RE: LeoThread 2024-10-14 11:58

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Welcome to the leoentertainment threadcast 14/10/2024

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Another day is here for the Leo entertainment, let's get down on our entertainment activities 😎😎😎😎... Feel free to share all your entertainment stuffs here....

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I’m so glad Slow Horses is a hit

https://img.inleo.io/DQmQDSkm5v1RDFkThXnuJAWQxZek7KKXeX5ECcRqvct9SL1/ac2c3c10-848d-11ef-9e5e-d0c18c2dc3be.webp

Apple
The sixth and final episode of Slow Horses’ fourth season lands on Apple TV+ today, giving me a flimsy excuse to urge you all to watch. It’s a pulpy, fun and gripping British spy thriller that has finally started to garner some deserved attention. At six episodes a run, it’s respectful of your time in a way plenty of other streaming series aren’t. And while it’s unafraid of showing you the brutal side of espionage, you can revel in its gloriously deathly sense of humor.

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Slow Horses focuses on Slough House, a department inside Britain’s security service where agents are dumped. MI5 officers who can’t be trusted with real work, or angered their superiors, are dumped in the administrative purgatory. Since you can’t hand a spy a pink slip and send them on their way, they’re parked at Slough House until they retire, or quit.

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(Edited)

The show stars Gary Oldman as Jackson Lamb, the antithesis of anyone’s imagined vision of a real spy. Lamb is perpetually drunk, obsessed with his own bodily emissions and is unpleasant to be around. (As I said when the show started, Slow Horses delights in watching the once and hopefully-future George Smiley playing someone so grubby.)

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He’s joined by Jack Lowden as River Cartwright, a would-be superspy and the scion of a great family of spymasters parked at Slough House for spoilery reasons. Of course, much as River may chafe at his exile, he’s not quite able to live up to his own expectations. Much like the rest of the team, that Lamb delights in tormenting, River lacks some top-tier spy talents.

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Naturally, despite being a team of “losers, misfits and boozers,” Lamb and his crew are regularly drawn into MI5’s grander intrigues. This time around, a central London shopping center is blown up, which precipitates a rabid hunt for the culprit. Except this time, the answers aren’t in MI5’s hands, but the slow horses themselves, but that’s about as much as I can say.

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Much as I love the world the series depicts, drawn from Mick Herron’s series of books, I adore its dialog. Creator Will Smith (not that one), who recently won the series’ first Emmy, worked on The Thick of It. The British sitcom is the progenitor for Veep, and also laid the groundwork for Succession two series that also share a love for the almost operatic use of profanity.

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A show like Slow Horses should be dominating the news cycle every single episode, but I think we all know why it remains in a smaller niche. That it’s on Apple TV+ certainly limits the number of people who are able to watch it and, by extension, fall in love with it. After all, despite having the world’s most well-heeled backer and access to every iPhone in the world, it still has a quarter of Netflix’s user figures.

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But don’t let its platform hold you back, especially when you can pay for a month’s worth and watch all four seasons in a week, depending on your patience. It’s certainly worth it.

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What to read this weekend: Preventing an asteroid apocalypse, and Cult of the Lamb’s first arc wraps up

https://img.inleo.io/DQmbQG1793SEgrcCTbTABD8hmaKXoYNjj3pyxAmUHVYMN91/63eaa550-834c-11ef-b37e-2fe23b3ef6f7.webp

New releases in fiction, nonfiction and comics that caught our attention.

Normally a book described as being largely about a teen love triangle wouldn’t be something I’d reach for, but I decided to give this one a go after reading many glowing reviews, and found myself drawn in by Louise Erdrich’s prose right away. There is a love triangle, yes, but The Mighty Red is about much more than that. It covers a lot of ground, including the struggles of a farming community facing economic recession, land degradation and concerns about the chemicals being used to keep the land productive.

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The Mighty Red follows characters Crystal and Kismet, a mother and daughter, and the people in their orbits in rural North Dakota. There is a tragedy that underlies much of the story (and a hint of the supernatural), but there’s a fair amount of humor mixed in too.

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How to Kill an Asteroid: The Real Science of Planetary Defense

Every so often I’ll be minding my own business, just going about my day, when I suddenly remember the terrifying possibility that a small asteroid could someday strike Earth and do unfathomable damage. Mood ruined. This exact scenario is something that scientists have been investigating for decades and devising tactics to prevent. Promisingly, they’ve made some major strides in recent years. In How to Kill an Asteroid: The Real Science of Planetary Defense, science journalist Robin George Andrews dives into the ongoing efforts to develop a planetary defense strategy, like asteroid redirection.

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The beginning of this book reads like an apocalyptic nightmare, which is to say it’s pretty engrossing. As Andrews moves on from the hypothetical and into reality — the history and the science that the book is all about — he keeps it interesting with a conversational writing style that makes even the jargon feel readable.

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Cult of the Lamb

Despite being obsessed with Cult of the Lamb, it’s taken me a little while to get around to reading the comics, the first of which was released back in June. I finally snagged issues 1-4 this week, though, after the fourth and final book of this arc was released, and it’s been a lot of fun reading through them. The comics (so far) rehash the game’s already established lore — how the Lamb came to be leading a cult, why they’re fighting the Bishops of The Old Faith, etc — but there’s some new stuff to latch onto even for people who already know the story really well. At least, new to me (did you guys know Clauneck is a duck?).

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Running a cult is complicated stuff, as anyone who has played the game can attest, and the comics get into the emotional ins and outs of that burden. It’s just as cute-yet-horrifying as you’d expect a Cult of the Lamb comic to be. Issues 1-4 are being collected in a volume called The First Verse that’s due to come out in December, but you can find them individually at your local comic store or in digital form.

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