Monday, October 03, 2005

Saturday Brothers

JACK
Jammed by the saturday-sickness (no assignments finished despite its urgency and the wAnt to finish them during saturdays) I end up in bed watching this 8:40 pm "you-better-watch-show". Yes, it may it may come a little bit cheesy, but the story is the most sensible, in terms of morality-fiCtion, in TV today. About brothers with a pot-smoking mom, it deals about teens, friends, family, the academe, and other issues that happen to most people. Though the setting is situated in America, watching it will make you feel at home with the show and will find yourself nodding in appreciation of the concepts Knocking on your head.

And

"On each episode, "JAck & Bobby" follows this young boy who will one day be President. Needless to say, the boy has No idea of his destiny. But the audience does. Set in the current day, the show uses flash-forward interviews with the future President's staff and confidantes to show us the greatness this boy will one Day find. From boyhood, to the world's most powerful man. It's an idea we've gotten away from, especially in these volatile times. But it's an idea Brad and Steve were determined to bring us back to: the simple American concept that anyone can be President.Welcome to "Jack & Bobby."" (Meltzer, co-creator of Jack and Bobby)


Bobby

From understanding the repuBlicans and the democrats to understanding what asthma can do to you, you'll find every episOde sensiBle, usefull, not so dramatic, and interesting. It runs for about 45 minutes, that every commercial in-between will seem to be shit. After watching, you'll find yourself stuck in front of the tube on Saturdays. You'll be stucked with it in anticipation on who of the two brothers will become America's next president.

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