News Around the Net!
Lots of great Lost analysis out there. Click here for EW‘s Jeff Jensen’s in-depth write-up of the season 6 premiere. I’m a big fan of “Doc” Jensen’s weekly Lost write-ups — they’re always insightful and ridiculously detailed. Click here for Mr. Jensen’s interview with Lost masterminds Carlton Cuse & Damon Lindeloff, and click here for collider.com‘s interview with Mr. Lindeloff. Both contain some tasty morsels of hints about what awaits us in season 6. (And here’s a great interview with Mr. Jensen himself in which he discusses Lost‘s final season.) On a less serious note, check out this very funny (and also super-detailed) review of the season 6 premiere from bestweekever.tv. (The graphic of Jacob’s note to the Temple-Others is phenomenal.) Lastly, this review of the premiere from chud.com is worth your time. This dude has a Lost re-watch blog that I often checked out while conducting my own Lost re-watch project. I hope you all enjoyed my extraordinarily lengthy list of the burning questions left hanging after Lost‘s first five seasons. Can’t wait for tonight’s episode!
Click here for a terrific interview with comedian Patton Oswalt. Click here for the Onion A.V. Club‘s interview with Aziz Ansari. Both are great conversations with two very smart and funny individuals.
Speaking of interviews, for anyone out there who loved A Serious Man as much as I did (read my review here), you MUST read this phenomenal interview with Fred Melamed. Mr. Melamed is the actor who portrayed Sy Ableman, one of the my favorite new characters that I saw created on screen in 2009. The interview is a hoot, particularly when Mr. Melamed declares his effort to “bring the pompous, Jewish, overweight, rabbinic figure back to the center of American sexuality.”
Bill Waterson, the amazingly talented creator of Calvin & Hobbes, is well-known for having pretty much disappeared from planet Earth following the end of his beloved comic strip. He hasn’t granted interviews, he hasn’t appeared at conventions or other gatherings of comic strip artists, and he hasn’t allowed any licensing of his characters. So die-hard Calvin & Hobbes fans like myself took notice when he agreed to an e-mail conversation with a reporter for the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Click here for the question-and-answer exchange!
This is very disturbing. Back to the Future Part III is officially ruined for me forever.
That’s all for today!
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