- Joined
- Apr 7, 2013
- Messages
- 120,688
I guess I'm the only one that has never heard of it.He’s from the south, not jersey.
I guess I'm the only one that has never heard of it.He’s from the south, not jersey.
YesI guess I'm the only one that has never heard of it.
I wouldn’t know it without sopranos.I guess I'm the only one that has never heard of it.
We started it but have only made it a few episodes in.Finishing up Succession.
Not bad.
Growing up in NJ, this is correct.Yep. Capicola is awesome. It's everywhere. One of the meats in an Italian hoagie, which is by far the best hoagie.
Crap. I’ll see it tonight or tomorrow. That show has gone off the rails a little bit this season.The Barry finale was a bit of a gut punch.
I thought the McDonald’s vs Burger King was pretty good too.Growing up in NJ, this is correct.
Kind of switching over to the thread topic. I watched a series on Amazon Prime called The Food That Built America. It's about how some iconic American staples took root, the competition between two of the biggest of the time and their battle for supremacy.
Subway and Blimpie were two of the original sub shops, always trying to one up each other. One of the keys to the battles was a company creating a signature item that distinguished them from the other. Blimpie came out with the Blimpie's Best and eventually Subway countered with the Italian BMT which basically was almost everything they had including Capicola.
The series originally aired on The History Channel, it's on Amazon Prime on their History Vault channel. Some of it is probably a bit melodramatic just for TV but factually accurate.
Coke v. Pepsi, McDonald's v. BK. Pizza Hut v. Domino's, Wendy's v. KFC, Kellogg v. Post cereals. I started watching it on a lark one night and ended up watching almost every episode.
Pizza Hut was started in Kansas, a long way from the east coast which was where pizza in the US originated.
CW Post was a patient in JH Kellogg's mental institution, who basically stole a personal recipe for granola cereal from him and commercialized it.
It's actually a very interesting series, very cutthroat dealings with a lot of competition.
I liked the ending just fine, with a few reservations as to how it happened.Finishing up Succession.
Not bad.
That one and Hershey vs Reese. It took some gonads to start your own company right under Hershey's nose while working there.I thought the McDonald’s vs Burger King was pretty good too.
The Barry finale was a bit of a gut punch.
I agree with "off the rails". I liked the first couple of seasons quite a bit, but then the twisted humor was replaced by a depressive cynicism. I thought Season 4 and the finale were smart but bleak. I didn't enjoy watching them.Crap. I’ll see it tonight or tomorrow. That show has gone off the rails a little bit this season.
Damn. Yeah. The first season was good. It kind of went downhill from there. It went from a comedy/drama to a drama with some dark comedy moments. By the end of season 4 it was more morbid curiosity than enjoyment.I agree with "off the rails". I liked the first couple of seasons quite a bit, but then the twisted humor was replaced by a depressive cynicism. I thought Season 4 and the finale were smart but bleak. I didn't enjoy watching them.
always funny; very underratedFred Armisen
My son thinks he is funny as shit, I have never found him all that funny.always funny; very underrated
Agreed. He gives off a creepy, pervert vibe.I have never found him all that funny.
No thanks.I found a great comedy on Netflix, Documentary Now!
It is a parody of famous documentaries that was around in 2015 and has four seasons.
Lorne Michaels, Fred Armisen, Bill Hader and Seth Meyers produced and has a number of stars in guest roles like Owen Wilson, Jack Black, Cate Blanchett, Michael Keaton, . I just found a random episode (Season 3, episode 1 & 2).
This is just funny as shit and extremely well done.
KNo thanks.