Drops of God

I made it to season eight before Game of Thrones wrecked itself on the rocky shores of continuity. Ruined it.

Or the time Marge told Homer she was pregnant with Maggie.

See this demogorgon from Stranger Things?

It wasn’t released until a year, a freakin’ year, after the story took place. An abomination. Wrecked it.

Piss me off.

F.T.F.W!

:checkered_flag:

1 Like

My daughter, as a kid, banned me from watching lawyer shows with her. :rofl:

Oh, and she’s now a lawyer (and the ban probably remains in effect :rofl: )

Speaking of medical shows…I hate House.

That dumbass is wrong for the first 45 minutes of every show, then manages to pull the diagnosis out of his butt right as they are starting to drill into someone’s head, or whatnot. Dipshit.

Most of the problems could have been solved in the first ten minutes, especially if he did decent exams or had an assistant who had internet access.

Plus, he’s high on narcotics and has a pyscho-somatic limp.

Do not, ever, let this guy participate in your care.

I think you’d be better off with Nick Riviera.

1 Like

I’d rather have Guy Fieri as my surgeon.

If only someone told us HOUSE was a medical detective aka HOLMES … the show would have made much more sense.

You are all mixing science, documentaries and fiction. Yes superman can not fly, and the Roadrunner can not build machines. Almost all films and novels are just a story for pleasure. To bad you get enjoy the story and the characters. I thought this was a fun film.

What, are you kidding me?

The Roadrunner never built one machine. You can look it up.

(My son’s middle name is Wile E. Not kidding.)

Hey sorry for the late reply thing technically you’re correct but in the series what they wanted to say is that it can give the same quality white and red wines. Merlot can give you white wine it might be good but it will lose some of its primary aromas it will lose quality etc the lignage can give high-quality white and red while maintaining its primary characteristics and this has some truth to it because grapes like merlot and cabernet get a lot of aromas from the skin that get extracted during maceration that’s why if they give white wines it won’t always give good results. But pinot noir on the other hand has a really thin skin and the major aromas come from the pulp and not the skin that’s why it can make good whites sometimes but with lignage it has a really really thin skin even more than pinot and most of the aromas are in the pulp if not all that’s why you get great red and white from this grape.
Please note this is purely theoretical i don’t have a lot of real life experiences with lignage and i’m not familir with it’s process but this was the most logical answer

Just watched it this month (Aug 20205) so a little late to the game. It was cute but definitely a bit far-fetched. Heard that they might be coming out with a second season and would be happy to give that a go.

Something to look forward to in the new year!

1 Like

I’m just pleased to see a well crafted, and well acted, story that features wine in a positive and romantic light. Really enjoyed pouring a glass and watching the first season twice, so very much looking forward to a second season.

1 Like

This is great news!

We watched episode one of season two and will stop there.

3 Likes

I’ve largely enjoyed season 2, but I should also manage expectations. It’s important to remember that this is a show based on a Japanese manga (comic) so it was never going to take itself too seriously. That’s part of the charm though. There is plenty of quirky Japanese humor that would feel right at home in an anime and the mystique of the wine world is clearly overexaggerated. I’ve enjoyed it for what it is - it’s always fun seeing the famous wines that make cameo appearances.

Enough wine geekiness to make it interesting. Mentioning the chalk soils of Jerez in episode one without any other references.

I thought episode 1 of season two was dull. Then the show got better. Not always factual, but fun.

Are there any truly great wines from Georgia. I have heard about wines from Georgia but have not seen or had any

I can’t forgive Camille’s vile treatment of the main wine and not sharing with people who were obviously interested.

She’s no Berserker.

It was so self absorbed, I shan’t accommodate it.

:wink:

I’m being iconoclastic, I’ll be back.

2 Likes

I guess it depends on what you consider “truly great”.

I’ve had many. I suppose many people I know very well would think they’ve had none even if we tasted the same wines at the same table.