Not the point of the show, but it makes me mad at the people complaining that 'people are too sensitive' and 'everything is so woke today', just makes me think 'you're not the one getting arrested and banned from playing places because you told some jokes' and 'you're not the one who can't stay in the hotel you're performing at because of segregation laws' (re season 3 episode 6), and 'you're not the one who could risk being arrested and fired if you came out of the closet'. Really makes me mad how people act like they're the victim because people are asking them to be considerate after centuries of sexism and racism and homophobia being 'the norm' and used in daily life as well as in all forms of the media.
@@mfenn7325 he's also almost always set up as Joel's opposite and Joel continuously rejects help/support from the women in his life after his relationship with Midge ends (probably because when they were together she helped him so much that she was really just propping him up and he realized that and then over-corrected.)
according to Luke Kirby this is the moment Lenny fell for Midge 🥺
Had me at Frank Sinatra and "One for my Baby".......
I like how the whole scene takes place within the song
Yea...I hadn't noticed that before.....possibly some foreshadowing given how Lenny Bruce s story goes....
Not the point of the show, but it makes me mad at the people complaining that 'people are too sensitive' and 'everything is so woke today', just makes me think 'you're not the one getting arrested and banned from playing places because you told some jokes' and 'you're not the one who can't stay in the hotel you're performing at because of segregation laws' (re season 3 episode 6), and 'you're not the one who could risk being arrested and fired if you came out of the closet'.
Really makes me mad how people act like they're the victim because people are asking them to be considerate after centuries of sexism and racism and homophobia being 'the norm' and used in daily life as well as in all forms of the media.
3:16 “You are lovely.”
Did the term play date exist in the late 1950s? Nonetheless, a fantastic scene.
it's the sixties man
Really? I thought he would feel the opposite.
He's deeply attracted to her. I think it was an opportunity to spend an extended period of time with her
@@mfenn7325 he's also almost always set up as Joel's opposite and Joel continuously rejects help/support from the women in his life after his relationship with Midge ends (probably because when they were together she helped him so much that she was really just propping him up and he realized that and then over-corrected.)