Nobel laureate brought new discoveries of physics to the people
Jim McDermott
Jim McDermott writes about pop culture at jimmcdermott.substack.
Enraptured?: The sad, strange comfort of HBO’s ‘The Leftovers’
When HBO first announced that it had greenlit a television series about the Rapture, one would have been forgiven for assuming we were in for yet another twist on Hollywood’s seemingly endless obsession with the post-apocalyptic. Given the popularity of recent “scripturally inspired&rdqu
Dispatch From Los Angeles: Murrieta Revisited
The example of Christ looms large over the immigration debate here.
Not a Hollywood Ending: Robin Williams, RIP
“You’re only given a little spark of madness. You mustn’t lose it.”
A Broken, Humbled Heart: Netflix’s ‘Orange Is the New Black’
Netflix’s ‘Orange Is the New Black’
A Meditation on Sin: ‘César Chávez’ and the ongoing struggle for labor justice
I once had a homiletics professor who said not to worry too much if it appears that members of the congregation are daydreaming during your homily. A homily, he pointed out, is not an act of persuasion. You’re not up there trying to prove some point. (Or if you are, God help the people.) A goo
Beltway Shakespeare: Treachery and vanity in ‘House of Cards’
I can’t tell whether I was actually sick the week season two of Netflix’s House of Cards dropped, or if I was glued to the couch because I just couldn’t stop watching.
Blow the House Down: The big, bad ‘Wolf of Wall Street’
Jim McDermott, S.J., reviews the big, bad “Wolf of Wall Street,” up for five Oscars at this Sunday’s Academy Awards.
He Who Is: ‘The Doctor’ Turns 50
Late on Sunday nights when I was a kid I used to sneak downstairs to our family TV room, where more often than not my father was asleep in his chair, the news or sitcom reruns droning on. I would do my best to slip the remote control from off his chair, turn down the volume and switch the channel. I
Superheroes, Sex and the Aged: The Fall on TV (and Netflix)
Last year a number of critics complained that there are actually now so many good shows on television (mostly on cable) that they could no longer keep up with them all.And yet they keep on coming. Over the next few weeks in Hollywood’s small screen version of Christmas dozens of new and return
