US TV

Just how hard is it to spell taxi correctly, Taxi Brooklyn?

I’ll be reviewing the first two episodes of French-US co-production Taxi Brooklyn later today (or maybe on Monday), but as I sit down to watch the second episode, I thought I’d ponder the fact that as usual, it seems like no one can spell (or at least proofread) these days.

Taxi. It’s a four letter English word. In French, it’s spelt ‘taxi’. So really, what’s the excuse for spelling it ‘taxy’? Is there a subtle protest going on about the level of city taxes in Brooklyn: ‘Brooklyn, it’s quite taxy’?

Let’s ignore July 4 with this handy guide to UK accents

July 4 is the anniversary of something or other in the US that they like to celebrate for some reason, so they’re all going to be busy setting fire to miscellany today: gunpowder, bits of meat, that kind of thing. But just in case they want something better to do, such as learn about the British (we’re not coming, we’re not coming – we’re staying here), here’s a handy guide for them to UK accents, with Siobhan Thompson going through 17 regions’ worth of speech sounds from around England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and just for luck Ireland.

Just to warn Americans in advance though: there are lots more accents than this, particularly the much-hated Estuary English, and if you think London (and Lancashire, Yorkshire et al) only has one accent, you might be in for a surprise. Also, her Glaswegian accent is way too comprehensible – you will not understand Glaswegians.

But it’s pretty good. And at least you’ll now know what accent Billie Piper was aiming for in Penny Dreadful.

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Review: Tyrant 1×1-1×2 (FX)


In the US: Tuesdays, 10pm, FX

Sometimes, before criticising fiction, it’s worth looking at reality and noting just how much weirder it can be. 

Take Bashar al-Assad. He’s the ruler of a little country called Syria that you might have heard of recently. He’s very much A Bad Man, having amongst other things deployed chemical weapons against his own population in a very bloody civil war that’s claimed the lives of over 100,000 people.

Guess what? He never wanted to be ruler of Syria. He wanted to be a doctor. In fact, he went to Western Eye Hospital, part of the St Mary’s group of teaching hospitals in London, so that he could become an opthamologist. 

In fact, it was his brother Bassel who was being groomed for power by their father, Hafez al-Assad. However, Bassel was killed in a car accident, which meant that Bashar was recalled back to Syria and his father decided to prepare him to become president instead.

Reality is strange: had that car accident not happened, one of the bloodiest dictators of modern history would be off treating eye disorders somewhere.

Thus, going into FX’s new show Tyrant, it’s worth remembering that despite all the seemingly preposterous conceits of the show, reality is almost certainly serving up something stranger somewhere in the world. Set in a thinly veiled version of Syria that’s separated by a mere star on its flag from the real thing, it sees an Arab-American paediatrician return back to his home country for his nephew’s wedding. While there, his father has a stroke and his brother has a car accident, which would be merely tragic were it not for the fact that his father is the ruler of the country and he in turn is now its new de facto ruler – at least until his brother gets better. Will he prove to be a better, kinder ruler, or will power turn him into the thing that he’s tried to so hard to avoid?

Written by Gideon Raff, the Israeli writer/director who created the original HomelandPrisoners of War/Hatufilm, the show is a hard but rewarding watch, albeit one that knows it. But it’s not without its problems. 

Here’s a trailer. 

Continue reading “Review: Tyrant 1×1-1×2 (FX)”

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