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Have you been around many 18 year old girls?
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Have you been around many 18 year old girls?
aggierogue said:
Man I loved this show, but it's starting to get silly.
I can't get over the attractive women going sleeveless on the drive with no tan lines in sight.
Not at all. I like westerns where people look the part. If you want to watch Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman type westerns, more power to you. Even they had the sense to not portray women riding around in the sun on horseback during a migration with sleeveless shirts while the men (and the less attractive women) are covered head to toe for sun protection.Thisguy1 said:aggierogue said:
Man I loved this show, but it's starting to get silly.
I can't get over the attractive women going sleeveless on the drive with no tan lines in sight.
Such a weird thing to get this worked up over.
Panhandle Ag said:
Where did the snow capped mountain come from in the last scene? Did we time warp to somewhere? Yea
Anti-taxxer said:
I have some thoughts:
Where did the Indians get that clown yellow leather to make her chaps?
How the hell does it make any sense for her to ride to Oregon, and then turn around and go back? By herself, I assume?
Taylor Sheridan should not ever attempt to act again. Ever.
I hate every character he's attempted to portray.Quote:
Taylor Sheridan should not ever attempt to act again. Ever.
I heard Elsa was roommates with the Olsen twins at A&M and she's a lurker on TexAgs. Maybe that's why.Quote:
I'll never understand why some of y'all have to come on here and announce you won't be watching the show anymore. Just quit watching and quit *****ing. It ain't like we're going to miss you.
_lefraud_ said:
How did it take you EIGHT episodes to realize Elsa was the main character of the show? This show has been about a teenage girl on a wagon trail from literally the first scene...and they even give her voice overs EVERY episode to help people like you figure out that yes, this in fact about a teenage girl turning into a woman on the open plains.
I'm baffled by all you old men that keep expecting John Wayne to ride in and shoot up the bad guys and save the day
Yeah, the entire ending of this episode was overly cheesy. "We're wasting time" was the icing on the cake after she unsolicitedly proclaims her love for Sam in Comanche, then English.Old School Brother said:
i couldn't help but laugh when she started yelling "I love you" in Comanche at Sam. It was exactly like Wind in His Hair yelling at Costner from up on the ridge in Dances with Wolves when he and his woman decide to go out on their own.
Old School Brother said:
i couldn't help but laugh when she started yelling "I love you" in Comanche at Sam. It was exactly like Wind in His Hair yelling at Costner from up on the ridge in Dances with Wolves when he and his woman decide to go out on their own.
At what point did I say he tried to pass it off as his own? Or say it was stupid? Cheesy, yes. It honestly just made me laugh. Most of the leaps and bounds in this thread are made by the people assuming comments are harsh criticisms.SWC Ag said:Old School Brother said:
i couldn't help but laugh when she started yelling "I love you" in Comanche at Sam. It was exactly like Wind in His Hair yelling at Costner from up on the ridge in Dances with Wolves when he and his woman decide to go out on their own.
The word for that is "homage". You don't honestly believe Sheridan is unaware of that scene and/or tried to pass that off as his own do you?
Some of these gripes about the "stupidity" of the show are leaps and bounds more stupid than what the actual gripe was about.
PlanoAg98 said:I heard Elsa was roommates with the Olsen twins at A&M and she's a lurker on TexAgs. Maybe that's why.Quote:
I'll never understand why some of y'all have to come on here and announce you won't be watching the show anymore. Just quit watching and quit *****ing. It ain't like we're going to miss you.
Old School Brother said:At what point did I say he tried to pass it off as his own? Or say it was stupid? Cheesy, yes. It honestly just made me laugh. Most of the leaps and bounds in this thread are made by the people assuming comments are harsh criticisms.SWC Ag said:Old School Brother said:
i couldn't help but laugh when she started yelling "I love you" in Comanche at Sam. It was exactly like Wind in His Hair yelling at Costner from up on the ridge in Dances with Wolves when he and his woman decide to go out on their own.
The word for that is "homage". You don't honestly believe Sheridan is unaware of that scene and/or tried to pass that off as his own do you?
Some of these gripes about the "stupidity" of the show are leaps and bounds more stupid than what the actual gripe was about.
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"Yellowstone" prequel "1883" has been renewed for additional episodes at Paramount Plus, and the ViacomCBS-owned streaming service has ordered another Taylor Sheridan-created origin-story show following the Dutton Family called "1932." Yes, you guessed it the show will follow a new generation of Duttons "during the time of western expansion, Prohibition and the Great Depression."
So now you must be an old man who watched John Wayne to have a critical opinion of the direction the series has taken? What a dumb statement._lefraud_ said:
How did it take you EIGHT episodes to realize Elsa was the main character of the show? This show has been about a teenage girl on a wagon trail from literally the first scene...and they even give her voice overs EVERY episode to help people like you figure out that yes, this in fact about a teenage girl turning into a woman on the open plains.
I'm baffled by all you old men that keep expecting John Wayne to ride in and shoot up the bad guys and save the day
GreasenUSA said:He absolutely gave them a choice. He started with "If we're lucky, we reach Fort Laramie in October, which means crossing the South Pass in the snow, or stay the winter in the Fort.... The other option is to head to Denver, be there in 6 weeks."98Ag99Grad said:GreasenUSA said:
Not sure what Shea did so wrong by giving the emigrants a choice and explaining the risks. Also not sure what changed in James that he's suddenly wanting to be the leader. I get that we want to see character growth, but not sure that we've seen enough for these sudden changes to be believable.
This is the first episode I would consider a bit weaker. Excited to see the next obstacle that comes their way.
He didn't give them a choice though. That's the problem James has. Shea decided for them they can't hack it to Oregon and said we're going to Denver now. James was tired of him treating them like kids is my take.
ChipFTAC01 said:GreasenUSA said:He absolutely gave them a choice. He started with "If we're lucky, we reach Fort Laramie in October, which means crossing the South Pass in the snow, or stay the winter in the Fort.... The other option is to head to Denver, be there in 6 weeks."98Ag99Grad said:GreasenUSA said:
Not sure what Shea did so wrong by giving the emigrants a choice and explaining the risks. Also not sure what changed in James that he's suddenly wanting to be the leader. I get that we want to see character growth, but not sure that we've seen enough for these sudden changes to be believable.
This is the first episode I would consider a bit weaker. Excited to see the next obstacle that comes their way.
He didn't give them a choice though. That's the problem James has. Shea decided for them they can't hack it to Oregon and said we're going to Denver now. James was tired of him treating them like kids is my take.
My transcontinental journeys have all been via Interstate but Google maps takes me from FW->Denver->Laramie->Salt Lake->Portland. I've driven to Denver a lot and Eastern Colorado is basically just Kansas. Why not cheat over To Denver to give yourself some options?
98Ag99Grad said:
Never saw that. Was speaking just to his Yellowstone, 1883 roles. Didn't know he appeared in SOA too. Was he a writer for that show?
_lefraud_ said:
Again, the show hasn't taken any sort of new "direction". The show has been about Elsa from the very beginning...