to know what was going on in your town, or even in the world at large, radio was the fastest way to get it. I don't know about the police blotter, but every morning I wake up with a station which, the day after a city council or county commissioners or school board meeting, I can actually hear someone talking at one of those meetings. On other days, the man just reads the news stories.
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mercurytheatre
Honorary Luthor
Searching for light in the darkness of insanity
Posts: 4,675
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Post by mercurytheatre on Jul 6, 2013 7:31:28 GMT -5
You were Casperette? Wow! I didn't know that. Timmy takes liberties with more than his own name. Cas-perette is for Castiel - not to be confused with fans of the friendly ghost. My apologies...
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Post by AntiArbitrator on Jul 7, 2013 14:48:29 GMT -5
Timmy takes liberties with more than his own name. Cas-perette is for Castiel - not to be confused with fans of the friendly ghost. My apologies... Timmy, I was delighted and thought it was cute. You may take liberties with my name anytime you want.
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