Lily23 : Don't watch it then. I don't. Just happy I live in a place & at a time that I can make tha...
SheWatches : I just finished watching it. I started it the other day and then got distracted but I'm g...
Dahwoodsman : I seen someone said there were links with subtitles but I’ve checked them all and not foun...
GeminiSaga : It's good but not great. Rosemary's Baby was ahead of its time, this is well done but safe...
grasshopper rex : Almost a true story.
maxx.black2 : after watching the first couple of episodes of the series, you'll feel your eyebrows furr...
lvlaxq : I totally agree. I had hoped that having Roz in this episode would make it great.. but it...
cybertech00 : when i think back to some of the funniest moments from the original frasier its scenes wit...
elb11 : I also agree with you too. The college scenes are too forced, stiff and not funny, and the...
elb11 : I agree with all you said, its just not the same w/o Niles and Daphne and of course Mr. Cr...
Many good documentaries tell more than one story and this is no exception.
I initially turned this on to watch the history of CGI. I got a bit of that for the first half or so, but then I got a whole life story with incredible successes and equally big lows.
Given how relatable this story can be for many, like those not using their hard earned degrees, it’s also a cautionary tale. What I learned from Steve is not to do what he did. Dealing with rejection and failure after decades of hard work is no easy task. What separates the survivors from the permanently crippled is how we cope.
I wish there was more than 5 minutes on his new upward trajectory, but the few things he says about his “noise” and being with himself etc. are core to leaving that destructive, pain avoidance behavior. Discomfort often proceeds the search for a sedative.
PS - The best double entendre documentary I’ve seen is “The March Of Sherman”.
Spoiler: There’s not that much about General Sherman.