Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 9/18/23 — 9/24/23


Today, I was standing outside when there was suddenly a loud clasp of thunder, rain started to pour out of the sky, and a piece of hail bounced off the roof of my house and then struck me in the forehead!  OUCH!  Of course, being in Texas, the sun was shining the entire time.  Interestingly enough, the storm itself was over in 20 minutes.  As the sun set, the clouds in the sky glowed a deep red color.

This can only mean that October is quickly approaching and with it, our annual Horrorthon!  Horrorthon begins next Sunday and I can’t wait to celebrate everyone’s favorite time of the year with you all!

Here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week!

Films I Watched:

  1. The Best of Times (1986)
  2. The Boogie Man Will Get You (1942)
  3. The Devil Bat (1940)
  4. The George McKenna Story (1986)
  5. Karate Warrior (1987)
  6. The Man Who Changed His Mind (1936)
  7. Red Eye (2005)
  8. Spellbound (1945)
  9. Suburbia (1983)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Big Brother
  2. Degrassi: The Next Generation
  3. Dr. Phil
  4. The Hitchhiker
  5. Jennifer Slept Here
  6. Nightmare Cafe
  7. Saved By The Bell
  8. South Central
  9. T. and T.
  10. Welcome Back Kotter
  11. Yes, Prime Minister

Books I Read:

  1. Missing (1990) by R.L. Stine

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Beck
  2. Britney Spears
  3. The Chemical Brothers
  4. Christina Aguilera
  5. Coldplay
  6. Goblin
  7. Jakalope
  8. Katy Perry
  9. Michael Fredo
  10. Moby
  11. Muse
  12. Patti Smith
  13. Phantogram
  14. Phil Collins
  15. Red Hot Chili Peppers
  16. The Rolling Stones
  17. Saint Motel
  18. Siouxsie and the Banshees
  19. Taylor Swift

Live Tweets:

  1. Karate Warrior
  2. Red Eye
  3. The Best of Times
  4. The Being

Trailers:

  1. Butcher’s Crossing
  2. Miranda’s Victim
  3. Woman In the Maze
  4. Dream Scenario
  5. Impuratus
  6. The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes
  7. The Exorcists
  8. The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial Trial

News From Last Week:

  1. Box Office: ‘Expend4bles’ Flops With $8.3 Million Debut as ‘The Nun II’ Claims No. 1 Again
  2. Maury Povich Offers Matthew McConaughey DNA Test to See if He’s Woody Harrelson’s Brother: ‘I Would Come Out of Retirement’ for It
  3. Pierce Brosnan’s RFK Jr. Support Sparks Fury From Fans: ‘Traitor’
  4. Eric Clapton raises beaucoup bucks for RFK, Jr.
  5. POTUS refers to rapper LL Cool J as ‘boy’ while speaking to Congressional Black Caucus
  6. Michigan Senate candidate Hill Harper spent years doing gigs for Wells Fargo as a promotional speaker, conflicting with his progressive message.
  7. Hollywood studios put ‘best and final’ deal forward. WGA strike nears an ending
  8. Writers Guild Reaches Tentative Agreement With Studios and Streamers, Union Says

Links From Last Week:

  1. My Ode to Mabon
  2. Tater’s Week in Review 9/22/23
  3. “Shirley You Can’t Be Serious!” The Oral History Of “Airplane!” Celebrating Classic 70’s Cinema…
  4. Hip-Hop — and America — Are Changing, and Not for the Better
  5. The Short, But Spectacular Career of Freddie Prinze
  6. Cancer Chronicles

Links From The Site:

  1. I reviewed Miami Vice, Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, South Central, T and T, and Welcome Back Kotter!
  2. I shared my week in television and an AMV of the Day!
  3. I shared a scene from Ghostbusters!
  4. I reviewed The George McKenna Story, A Very Delicate Matter, Double Nickels, and Prizzi’s Honor!
  5. Erin shared Dragnet, Nickel Detective, Liberty, Complete Love, Sports Fiction, Dr. Bobbs, and Danger Trail!
  6. Erin shared The Sinister Covers of Sinister Stories!
  7. Jeff shared music videos from Def Leppard, The Alice Band, White Lion, Warlock, Peter Gabriel, L.A. Guns, and Bauhaus!

More From Us:

  1. At her photography site, Erin shared Cottage, Sky, Woodpecker, Watcher, Rainbow, Rainbow 2, and Angry Bird!
  2. At Pop Politics, Jeff shared On Dress Codes and American Tragedy!
  3. At my music site, I shared songs from Patti Smith, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Phantogram, Phil Collins, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Rolling Stones, and Muse!
  4. I wrote Big Brother for the Reality TV Chat Blog!

Want to see what I watched, read, and listened to last week?  Click here!

Retro Television Reviews: The George McKenna Story (dir by Eric Laneuville)


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sundays, I will be reviewing the made-for-television movies that used to be a primetime mainstay.  Today’s film is 1986’s The George McKenna Story!  It  can be viewed on Netflix, under the title Hard Lessons!

George Washington High School is a school that has defeated many well-meaning principals.  The hallways are full of drugs and gang members.  A good deal of the student body never shows up for class.  Fights are frequent.  The police are a common sight.  The majority of the teachers are men like Ben Proctor (Richard Masur), burned-out and content to hide in the teacher’s lounge.

New Orleans-raised George McKenna (Denzel Washington) is the latest principal and, from the minute that he shows up at the school, he seems a bit more confident than the other principals that the school has had.  He barely flinches when a raw egg hits his suit.  When he hears a fight occurring, he doesn’t hesitate to head down the hall to investigate.  McKenna is determined to make George Washington High into a worthwhile institution and that means inspiring both the students and the teachers.

When it comes to films about dedicated educators trying to reform a troubled school, most films tend to take one of two approaches.  One approach, the well-intentioned but not always realistic liberal approach, features the teacher or the principal who demands respect but who also treats the good students and teachers with equal respect and who turns around the school through the power of benevolence.  The other approach is the one where the principal or teacher grows frustrated and turns into an armed vigilante who forces the students to shut up and learn.  Think of The Principal or The Substitute or Class of 1984.  The first approach is the one that most teachers claim that they try to follow but I imagine that, for most of them, there’s an element in wish-fulfillment to be found in watching the second approach.  In the real world, of course, neither approach is as automatically successful as it is in the movies.

The George McKenna Story was made for television and it’s based on a true story so, not surprisingly, it follows the first approach.  Denzel Washington plays McKenna as someone who could probably handle himself in a fight if he ever got into one but, for the most part, the film portrays McKenna as succeeding by treating his students with more empathy and respect that they’ve gotten from anyone else in their lives.  Though cranky old Ben Proctor thinks that McKenna’s methods are foolish and that he’s asking the teachers to do too much, McKenna starts to turn the school around.  One student, whose father was threatening to make him drop out, ends up getting nearly straight A’s and reciting Shakespeare.  Unfortunately, not everyone can be rescued.  One student is arrested for murder and taken away by the cops but McKenna is still willing to be there for that student.  McKenna doesn’t give up on his students and, unlike that music teacher in The Class of 1984, he doesn’t allow them to fall through a skylight either.

The George McKenna Story is a predictable film.  It’s easy to guess which student will be saved by McKenna’s approach and which student will end up getting stabbed in a gang fight and which student will end up in prison.  That said, the film definitely benefits from Denzel Washington in the lead role.  Washington exudes confidence from the minute that he appears on screen and you’re left with little doubt that if anyone could reform a school simply through good intentions, it would definitely be Denzel Washington.