"The Glass House" finale is here -- so for whomever is still watching, we're down to Kevin, Andrea, Erica, Jeffrey and Mike. Who do you hope wins the money?
The final three ends up being Andrea Clark, Erica Russell and Kevin Braun. After a rather weird live finale with speeches, the viewers choose to give the $250,000 to Kevin. Did the right person win? Was it a satisfying ending?
Let's see how we got there ...
The major drama in the house is that Erica likes Kevin and had no idea about his special lady friend at home (until Jeffrey tells her). And while he insists to Andrea and Mike that he doesn't like her past a drunken kiss one night, the editors show that he has said differently to her. Erica totally likes him, which is kind of sad, but Mike likens it to "Fatal Attraction." Erica doesn't strike us as...
The final three ends up being Andrea Clark, Erica Russell and Kevin Braun. After a rather weird live finale with speeches, the viewers choose to give the $250,000 to Kevin. Did the right person win? Was it a satisfying ending?
Let's see how we got there ...
The major drama in the house is that Erica likes Kevin and had no idea about his special lady friend at home (until Jeffrey tells her). And while he insists to Andrea and Mike that he doesn't like her past a drunken kiss one night, the editors show that he has said differently to her. Erica totally likes him, which is kind of sad, but Mike likens it to "Fatal Attraction." Erica doesn't strike us as...
- 8/21/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Film producer behind popular TV cartoon commercials of the late 20th century
Lee Stork, who has died aged 97, produced some of the nation's favourite television commercials and later became a mainstay of the extraordinary resurgence in British animation during the 1980s and 90s, producing shorts for writer-directors. The UK contingent dominated the international festivals, and Lee was a winner of prizes without equal. This was partly because he had a nose for good projects and directors, but also because he could get the best out of them. He made things happen with a minimum of fuss, yet was able to spot creative as well as technical problems and steer his directors towards the right solution without usurping their role.
He achieved this with the benefit of three decades of having written, directed or produced several hundred commercials, culminating in the 1970s with classic campaigns for the Wyatt Cattaneo animation studio in London.
Lee Stork, who has died aged 97, produced some of the nation's favourite television commercials and later became a mainstay of the extraordinary resurgence in British animation during the 1980s and 90s, producing shorts for writer-directors. The UK contingent dominated the international festivals, and Lee was a winner of prizes without equal. This was partly because he had a nose for good projects and directors, but also because he could get the best out of them. He made things happen with a minimum of fuss, yet was able to spot creative as well as technical problems and steer his directors towards the right solution without usurping their role.
He achieved this with the benefit of three decades of having written, directed or produced several hundred commercials, culminating in the 1970s with classic campaigns for the Wyatt Cattaneo animation studio in London.
- 5/14/2010
- The Guardian - Film News
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