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The SandboxThe Sandbox is a collection of off-topic discussions. Humorous threads, Sports talk, and a wide variety of other topics can be found here. If it's NOT an adult-themed topic, then it belongs here
There's nothing better than settling in after a long day with a cup of tea and watching your favorite show. I'm a HUGE fan of the Investigation Discovery channel (specifically Web of Lies, Evil Lives Here, and Wives With Knives). I also enjoy Obsession: Dark Desires, which is what I'm watching right now.
Every now and then when my insomnia kicks in, I indulge in old episodes of Jersey Shore. Ron and Sammie's toxic relationship made for some great reality television!
The old Late Night With David Letterman show on NBC was fantastic. Not the one he retired from in the last couple of years on ABC but the one before that. They did all kinds of crazy stunts on it and it was just an "anything can happen" kind of atmosphere. Such as this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dYjdKbMT_c
Mostly I work my way through my fairly extensive DVD collection, which is heavily skewed to 60s-70s TV series. Lately:
Danger Man: Starring Patrick McGoohan. That's the original British title; it aired as Secret Agent in the US, complete with the iconic Johnny Rivers theme song, "Secret Agent Man":
The Prisoner: Considered by some to be the "sequel" to Danger Man/Secret Agent; starring McGoohan as the enigmatic "Number 6"... "I am not a number, I am a free man!"
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea: Schlocky Irwin Allen sci-fi about a privately owned super-submarine. Allen was probably best known as the producer of Lost in Space, but I always preferred earlier nautically themed series.
The Rockford Files: James Garner as ex-con PI Jim Rockford, and Stuart Margolin in the supporting role as Rockford's sleazy sidekick Angel Martin. Featuring the iconic "answering machine" opening before the theme song. "This is Jim Rockford. At the tone leave your name and message, I'll get back to you." "Jimmy, old buddy, buddy. It's Angel! You know how they allow you one phone call? Well, this is it."
Batman: The classic 1966 series which defined "camp" for old farts like me. Featured a classic "window gag" routine when Batman and Robin were scaling the side of a building trying to get the drop on the baddies. Producer William Dozier wasn't beneath using the window gag to promote another show he was producing: