Vinyl.

I’ve caught parts of a few episodes, but the Elvis episode was the first one I’ve caught all of. It’s an interesting comic book of what the record industry is like, you can almost see the borders between the scenes and the narration in boxes overlaid over it. It seems like most of what it’s saying is generally metaphorically true, but I’m still not sure if I like it.

But, I did love the call out to the Pink Fairies. It put a smile on my face, and made me think that their heart’s gotta be in the right place. I’ll have to stream the earlier episodes, and catch more as they air.

In the bar where Devon scammed John Lennon, Bob Marley and Peter Tosh were featured prominently as the band playing on stage.

Ah, thanks. I’d heard he’s supposed to be on there again, so I suppose I’ll follow along and hopefully hear more.

Update: showrunner Terence Winter has been fired at the end of the first season, and they are looking at a change in direction.

No surprise.

I’ve watched every episode, not a huge fan, I agree with the poster up thread that said Ritchie is too much of a train wreck to be believable.
I will watch the show as long as the woman with the curly blonde hair is on.
Wordman, I’m sure that like me, you’re keeping an eye on the guitars and amps to make sure they are the proper vintage :slight_smile:

It’s a good show. I enjoy it. But it’s not great. It has a lot of potential. They’ve got the period down, I think. They just need to work on the story and the acting.

That Windmills of Your Mind scene was a neat twist.

HBO cancels Vinyl’s second season: HBO’s $100 Million Debacle: Why The Network Gave Up On ‘Vinyl’ | Decider

I first noticed him as an actor. He had a decent sized role in one of my favorite shows of all time, Crime Story. His standup didn’t hit big until after that was canceled. I think he was billed as Andrew Clay.