Two young lovers find their romance tragically doomed by the bitter feud between their families in this classic drama series.Two young lovers find their romance tragically doomed by the bitter feud between their families in this classic drama series.Two young lovers find their romance tragically doomed by the bitter feud between their families in this classic drama series.
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This show was off the cuff. It looked like an improv half the time which was actually refreshing, because you had no idea what someone was going to say, especially when it came to the actor playing Sean (Peter Kenney). I was astounded by some of the things he got away with and it left me on the floor laughing... where is this dude? Has he done anything else? I want to see more of him! I see some of the other cast pop up here and there on TV- the guy who played Michael is now on Battle Star Galactica and is quite good. One of the three girls is a host on some network and the other two young ones I see a lot- Anyway if you get a chance check out this show, though it was not consistently good, it was ahead of its time as far as improving a dramatic/comedy.
I noticed nobody'd reviewed this show, so this is about the best summary I can come up with:
This show ran from 1996 into some time in 1997 as I recall. George Hamilton (or maybe it was a reasonable facsimilie) was the boss of some corporation. The usual plotting, scheming, and whining that accompany soap operas went on in abundance.
One thing differentiated this show from everything else on TV: either the whole show was done improvisationally, or NONE of the actors ever studied their scripts. This led to rambling, stumbling, even swearing -- the kind not normally allowed on network TV.
This show did for soap operas what the Blair Witch Project did for the price of tea in China. It sucked, but at least nobody noticed.
This show ran from 1996 into some time in 1997 as I recall. George Hamilton (or maybe it was a reasonable facsimilie) was the boss of some corporation. The usual plotting, scheming, and whining that accompany soap operas went on in abundance.
One thing differentiated this show from everything else on TV: either the whole show was done improvisationally, or NONE of the actors ever studied their scripts. This led to rambling, stumbling, even swearing -- the kind not normally allowed on network TV.
This show did for soap operas what the Blair Witch Project did for the price of tea in China. It sucked, but at least nobody noticed.
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- ConnectionsVersion of La culpa (1996)
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