Herbie, The Love Bug The 1982 series that was canned after only 5 episodes. Disney, in their infinite wisdom has never released it on ANY type of media.
We'll Meet Again, on PBS. Hosted by Ann Curry (a long overdue welcome back!), this is a show that reunites people who have experienced real historical events together and were then separated for decades. This is a fascinating show that combines history that the History channel could take notes on (did not know there was a Jewish ghetto in Shanghai during WWII, and that laundering of money, as in actual washing and pressing of U.S. dollars to increase their value, was an in-demand thing), with gut wrenching stories of oppression that were ultimately survived by the strength of family and love of friends. It's also at a "This Is Us" level of tear inducing that I did not expect. A real palate cleanser from the usual dreck.
I watched the pilot episode of the Back to the Future cartoon series on Youtube. It wasn't as good as I remember from when I was a kid.
Bellevue second episode "He's Back" The X-Files season one episodes "Ice" and "Space" The X-Files season eleven episode five "Ghouli"
I was in the break room at work staring out the window when two snow geese started beating the stuffing out of each other. I started excitedly yelling 'Goose Fight! Goose Fiiiight!' to anyone who would listen. It was then that I realized I've been watching a bit too much 'Rick & Morty' lately.
Trailer Park Boys - S01E01 I've seen them all a million times but started at the beginning and working my way through them all again. Have 'em all on DVD lol
Now that E.R. is on Hulu, I've been dipping into various seasons, and I've been going back and forth between that and this new Fox series The Resident, starring Matt Czuchry (Cary from The Good Wife, a show I liked a lot, including this actor). Needless to say the comparison is stark in the disparity of quality. What's amazing is that there was a pretty sharp drop-off in quality as E.R. wore on into double-digit seasons, but even the last season (15!) was still miles better than this mess on Fox. There were always moral quandaries on E.R. about patient care and ethics, but they were judicious in having doctors basically selling their soul to break the Hippocratic oath (and I just watched one very powerful episode in which Mark Greene let a mass murderer die-chilling the way they shot it). There are apparently no such qualms on the very jaded Resident, as doctors seek to cut corners or break rules at every turn.