I don't know how you might feel about American Network TV shows...
Personally, IMHO, many - and on some nights, most - Suck.
Enter the BBC... or, to be more accurate, BBCA (BBC America).
In one word... "Brilliant".
Brilliantly original shows, Brilliantly cast, Brilliant acting, Brilliantly clever, smart and funny writing with Brilliant twists and unexpected turns.
Take, for example, the show called "Being Human".
Premise:
"George (Russell Tovey) and Mitchell (Aidan Turner) work in anonymous drudgery as hospital porters in Bristol, England. They lead lives of quiet desperation under the burden of a terrible secret - Mitchell's a vampire and George a werewolf... Not known, historically, to pal around with each other. But, Mitchell and George have become friends and confide in each other. Deciding to start life afresh and leave behind the dark side (the two young men take special measures to try to avoid killing people), they move into a house, only to find that Annie (Lenora Crichlow), the ghost of a woman killed in mysterious circumstances, haunts it. As the monster threesome deal with the challenges of their new life together, they're united in their strong desire to be "normal", to blend in with their human neighbors... to Be Human."
(From: bbca.com)
Regardless of how corny the description may sound... It's a Fantastic show!
I've included three videos - below - that introduce each of the characters... Just to give you a... uh, taste.
Enjoy!
Peace.
L.
Amusing and Informative, Your Lil' Sister Loves to Get the 'Scoop' on the Mainstream Media and To Present a Variety of Obscure, Under-Reported and Decidedly-More Newsworthy Items From Around The Globe; You'll Also Be Privy To Pieces of My Own Personal Paranormal Phenomena; and Frequently Hear of Things Your Parents, Clergy, Society and Uncle Sam didn't bother to tell you. But, I will... In Other Words: The Way This Grrrl Sees It!
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Women On The Frontline For Human Rights
(From: Amnesty International (amnesty.org))
Women On The Frontline For Human Rights
10 December 2009
Women often bear the brunt of poverty and human rights abuses; but as activists they use these roles to trigger positive social change. To mark World Human Rights Day, Amnesty International spoke to three women who put their lives on the line in defence of human rights.
Women are affected by poverty, violence and human rights violations more than men because of the discrimination they face the world over. Over 70 per cent of the world’s poor are women. Women earn only 10 per cent of the world’s income but do two thirds of the world’s work.
Three quarters of the world’s illiterate are women. Women produce up to 80 per cent of the food in developing countries but own only one per cent of the land.
In spite of these overwhelming odds, women are often the most active agents of positive social change in their communities, working tirelessly to improve their lives and the situation of their families. Women are responsible for some of the most effective grassroots-based human rights work all over the globe.
The three courageous women interviewed for this Amnesty International article are:
1.) Gertrude Hambira, General Secretary of the General Agricultural and Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ)
2.) Zebo Sharifova, head of the League of Women’s Lawyers, Tajikistan
3.) Aminatou Haidar, Western Saharan human rights defender who has been on hunger strike since 15 November to protest her expulsion from Laayoune in Western Sahara by the Moroccan authorities. She is currently stranded in Lanzarote airport in Spain’s Canary Islands.
To Read The Interviews/Article, Please Go To The Amnesty International Website (<From: Amnesty International (amnesty.org))
Women On The Frontline For Human Rights
10 December 2009
Women often bear the brunt of poverty and human rights abuses; but as activists they use these roles to trigger positive social change. To mark World Human Rights Day, Amnesty International spoke to three women who put their lives on the line in defence of human rights.
Women are affected by poverty, violence and human rights violations more than men because of the discrimination they face the world over. Over 70 per cent of the world’s poor are women. Women earn only 10 per cent of the world’s income but do two thirds of the world’s work.
Three quarters of the world’s illiterate are women. Women produce up to 80 per cent of the food in developing countries but own only one per cent of the land.
In spite of these overwhelming odds, women are often the most active agents of positive social change in their communities, working tirelessly to improve their lives and the situation of their families. Women are responsible for some of the most effective grassroots-based human rights work all over the globe.
The three courageous women interviewed for this Amnesty International article are:
Gertrude Hambira has been threatened and told to leave her job several times
© Amnesty International
1.) Gertrude Hambira, General Secretary of the General Agricultural and Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ)
Women wanting rights advice go to Zebo Sharifova's League of Women's Lawyers
© Amnesty International
2.) Zebo Sharifova, head of the League of Women’s Lawyers, Tajikistan
Aminatou Haidar has been on hunger strike at Lanzarote airport since 15 November
© Berserk Productions
3.) Aminatou Haidar, Western Saharan human rights defender who has been on hunger strike since 15 November to protest her expulsion from Laayoune in Western Sahara by the Moroccan authorities. She is currently stranded in Lanzarote airport in Spain’s Canary Islands.
To Read The Interviews/Article, Please Go To The Amnesty International Website (<From: Amnesty International (amnesty.org))
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