Pages
- My political lists
- Great political movies
- Great Political Documentaries
- Great political mistakes
- Political predictions they got wrong
- Great political fiction books
- Great political non-fiction books
- Great political poems
- Political computer games
- Great political TV series
- American politics resources
- Great scenes from political movies
- Political advertising
- Great political comics
- Great political plays
- Background of Dr Matthew Ashton
- Links
- My political lists
-
Recent Posts
Archives
Categories
DrMatthewAshton
- @paulspeacock Maybe if he wore heels he'd have something to pivot on? ;-) 12 hours ago
- @MusingJules Maybe they could have gone with "Palace pontifications"? ;-) 12 hours ago
- @SimonScottuk I think I'd prefer to see someone like Kenneth Clark in charge. He did a fairly decent job after Lamont if I remember right 12 hours ago
- Am watching George Osborne put the best possible spin on his performance as Chancellor. I'm not particularly convinced 13 hours ago
- @lorisarvendu Then they discovered the episodes and realised they had several thousand cassettes no one was likely to want 13 hours ago
June 2013 M T W T F S S « Nov 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Blog Stats
- 225,313 hits
Meta
Tags
2012 art arts BBC Radio Nottingham Bill Clinton books cold war Conservative Party culture David Cameron Democrats documentary economics Ed Miliband election elections entertainment film films great political movies Iraq life Matthew Ashton media movies news newspapers Nottingham Trent University Obama political documentaries political mistakes political movies political predictions politics President press Republicans Richard Nixon Sarah Palin Soviet Union Tea Party television TV USA Vietnam War-
Tag Archives: On the buses
Great political movies (No18) In the Loop
There is a long history in Britain of trying to turn sitcoms into movies and failing miserably. The 1970s seemed by the height of this trend, with adaptations of Dad’s Army, Are you Being Served, Steptoe and Son, Porridge and On the Buses. The one thing … Continue reading →
Posted in American politics, British politics, Review
|
Tagged Are you being served, Armando Iannucci, art, Cheers, culture, Dad's Army, David Rasche, entertainment, filn, Friends, In the Loop, James Gandolfini, life, Linton Barwick, Malcolm Tucker, Matt Le Blanc, Matthew Ashton, Mimi Kennedy, movies, Nottingham Trent University, On the buses, Peter Capaldi, political satire, politics, Porridge, Simon Foster, sitcoms, Sledgehammer, Steptoe and son, Taxi, television, The thick of it, War in Iraq, WMDs
|
8 Comments



