
ΑΣΥΜΠΙΕΣΤΟΣ - ΕΛΛΗΝΕΣ YOUTUBERS "Twin Peaks": David Lynch's journey to revive the cult TV classic, 26 years after its cancellation — Quartz It was cookies, not cherry pie, that brought Twin Peaks back to TV. Twenty-six years ago, David Lynch’s surreal soapy drama about the murder of a prom queen in a small Pacific-Northwestern town was pulled from the air after the once promising TV show suffered a sharp decline in ratings. Tonight, on US cable channel Showtime, it will pick up where it left off all those years ago. Twin Peaks premiered on US TV on April 8, 1990 with a two-hour pilot that pulled nearly 35 million viewers, a third of the nation’s TV audience at the time, the New York Times reported (paywall). The Twin Peaks pilot became one of highest-rated US TV movies of that year. It was moved to Saturday nights, which was effectively a death sentence. Call COOP That might have been the end of Twin Peaks, if not for its eccentric fan base. Lynch also encouraged viewers to write the then president of ABC—now the most powerful man in entertainment, Disney CEO Bob Iger—to insist that ABC give the show more time.
Basketball Manager Register Now Take the Tour Statistics Facebook Like us on Facebook! Using mobile? Register Now Charazay is available in a lot of languages, please choose the one you prefer Advertisement Χάρης Καστανίδης:"Θα τα διαλύσω όλα αν πουληθεί το λιμάνι, θα τα κάνω λίμπα" Ένα ακόμη κορυφαίο βίντεο ντοκουμέντο από taxalia: Τότε που οι σοσιαλιστές βουλευτές και συνδικαλιστές, γκρέμιζαν κάγκελα για να εμποδίσουν την ενοικίαση του λιμανιού της Θεσσαλονίκης, έναντι 130 εκ.ευρώ το χρόνο για 25 χρόνια από τη Hutschisson. Θα έπαιρναν 3 δις ευρώ σε 25 χρόνια. Τώρα θα πάρουν καμιά 50αρά εκατομμύρια ευρώ όλα κι όλα. Χάρη, θα τα ξανασπάσεις τα κάγκελα τώρα; Ή θα ρουφήξεις το αβγουλάκι σου και θα βάλεις την υπογραφή σου, επειδή περνάμε κρίση (πότε δεν περνούσαμε;) Kύριε Γεωργακόπουλε, μαχητικέ και αγριεμένε συνδικαλιστή τι λέτε σήμερα; Για ξαναδείτε τη φάτσα σας!
Frank Sinatra 'Trilogy' Album: Behind the Scenes of Recording Frank Sinatra, a man not fond of interruption, was in the middle of a 1978 recording session at Warner Bros. studios in Burbank when his longtime producer Sonny Burke walked in and dared to halt the proceedings. Vincent Falcone, a pianist-conductor who had worked with Sinatra for two years at that point, recalls that the singer, then 63, was recording Cy Coleman’s “I Love My Wife.” Falcone doesn’t remember if the song was intended for a new album -- Sinatra had already recorded it as a single -- but whatever the purpose of the session, Burke thought he had a better idea. Burke ushered Sinatra into the control room, and an animated conversation ensued. “This project,” a triple album eventually titled Trilogy: Past Present Future, would employ 200-plus musicians and backup singers, and take more than a year to complete. Frank Sinatra Podcast: Filmmaker Alex Gibney, Biographer James Kaplan Talk HBO Doc & More “It’s a conspicuous album. Not that Sinatra had given up.
Why Is ‘Twin Peaks’ So Influential? - The Atlantic The sensational entrance into mass consciousness of David Lynch and Mark Frost’s Twin Peaks, 27 years ago, was an event that defies replication. To begin with, back then there actually was a mass consciousness—or, at least, there were a lot of people watching the same shows at the same time. Norm said something funny on Cheers and a single, vast chuckle rumbled westward across the continent and sank hissing into the Pacific. No Netflix in 1990. No personalized viewing recommendations. Who was dead? And now—the intervening quarter century having been, apparently, a mere blip, a quick writhe of Lynchian static across the screen—Twin Peaks is back for a belated Season 3 on Showtime, featuring many of the original cast members and helmed once again by writer-director Lynch and writer Frost. Because let’s be clear: Without Twin Peaks, and its big-bang expansion of the possibilities of television, half your favorite shows wouldn’t exist. Then there was the garmonbozia.
PostSecret