What was the last TV show you watched?


Recommended Posts

I'm currently going through Star Trek: Voyager. I watched a good portion of the series back in its day, but I don't remember much of it. As of S3, There have been some down right campy episodes, but overall I'm enjoying it. DS9 is another one I want to watch through, but I can't seem to commit to it. Lose interest quickly every time I try. 

  • Like 3

Started Shogun and its Amazing, I have apparently an unpopular opinion that the Netflix Airbender series was decent, The kids acting was a bit bad but everything else was alright.

  • 2 weeks later...

Like a few others here, I'm also watching Shogun with Halo s2 as well.  Also a few days away from the 2nd part of Invincible s2 starting up again.  I need to make some time to go back and watch Foundation s2.

  • 1 month later...

The last series I completed was The Gentlemen.  Look, it is what it is - Guy Ritchie doing more of his cartoony gangsta stuff (a world that he is so infatuated with), but it's enjoyable.  Made me laugh a few times, made me enjoy Vinnie Jones on screen (I hate the usual crap he plays - it's such a pantomime), Ray Winstone was used correctly (sparingly).  Yeah, I'm down for season 2.

  • Like 1
On 19/04/2024 at 11:17, Dick Montage said:

The last series I completed was The Gentlemen.  Look, it is what it is - Guy Ritchie doing more of his cartoony gangsta stuff (a world that he is so infatuated with), but it's enjoyable.  Made me laugh a few times, made me enjoy Vinnie Jones on screen (I hate the usual crap he plays - it's such a pantomime), Ray Winstone was used correctly (sparingly).  Yeah, I'm down for season 2.

I didn't know they had made a TV series. I quite enjoyed the film, so maybe I'll take a look. But I know what you mean, I can be onboard with a Guy Ritchie film...not sure if I could go a whole series.

I just finished watching Fallout the other day. I struggled a bit on the first episode, although that might be more to do with my expectation being that I was going to dislike it. As I continued I came to really enjoy it, and I'm glad they've been given the greenlight on another season.

  • Like 2
On 19/04/2024 at 11:23, Nick H. said:

not sure if I could go a whole series

Episodes don't feel too long, break it up and you wont trip over Guy Richie's absolute posh-boy boner for the criminals!

  • Haha 1
On 03/03/2024 at 01:47, JustGeorge said:

I'm currently going through Star Trek: Voyager. I watched a good portion of the series back in its day, but I don't remember much of it. As of S3, There have been some down right campy episodes, but overall I'm enjoying it. DS9 is another one I want to watch through, but I can't seem to commit to it. Lose interest quickly every time I try. 

I did similar with Voyager a few years ago. I'd also watched quite a lot of episodes as a kid, however never everything from start to finish, or in any particular order.

After Voyager I ended up wanting more, so watched DS9. To the younger me DS9 was like watching paint dry, however in my 30's I found it much more entertaining. I would now go as far to say DS9 is one of my favourite Trek series, it only gets better as the series go on.

The Ferengi in particular I thought we're hilarious, especially their Rules of Acquisition! 😄

On 26/04/2024 at 06:10, InsaneNutter said:

I did similar with Voyager a few years ago. I'd also watched quite a lot of episodes as a kid, however never everything from start to finish, or in any particular order.

After Voyager I ended up wanting more, so watched DS9. To the younger me DS9 was like watching paint dry, however in my 30's I found it much more entertaining. I would now go as far to say DS9 is one of my favourite Trek series, it only gets better as the series go on.

The Ferengi in particular I thought we're hilarious, especially their Rules of Acquisition! 😄

Got about 1.5 seasons of Voyager left and then I'll probably try DS9 again. Err....Complete last season of Discovery and then DS9 :)

  • 5 months later...

Currently watching The Penguin, 2 eps in and it's great.  Also watching s2 of Tulsa King.  Stallone as a old school mobster is pretty fun to watch IMO.

Land of the Lost. The original series. A streamer is doing it in his discord at one episode a day. I used to think that show was so cool, now.... not so much. Neat ideas, but it was limited by the time it came out. 

  • 2 weeks later...
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I imagine that was a review or something? My reviews mostly contain a lot of images and galleries, but these are all webp too, but yeah it all adds up on the page load. Would help if you were more helpful with your critique instead of bitching and moaning like a Karen 😂 Because then we might be able to fix it for you.
    • If Valve refused to let them make the case, I wonder if they've already partnered with someone else to do it? The fact that they didn't seek permission/licence before diving straight in is incredible though
    • OpenClaw now has native mobile apps on iOS and Android by Karthik Mudaliar OpenClaw, the viral open-source personal AI agent, now has its own mobile app, available on both Android and iOS. Users can pair the app with an existing OpenClaw gateway and can start using new mobile-native features that are now available on the app. The app supports all the existing features you'd already have seen on OpenClaw's TUI, as well as some more, such as real-time and background Talk mode, action approvals, sharing from iOS, and optional access to device capabilities such as camera, screen, location, photos, contacts, calendar, and reminders. These features are available on both the Android and iOS versions of the app. What's important with these apps is that they don't run OpenClaw on your phone, but are actually just companion apps that require a running OpenClaw Gateway on an existing device, on macOS, Linux, or Windows via WSL2. To pair the app with your existing OpenClaw gateway, users need to run the command "/pair qr" on the TUI or existing chat interface, which brings up a QR code. Users can then scan this QR code to pair it up with the mobile app. There's also an option to manually pair the app by entering the host and a port. Previously, OpenClaw had been available on phones via WhatsApp, Telegram, Slack, Discord, Microsoft Teams, Matrix, and others. Now, with a native mobile app, the interface is much cleaner and more focused on just the OpenClaw, of course, with the added support for camera, screen, location, and more. It's important to note that OpenClaw comes with its own security warnings. There's always a chance of prompt injection with these tools, so users are recommended to double-check authentication, tool policy, sandboxing, and execution approvals rather than prompts alone. For users well-versed with the AI harness, a native mobile app makes it easier to approve an automation, share a link, use voice, or let an agent react to phone-side context.
    • Google pitches Spanner as one database for all AI agents with these new featues by Karthik Mudaliar Google Cloud is introducing new features within Spanner, its distributed database, as a place where enterprises should keep their data, using which AI agents could make smarter and better decisions. In a detailed blog post, Google highlighted quite a few features coming to Spanner, including relational data, graph relationships, vector search, key-value access, full-text search, and operational analytics together in one database architecture. Google says that today's systems aren't well-made for AI agents. There could be data that is present in one system, search indexes in another, embeddings in a vector database, and relationship data in a graph database. This fragmentation isn't great for AI agents to do their jobs because they don't have access to all of this data in one place. This is where Google is positioning Spanner as a solution. Spanner is already a globally distributed relational database with strong consistency, and Google wants its customers to see it as a broader data layer for AI applications. The company introduced something called Spanner Graph, along with integrated vector search, full-text search, a Cassandra-compatible key-value endpoint, and a columnar engine for analytical queries on operational data. Google also added that its ScaNN-powered vector search can support indexes with more than 10 billion vectors, while the columnar engine can make some analytical scans up to 200 times faster. All of this isn't just exclusive to the Google Cloud Platform, and there's support for multi-cloud as well. This comes via Spanner Omni, which Google says is a downloadable, containerized version of Spanner that can run on Kubernetes and in environments outside Google Cloud, including Microsoft Azure and AWS, and even on-premises infrastructure as well as edge deployments. Google says that customers who are interested in the full-featured edition should contact the company, and there's no word on commercial availability or separate pricing. Those interested can read the full blog by Google Cloud, which details these features individually.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      rosiecharles earned a badge
      First Post
    • Reacting Well
      Juan Dela earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      Collagen Project earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Reacting Well
      Wakeen1966 earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Rookie
      Almohandis went up a rank
      Rookie
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      515
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      273
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      143
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      99
    5. 5
      macoman
      54
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!