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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

aussiemoose

I am an extrovert gay man living in Sydney who loves Indian food, current affairs, music, film and reading, caramel anything, and a beautiful guy called Steve who makes every day a delight. I am trying to get two novels in a trilogy ready for e-publication, love my iPhone & iPod, and am secretly Canadian in my soul. Life is fun, exciting and joyful and I aim to make the absolute most of it!

Let the pixels rejoice! “Community” and “Cougartown” both renewed

Posted on May 11, 2012May 23, 2012 by aussiemoose

One of the fun games my house mate and I love to play at this time of year – the preceding phrase is laced with so much sarcasm that small puppies and kittens may die if they come too close to it – is whether our favourite US TV shows Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Review: “Zombies Hate Stuff” by Greg Stones

Posted on May 11, 2012May 11, 2012 by aussiemoose

Frankly I am not sure why everyone is worried about this Mayan calendar end of the world thing this year. I think we have far more to fear from the impending zombie apocalypse. Or do we? Thanks to Greg Stone, the inspired, uber-talented man behind this amusing book, which also Continue Reading

Posted In Uncategorized

Road to Eurovision 2012: Week 6

Posted on May 10, 2012May 10, 2012 by aussiemoose

Welcome to another week of barely-controlled Eurovision madness! The clock is loudly ticking down to Eurovision (with an occasional unexpected key change and the odd pyrotechnic burst from the clock face… oh and is that a Ukrainian grandmother popping out of the time keeping piece on the hour every hour, Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Review: “The Five Year Engagement”

Posted on May 9, 2012May 10, 2012 by aussiemoose

This is a romantic comedy that desperately wants you to love it wholeheartedly. From the quirkiness of the Meet Cute (where boy meets girl) where Violet (Emily Blunt) dressed as Princess Diana at a costumed New Year’s Eve party locks eyes across the room with a pink bunny costume-clad Tom Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

RIP author Maurice Sendak (1928-2012)

Posted on May 9, 2012July 11, 2017 by aussiemoose

  Maurice Sendak, much loved and admired author of the children’s classic, Where the Wild Things Are, and In the Night Kitchen, among more than 50 books he wrote and/or illustrated, died Tuesday US time of complications from a recent stroke. “I don’t write for children. I write…” While he was primarily known for Continue Reading

Posted In Uncategorized

A darker shade of glitter: Eurovision’s political underbelly

Posted on May 8, 2012May 11, 2012 by aussiemoose

You could be forgiven for thinking that Eurovision is simply a “smorgasbord of kitsch”, as Keith Lawrence’s headline so eloquently put it in an article he wrote about Eurovision on his website, and nothing more. But as the other half of his article’s headline suggests, “…and politics”, it is not Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Review: “The Avengers”

Posted on May 6, 2012March 5, 2015 by aussiemoose

    At last a bigger-than-Ben Hur blockbuster bristling with intelligence, wit and humanity. I have to admit I was sceptical going in that it would be. For one thing, the movie had the malodorous stench of hype laying heavily across it. Secondly, snug within the giddy chaos of all Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Review: “Delicacy (La Delicatesse)”

Posted on May 4, 2012May 4, 2012 by aussiemoose

French cinema has a remarkable gift for crafting understated movies that, despite their under-the-radar approach to storytelling, manage to explore the depth and totality of human experience in a way that Hollywood can only dream about. Delicacy is a worthy heir to this innate French sensibility for subtle yet powerful narratives. Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Road to Eurovision 2012: Week 5

Posted on May 3, 2012May 4, 2012 by aussiemoose

It’s beginning to look a lot like Eurovision… Why? Well they have already announced the opening and interval acts for this year’s Eurovision Song Contest fiesta for one thing. Traditionally these two slots give the host country a chance to strut their cultural stuff  and the music is either resolutely Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Jericho returns: maybe, possibly (if CBS and Netflix make nice)

Posted on May 3, 2012 by aussiemoose

Ever since Netflix moved into the business of producing original content, they have become more and more like a pop culture Santa. On their latest trip down the TV show-giving chimney, it’s been announced that they’ve been talking to CBS about resurrecting the critically-mourned, but ratings-starved cult favourite Jericho, which Continue Reading

Posted In TV

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Recent Posts

  • Book review: Café Puccini by Tony Matthews
  • Step into your future: Thoughts on Star Trek: Starfleet Academy S1, E1-3
  • Book review: Outlaw Planet by M. R. Carey
  • Songs, songs and more songs #131: A Thousand Mad Things, Haute & Freddy, The Anahit, Robyn and Hatchie
  • Book review: Run for the Hills by Kevin Wilson

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Book review: Café Puccini by Tony Matthews
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026. If we’re honest, most of us live in fairly ordinary, decidedly unexciting cities or towns where everyone is as reasonably straight down the line as you can expect the contrarily idiosyncratic human race to be. They Continue Reading
  • Step into your future: Thoughts on Star Trek: Starfleet Academy S1, E1-3
    (courtesy IMP Awards) There’s a peculiar thing that happens to some people when they love something for a long time. It doesn’t matter if it’s a religion, a food or, as is pertinent here, a TV franchise, what was once fresh, exciting and new for them, a place to explore Continue Reading
  • Book review: Outlaw Planet by M. R. Carey
    What an extraordinary story. As you reach the end of Outlaw Planet by M. R. Carey, one of the finest contemporary voices working in science fiction and fantasy, you will be consumed by the idea that here is one of the very best and most human stories you have ever Continue Reading
  • Songs, songs and more songs #131: A Thousand Mad Things, Haute & Freddy, The Anahit, Robyn and Hatchie
    (via Shutterstock) I love disappearing down rabbit holes. Not actual rabbit holes, of course; that’s best left to the family Laporidae I think; rather, the digital version where one discovery leads to another leads to another, usually on YouTube for me where so many songs and trailers and clips await. Continue Reading
  • Book review: Run for the Hills by Kevin Wilson
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026. At first glance, a novel premised on the idea that one man, moving across America over some decades, managed to start, and crucially, abandon, four families, who then seek to unite many years later via a Continue Reading
  • Comic strip review: Unsupervised: A Crabgrass Comics Adventure by Tauhid Bondia
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026. Ah, the carefree joys and fun of childhood. As adults, we all look back to that time of our life, or we are supposed, with a wistful, sigh-laced nostalgia, having lost all of the playfulness and Continue Reading
  • Journey to Laika’s Wildwood where magic takes flight
    (courtesy Laika Studios) SNAPSHOTStep inside Laika’s Wildwood, where a powerful golden eagle commands the skies and magic takes flight. Wildwood – based on Colin Meloy’s illustrated book series – will see Prue McKeel leave behind her home of Portland, Oregon, venturing into Wildwood on a dark quest to save her Continue Reading
  • Book review: Bookish by Matthew Sweet
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026. In the usual course of pop culture back and forth, a TV or streaming show would be watched in that medium, and then, the eager viewer would turn, if they were so inclined, to the book Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Rental Family
    (courtesy IMP Awards) People are not very good at bring authentic. We talk a big name about laying your heart on the line or wearing it on your sleeve, and to be fair sizeable number of people do just that, but by and large, many of us play pretend about Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Naked Neanderthal by Ludovic Slimak
    This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2026 It is perhaps inevitable that we filter everything we see through our well-entrenched worldview. Try as we might to look beyond what we intrinsically know and understand, and it is to course possible to do that, Continue Reading
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