Spill Your Television (post 6669)
Dec1Got sent a TV advert, on a CD today, and apparently it's groundbreaking.
It's a new ad for Miller Genuine Draft, featuring the Fun Lovin' Criminals, which makes history (it says here), they're the first company to sign a band to appear in a beer commercial.
Here's the plot: The band are sat in the back of a pick up truck, stuck in a traffic jam in down town New York. Huey decides it's "Miller Time", and they play a gig on the back of the truck.
Send me actual beer, and I will try to sound more excited.
No I wasn't really posting messages at this time, this story was EMBARGOED until 1st of December for some reason, so I wrote a THING that would post it for me.
What sort of future is there for baby Amy? Not only was she born prematurely and is struggling to survive, but she also has Sean and Roxy for parents. Or has she?
It should have been shown on Remembrance Sunday and many people were, quite rightly, angry when it was suddenly moved to an earlier timeslot and they missed it. So here's another chance to catch Jo Brand's moving film about Vera Brittain.
More mild amusement as grumpy writer Rick Spleen (Jack Dee) undergoes a personality change after a near-death experience involving a falling lamp.
The hormonal battle lines between mother and child are there from the moment of conception, as this interesting film about the physiological effects of pregnancy shows.
Suddenly everyone is investing their money with the brooding Mr Merdle (Anton Lesser). So is he really the "wonder of the age"? Meanwhile, Mr Dorrit is feeling the strain.
How a student played the overdraft and cashback game until he was £40,000 in debt. It's a revelatory film about how easy it is to get money, and how hard it is to give it back.
Writer/director Neil Jordan revisits some of the themes from his earlier career - including transvestism and IRA terrorism - with this surreal rite-of-passage tale.
Things
