#91
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^^^ Michael's interview with Rick Beato was also good. If yacht rock is your super power, may as well flex it as much as possible ...
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#92
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Quote:
https://pezcyclingnews.com/features/...o-film-review/ The film: https://youtu.be/vQ0pUiTXV40?si=SJUcLOy8lPD_OHca A short from that same period, if you haven't seen it, is Louis Malle's Vive Le Tour: https://youtu.be/wiWQ6dAVzy8?si=gDRE3ZFbKDdKs0sm |
#93
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Other sports docs:
The Birth of Big Air, 30 for 30 film about BMX pioneer Mat Hoffman. He was just a few years too early for the period of televised extreme sports popularized by the X Games on ESPN etc., but he was out there trying to do amazing **** before just about everybody else, such as getting 25 feet of air above a 25-foot ramp that he built himself at home in Oklahoma. Among other things: He experiments with putting a weed whacker engine on his bike, to get more speed for the run-in, but said it threw the balance off, and also that it was just too janky, even for Oklahoma. And among the many times he hurt himself, he calls an ambulance, asks the cost when it arrives, and then sends it away because the price is too high. Good times. 100 Foot Wave, a six-part series on HBO about the career of surfer Garrett McNamara and his quest to surf the huge waves in Nazare, Portugal. Not sure about this but I think McNamara helped to make this place a big-wave surfing destination. Also fascinating to me is that the producers spent years with McNamara and his family making this series--the thing about documentaries is that you don't necessarily how they'll turn out when you start the project. It's on Max, aka HBO. Last edited by alessandro; Yesterday at 03:51 PM. Reason: **** |
#94
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One more: Wild Wild Country, on Netflix. A six-part series about the absolutely bat****-crazy story of the 1980s, when the Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and his followers, the Rajneeshees, buy 80,000 acres of sagebrush and scrub in eastern Oregon and start building their own community. Things do not go well. A really well-made series about the nature of good and evil, with interviews with Rajneeshees, townspeople, and local ranchers, one of whom is a Nike heir.
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