This is the only sentence I can come up with to explain this barbaric atrocity.
After reading the change of circumstances and the novel, I wanted to know more about late novelist / playwright / screenwriter Paddy Chayefsky and found a movie. It shocked me a few years ago, but now I know it is even more amazing. Not only for writing but also the strict instructions of Sidney Lumet, or the Oscar-class performance by all participants, far exceeds the highest level of praise.
But what surprised me was that Chayevsky does not write like his imagination, it is not guiding our modern age. He seems to be capable of some sort of psychological time travel; he can see the arrival of SURVIVOR, or Maury Povich, Jerry Springer, Bill O'Reilly, and Paris Hilton since the 1990s . Even he may not know how he knows, but he feels surprised today and writes.
Of course, the overall picture has an outdated political and cultural analogy. But the core of his vision is still astonishingly clear and strange prediction. Regarding Howardville, there is not a single "celebrity" today to reflect this role today, but perhaps he is a complex of several different characters, and we are very much in the world of "news and entertainment" I have familiarity. Or maybe he has not achieved it yet. Maybe this is the real lead time of NETWORK.
After all, now "crazy like hell" is more meaningful than it was about 30 years ago.
The Movie Network (1976) is known for the true satire against the television network that seemed very real at that time. "Television is a damn amusement park," said Lead's Howard Bill. The movie shows major networks and corporate radio programs only for evaluation. This was a criticism of "Recent" declaration of the 2005 declaration of taxes by Rachel Madot, she did not reveal to the end - and he did not find anything that was neither very touching nor cursing. Evaluation and reference to Twitter are increasing, but the whole program is depressed. However, because there is an interest in Mr. Trump's final return, she has no additional problems as it gathers additional audience.
The Network (1976) contains a subgraph for network administrators to negotiate with terror organizations in the city and create a series of weekly episodes, each containing terrorist acts. Climax of the movie made the terrorist organization oppose the network's own unstable star, the news commentator Howard Bill. "Running Man" (1982) is a book by Stephen King describing a game show that players escape the world from "hunters" and are hunting and killing him, probably this book is Robert Shekley "Danger Award" The book is roughly adapted to the film of the same name in 1987. The movie removes most of the book's real television elements: its competition is now being done entirely on a large television studio.