Just finished watching 'The Seven Ages Of Elvis' on Sky Arts. I'm not a massive fan, but do like quite a lot of his material. Plenty in the documentary to keep most music fans happy. There was one piece of narration that had me giggling uncontrollably: "In 1977 there were a 170 Elvis impersonators in the world. Today, there are 85,000. At this rate, by 2040, almost 1 in 10 of us will be Elvis." I'll be long dead.....but wouldn't that be interesting to see?
Homicide: Life on the Street (season three). The backstory to this season is probably more interesting than anything in the show. Still there's a few classic episodes among the compromises the producers/cast has to make. John Waters has a great bit as an exchanged prisoner.
Little House On The Prairie - "The Collection" - (guest) starring Johnny Cash. Also fine performance in a smaller role by June Carter Cash.
I just watched an episode which featured a pop group in which supposedly had toured the US in the 60s with the Kinks. The young policewoman correctly pointed out that that was not possible as the Kinks had been banned from touring there. A nice touch of realism I thought.
I picked up the first two seasons of I Dream of Jeannie for $6.95 at Dollar General. We watched the pilot.
That's like the Inspector George Gently episode where he has to infiltrate the Northern Soul scene to find a murderer.
Knight Rider, fourth-season episode called "The Scent of Roses" (OAD 1/3/86 on NBC [my fifth birthday, believe it or not!]); this was the one that was supposed to be the series finale, where Michael marries Stevie, and then literally seconds later, loses her to gunshots; he gets understandably furious
Vikings: Season 4 - Volume 2 (Blu-ray) Stranger Things: Season 2 (Netflix) Mindhunter: Season 1 (Netflix) House of Cards: Season 5 (Blu-ray)