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People die every week on HBO'S "Six Feet Under," but even the corpses aren't as brain dead as the family of the next episode's stiff. Poor Harold Mossback had a heart attack in the back of a bus.
Ultimately, Six Feet Under was a show that celebrated life. Get married, find your protégé, don’t get shot by robbers, be happy, because to quote Brenda, “Future is just a f*cking concept ...
Six Feet Under frontman Chris Barnes was the guest on Full Metal Jackie’s weekend radio show. The band recently released their 11th studio album, ‘Crypt of the Devil’ and Jackie spoke with ...
However, Six Feet Under creator Alan Ball will be guiding the ship, wherever it goes or does not go. Via Variety: At this time, no writer is attached to the project.
Six Feet Under is a great series and the final episodes offer all the surprises anyone could stand. The entire series is highly recommended, but Season Five is an exceptional achievement.
HBO’s Six Feet Under followed the lives of the Fisher family from 2001-2005. In that time, the Fishers became a great TV family: a family that audiences could invest in, could practically dwell ...
Six Feet Under are returning with a fresh slab of meat and potatoes death metal titled Torment. The record will serve as the successor to 2015's studio effort Crypt of the Devil, with the covers ...
Well, "Six Feet Under" has tackled everything: adolescence, widowhood, gay relationships, drugs, infidelity. It sure ain't "Leave it to Beaver," but the main thing it's about is death.
Six Feet Under has aged better than American Beauty, which is a relief. I still like Beauty, but it does have some wince-inducing moments, most of them courtesy of the aforementioned Ricky.
"Six Feet Under," drama, Sundays at 9 p.m., HBO. It happens sometimes, even to the best of them. A good show -- in this instance, a great show -- goes bad. It happened to "The West Wing" because ...
So, unfortunately, is the pace of ”Six Feet Under” — it may take a few episodes for you to become absorbed in the quiet pain of this series’ family of body buriers. Peter Krause (”Sports ...
But since Six Feet Under, death has become an occasion for laughing – for reveling in dark humour – as much as for crying on US TV comedies and dramas alike. It made it okay to laugh at death.
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