I miss my old job friends
Pretty much sums me up Old, washed up, misses the past.
My Aries Angel work wife and Pisces work sister role model from a long time ago.
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seen from China
seen from United States
I miss my old job friends
Pretty much sums me up Old, washed up, misses the past.
My Aries Angel work wife and Pisces work sister role model from a long time ago.

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tvrundown USA 2026.01.23
Friday, January 23rd:
(exclusive movies): "Gabby's Dollhouse: The Movie" (Peacock), "Mother of Flies" (AMC+|Shudder, horror), "Twin" (TUBI, thriller, ~90mins), "The Big Fake" (netflix, Italian thriller), "Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere" (hulu, biopic), "The Smashing Machine" (hboMAX, UFC fighter Mark Kerr biopic), "Secret Mall Apartment" (netflix, 2024 documentary, ~90mins)
(streaming weekly): Coldwater (Para+), Tehran (appleTV), Heaven (hboMAX), No Tail to Tell (netflix), LOL: Last One Laughing - Quebec (APrime, next 3 eps, season 4 finale), LOL: Last One Laughing - Netherlands (APrime, season 4 opener, first 3 eps)
(primetime specials): "Skyscraper Live" (netflix, free-solo climb by Alex Honnold), "Mel Brooks: The 99 Year Old Man!" (HBO, night 2 of two, 2hrs)
(broadcast movies): "Don't Breathe a Word" (LMN, 2hrs), Friday Night Vibes (TBS, "Avengers: Endgame" from 2019)
(hour 1): The Nowhere Man (Starz, regular timeslot), Happy's Place (NBC) / . / Stumble (NBC), RuPaul's Drag Race (MTV, ~90mins)
(hour 2): Spartacus: "House of Ashur" (Starz), RuPaul's Drag Race (MTV, contd) / . / Untucked (MTV), The UnXplained with William Shatner (HIST), Diners, Drive-ins & Dives (FOOD, season 43 opener)
(hour 3): "BMF: Blowing Money Fast" (Starz, regular timeslot), Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO, season 24 opener)
[preempted: Masters of Illusion (theCW) returns next week; Celebrity Wheel of Fortune (ABC) repeats thru Olympics.]
October 14th, 2025, Inktober '25 Prompt # 14 - Trunk. “It’s my industrial strength hair dryer. AND I CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT IT!” Is anyone else looking forward to "Spaceballs 2" next year?
🎃 31 Days of Halloween – Day 7 Bonus Post 2 🎃
Young Frankenstein (1974) ★★ · Rewatched Oct 7, 2025
Young Frankenstein (1974) is Mel Brooks’ best-known foray into horror territory, though he’d return to the well with Dracula: Dead and Loving It (1995). Both of these are flat-out absurdist comedies, not horror-comedies, and that distinction matters. The horror-comedies I love most (e.g., Braindead/Dead-Alive, Re-Animator, Evil Dead II, Ghostbusters) work because the monsters are treated as real threats. You actually care about these characters, which gives the story some weight, while the comedy comes from the tone, or from how the human characters react to the horrors around them.
Laughter and horror come from the same instinct: the release of tension. This is why often horror feels absurd and comedy is cruel or disturbing; the two genres are cousins.
That's why what Brooks attempts in Young Frankenstein doesn’t land for me. This isn’t a horror-comedy, it’s a 105-minute farce. The monsters aren’t remotely threatening; they’re about as dangerous as The Munsters. While Dracula: Dead and Loving It at least sustains some dramatic interest by following Stoker’s plot beats, Young Frankenstein abandons structure by being a pseudo-sequel to the Universal Frankenstein films.
It might have worked as a sketch or short, but nearly two hours of gags with no real stakes or characters I can invest in just leaves me cold. But that may just be me, I usually struggle with long-form comedies for this reason. If a comedy’s going to run feature-length, I need something to hold onto. like Dr. Strangelove or The Big Lebowski, where there’s still a real story, themes, or characters offering a throughline amidst all the absurdity.
With all that said, Brooks nails the look of a classic Universal horror film. His mimicry of James Whale’s style shows a real reverence for the material. Visually, you could believe this was shot in the ’30s or ’40s as part of Universal’s monster cycle.
While Mel Brooks isn’t usually considered in horror history, he left his fingerprints on the genre in surprising ways. Mel Brooks discovered David Lynch (generally not considered a horror director, but undeniably influential in the genre's development post-Hammer/Universal), who was at that point only known to cult audiences via the midnight movie reputation of Eraserhead. Lynch got the job of directing The Elephant Man (1980) specifically because of how impressed Brooks was by how the young filmmaker handled deformity in Eraserhead.
Brooks also spearheaded the 1986 remake of The Fly, ultimately directed by David Cronenberg, which remains one of the greatest horror films—and one of the greatest films—ever made. Brooks deliberately kept his name off both productions, not wanting his reputation as a comedy filmmaker to give audiences false expectations about Lynch or Cronenberg’s work.
So while Young Frankenstein may not be my thing, as a technical exercise in capturing Universal’s style, it’s impressive and proves Brooks genuinely loved the genre.
That time I lied to Mel Brooks
Yes, I lied to one of my heroes, but I didn’t lie to get the job. I enjoyed many highlights in Hollywood. My first and second came when filming an episode of Hill Street Blues, my first television role. Booking that role alone was a highlight, as my goal in coming to Hollywood was to get on that show. And less than two years later, voilà. But that cake came with icing. During filming, I met a…
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Happy Birthday 99th Mel Brooks 28.06.1926
Wishing the wonderful Mel Brooks a happy 99th birthday. Thank you Mel.
Well may the schwartz be with you! Looks like we are getting a Spaceballs 2. I will definitely be seeing this in the cinema. The original was before my time, but have seen it on dvd and streaming many times
Mel Brooks is set to reprise his role in the sequel to the 1987 film alongside other familiar faces. The film will hit theatres in 2027.