Missus abroad. A ‘free’ house. What to do? 13:22 - Sep 24 with 3764 views | The_Romford_Blue | So the missus went away yesterday (or 2am this morning to be specific) for a week with her sister and the kids. So I’m home alone (asides from the dog). I’ve got the week working from home to keep an eye on the dog and am already feeling spoilt for choice as to what to do. And by spoilt for choice, I actually mean I’m not entirely sure what I want to do. Seeing as she won’t be here to cook, I’ve got my eye on doing a few of my own favourites (a curry, a bolognese, maybe a fry up one morning). Might get a Chinese in one night maybe. I haven’t really ever lived alone (home, then uni accommodation, then moved in with mates for two years at uni, then home, then in here with the bird). I’m not worried I’ll burn the house down or anything, I am somewhat thinking I’m going to be bored though. I may have to entertain you all more this week on here to pass the time (#ThankYouRommy). But my question for you distinguished gentleman of TWTD, what do you do when the missus leaves and you’re on your ones. And let’s assume I don’t intend to host any orgies. |  |
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Missus abroad. A ‘free’ house. What to do? on 23:59 - Sep 24 with 102 views | ArnoldMoorhen |
Missus abroad. A ‘free’ house. What to do? on 23:26 - Sep 24 by mrfixit426 | Jackson Lamb is one of the greatest tv characters of modern times. Maybe of all times. |
Jackson Lamb is superb. I was sad that Min didn't continue into later series. I think Dustin Demri Burns is a hugely underrated actor and comedian. If you love Slow Horses and haven't seen it yet then I can heartily recommend Giri/Haji. It went massively under the radar but is a thing of beauty about a Japanese cop who comes to London as part of an investigation into the Yakuza and is teamed up with a local British detective. There's more to it, but it pays homage to Japanese culture in a really original way, including one key scene being acted completely differently according to the very formal rules of classical silent Japanese theatre. Honest! And then there are family dynamics, big baddies, gratuitous violence and more. A similar feel to Slow Horses in some ways, mainly because it largely centres on a relatively small, tight-knit main cast. |  | |  |
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