tv is changing dramatically now with 150 channels that might be available in the near future. there are a lot of things we do you couldn t have on network television. this is more a celebration of culture, opening the doors and allowing america to come on inside. there s always something on television and some of it may be better than we deserve. that was cool. [ cheers and applause ] listen to it. oh, they know when it hits the bottom, it will be 1990, good-bye to the 80s. ten, nine, eight eight, eight, eight! oh, will this horrible year never end? when the 90s began, we started to see a lot of experimentation. and the simpsons i think in some senses was inspired by not necessarily hatred of television, but a distrust of a lot of the ways in which television was talking to us. tv respects me. it laughs with me. not at me. you re stupid. doh! i think the sitcoms of the 80s were such a warm, safe, humor. i love you guys. you see? the ki
really, here? fantastic. well, we ve got to dig those performances from the vault. i can t think what it was. it was something. ken loach, welcome to this cultural life. it s a great pleasure to come. and good to see you. you, too. you were born in 1936. you grew up in the midlands. tell me about your family. what did your parents do? my father was an electrical engineer. took his apprenticeship in the mines. the whole family, my father s family were miners from the warwickshire coalfields, and he worked at alfred herbert s machine tool factory all his life. ao odd years. skilled worker, then? yes, a skilled worker, electrician. and he had a work ethic that was formidable. he worked seven days a week and my mother had been a hairdresser. but like women of that time, it was a matter of pride for my father that she should not have to work. but. ..lovely woman, very kind. what sort of cultural upbringing did you have at home? well, it was a very normal, i guess, suburban house,
i can t think what it was. it was something. ken loach, welcome to this cultural life. it s a great pleasure to come. and good to see you. you, too. you were born in 1936. you grew up in the midlands. tell me about your family. what did your parents do? my father was an electrical engineer. took his apprenticeship in the mines. the whole family, my father s family were miners from the warwickshire coalfields, and he worked at alfred herbert s machine tool factory all his life. ao odd years. skilled worker, then? yes, a skilled worker, electrician. and he had a work ethic that was formidable. he worked seven days a week and my mother had been a hairdresser. but like women of that time, it was a matter of pride for my father that she should not have to work. but. ..lovely woman, very kind. what sort of cultural upbringing did you have at home? well, it was a very normal, i guess, suburban house, semidetached, in nuneaton. erm. cinemas nearby? there were cinemas, but we didn t g
lesson for his own about quitting is getting attention on social media. skier posted a video on instagram of his son running uphill after he decided to quit the soccer team. the caption reading and part, consequences enforcing is not my favorite part of parenting but learning from them is important. this was about so much more than a game of soccer, it s teaching our kids never to quit. first of all, new timeslot but same great discussion. felt late? growing up in primetime, exciting. good to be with you and i think it s a great topic to start with. a lot of us know a great skier, and this is a lesson he s posting about his son who with the soccer team and posted this video on instagram and it s causing an outcry for folks saying this punishment having to run up the hill is too harsh. i know you ve got two teenage girls, what you think, too harsh or appropriate? of the offer of mean guys for a better america, i think i may have written the book on this. i think so.
[laverne] it would take a revolution for someone like me to have a career as an actor, and the revolution is netflix. you re right. [man] there s a new player in the original content game. uh, is this a bad time? [man] this flood of actors, writers, ideas just gushing into tv. i don t have time to explain lesbian shit to you. the people who are gonna change the narrative out there is us. [woman] there s an avalanche of new streaming services. word of the year? binge-watch. when you play the game of thrones, you win or you die. this is gonna be so fun! [theme music] [david] television used to be, here s what we re showing you, and here s your only chance to see it. [james] when there were fewer tv options, there wasn t as much room for experimentation and the creativity that we ve seen an explosion of. [lorraine] coming into 2010, hbo is like the king of the prestige drama. to those beautiful, ignorant bastards. [cheering] when scorsese does boardwalk empire, it just speaks