The weekly formula as we know it, the smart approach
Now I will announce something that is known to everyone who watches the TV series. In the USA, channels such as NBC, CBS, Fox broadcasting terrestrially, and channels such as HBO, Showtime, Netflix, which broadcast weekly, cable or digital broadcast, tell seasonal stories. The reason for this is that the channels broadcasting the terrestrial broadcast do not want to lose the aunts and uncles who stopped by while zapping irrelevant. This is why The Blacklist often takes the form of “the worst of the week” in terms of structure. However, it does not do this in the usual CSI way. Yeah, there’s a bad every week and we’re taking it down. But the writers take a very fresh approach on this, and as a regular audience you never feel like an idiot. It is as follows:
Immersive main story
The main issue of the show is a blacklist that the main character Raymond Reddington has accumulated over 20 years as an intermediary for high-level criminals. Each chapter is about one element from this blacklist.
While this satisfies the weekly formula we talked about above, why there is such a list in Red, what will happen at the end of that list, why Red decided to clear that list with the FBI, and why for a profiler who at that time seemed so irrelevant from the first episode? I won’t say anything without Keen ”keeps you busy throughout the long story. That is, speaking of …
Mystery Pattern
In the post-lost world, it’s common for TV series to finish their episode finale shocking – and making the next episode compulsory for those who watch it over and over. Few TV shows alone can do this for really cheap, avoiding Dallas-style audience-fooling corners. The Blacklist belongs to this elite group. Just like the first seasons of Homeland at the time, The Blacklist successfully accomplishes the process of making you crave for the next episode by not revealing the loyalty and motivation of the characters. You can think of it like this: If the series ending with the end of the episode “DANK” is the equivalent of jump scare in horror cinema, the Blacklist’s rather ingenious films that scare you by stretching you without saying “ho”.
A sense of threat that never goes away
I will come to that key separation again but; again there is a distinction between terrestrial broadcasting and cable broadcasting. The TV series that make 23 episodes per year, and the series broadcasted on the most basic networks, usually appeal to the smallest of the common floors; they are afraid of killing their characters. The Blacklist is not a Game of Thrones issue either. However, he is still able to construct that sense of threat without caring about the disadvantages of being a terrestrial broadcast series; because, by reflecting his characters with very successful shots, he leads them to incredibly rough pain. “Will it be okay?” the array is burning enough fire to make you think …
Impressive “super” villains
From the very first episode, Raymond sends a mail to the FBI saying, “The list of the most wanted criminals in your possession is like a joke, you don’t even know the main villains”, and the series fills in this seal sentence in the following sections. The characters confronting Red and the FBI team are both explaining “mysterious big-world events” in a Dan Brown-like way (as it turns out, that super assassin made all of those famous assassinations), and they seem to have each leapt from the audition of the James Bond movie. Meeting a new one in each episode, that’s why it’s huge.
Sturdy Staff
The names that portray the side characters in the cast of the series do not perform like that. As Megan Boone Elizabeth, she can reflect enough complex emotions. Others are somewhat overshadowed, as the knee often rises on his shoulder anyway; but they do not embarrass the audience while they are doing their work in that shade.
Names such as Diego Klattenhoff, Parminder Nagra, Harry Lennix are more or less portraying the characters they have played in other TV series and movies; but it doesn’t stand out too much. Because there is one star, you cannot spare time for anything other than watching its brilliance.
James Apader
If I had watched this series before Age of Ultron, I swear, that movie wouldn’t have gotten out of my hand so easily. I’m talking very sincere. He wouldn’t say “it was good here, but it was raw here”, “I would spit in the eyes of Joss Whedon who made James Spader” what was he saying to the little person or the ehi ehi child “joke”. Of course I had watched Spader’s previous films. But after seeing in The Blacklist how charismatic, scary, captivating, surprising, immersive and insidious he can be at the same time, the Ultron text worthy of it officially infuriated me.
The Human Side of Elvis
What makes Elvis the true king is his rather unknown human aspect, rather than his musical career. Elvis spent half of his lifetime $ 4 billion (since 1954, almost $ 40 billion today, given inflation in the US) on charity work.
“I love seeing the expression of happiness on people’s faces when they receive a gift or when a problem is solved,” said Elvis. He is the only artist in the world of music to set up and run his own charity.
He is one of those people who, despite having an incredible wealth, never forgot what it means to be poor. Elvis, who took care to donate to hospitals throughout his life; He gave the American Cancer Association the right to use its name, actively participated in campaigns that highlighted the importance of early diagnosis in cancer, supported various health campaigns by taking photos while giving blood or vaccination.
Elvis donated one of his Rolls Royces in 1968 to be sold at auction for the benefit of mentally disabled children; In 1964, Franklin purchased Roosevelt’s presidential yacht Potomac and restored it to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. For years, this yacht has been used on trips to ensure that children with terminal illnesses spend their last days in the best possible way.
Elvis is known to immediately send a check to people in distress (especially those with health problems), as well as pay off debts that many people cannot pay or remove their mortgages. But since Elvis Presley does most of his work in secret, it is still unclear how much money Elvis spent on charity work.
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