![]() Superhero purists may scoff at this, but those who love muscles, violence, and perverted jokes will lap it up. Īlia Shawkat, John Early, John Reynolds, and Meredith Hagner, Search Party Mark Schafer/HBO Max Three episodes will be available to start, with new episodes coming weekly. Search Party originally aired on TBS, where it was generally ignored for its first two seasons, but thankfully, HBO Max rescued it from getting lost in the shuffle of cable TV. The satirical comedy stars Alia Shawkat as Dory, an aimless twenty-something living in Brooklyn who decides to assign purpose to her life by tracking down an old college classmate who has recently gone missing. Since Season 1, Search Party has gone to all kinds of audaciously dark places, boldly switching genres every season by adding in elements of crime thrillers and court dramas, and continuously upping the dramatic stakes all while retaining its signature sharp sense of humor. It's the kind of show that keeps you on your toes, the kind of show that never reveals what direction it's headed in. John Wilson, How to With John Wilson Thomas Wilson/HBO It's a trip, but if you're willing to go along with it, you're in for a great ride. There's lots of "see the world through my eyes" programming out there, but the correct response to most of it is, "Thanks, but my own eyes would have sufficed there, pal." Not so with How to With John Wilson, a philosophizing Peeping Tom series that undergoes two sets of different "through my eyes" filtration. First, through its creator John Wilson, an introverted master of observation who distills complex social interactions to their simplest explanations, and second, through the lens of the camera he carries around New York City (as well as Idaho, Florida, and other spots his investigations take him), which concentrates his viewpoint into a single image, like that weirdo from American Beauty. It's all edited together to tell his story in ways no one expects. This makes How to With John Wilson sound like some pompous film student project, but it's anything but. It shares the same humor and hope of Nathan for You ( Nathan Fielder is an executive producer) in the way it shines a light on those who rarely get seen, like that guy who makes a living selling kits to restore foreskin (and was all too eager to demonstrate it), or Wilson's elderly landlord, the subject of the dazzling Season 1 finale in which he tries to cook her risotto as New York City enters COVID-19 lockdown. Not all handsets are able to do this due to various bluetooth driver bugs so some phones may be a little troublesome to setup.Wilson is able to take these ill-fitting themes and massage them into a cohesive, touching rumination on existence. Please note: This plugin needs a handset which can handle multiple bluetooth concurrent connections in a reliable manner. You can find them on sites like ebay and they're not too expensive. The 'LiveView' device is a little 'remote display'. Now supports HUD mode (heads up display) mode, so you can put the LiveView device on the dashboard and see it reflected in the windscreen at night! The plugins display will even match the graphical theme you have selected in Torque itself! Imagine being able to keep your phone in your pocket and still be able to see a digital boost gauge readout on the LiveView display, or any other OBD2 sensor that Torque can read. ![]() This is a plugin for the Sony Ericsson LiveView MN800 device and Torque - it allows you to display gauges from the Torque Pro OBD application on the remote display, so you can have a small digital (or gauge) readout on a separate location of your car ![]()
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