![]() ![]() I do note that they both appear onscreen as Women in Comfortable Shoes. I’m doing a lot of cross stitching during the Why Are We Out of Milk Again Times, and this is a perfect accompaniment. ![]() Sarah: SHANA JUST THE FLOWERS BLOOMING on the intro of Rosemary & Thyme. It’s only thinly connected to the original, but I’m really liking it. Oh, I didn’t mention the Bletchley Circle San Francisco spinoff. Shana: OMG, the competitive bell ringers ep is one of my faves. Or the one at the Literary Festival where an author and then their editor both get murdered! And I feel like there was one that featured mushrooms (some poisonous!) heavily Maya: I loved the one about the competitive bell ringers! Or the episodes about a supposed famous local cheese, or wine, chamber music or whatever? Or when they go undercover in a different New Age cult. The ethnic diversity improves around ten years back for long running shows, including that one, so I’d feel free to skip over the first few seasons.Ĭan we talk about our favorite wacky episodes of all time? Like when they investigate a free love cult. Shana: I find Midsomer Murders sooo relaxingly cozy. Susan: Oh, man, I spent SO MANY YEARS staying up past my bedtime to watch Midsomer Murders. Caroline Quentin from Blue Murder costars (and that show’s pretty good as well). Jonathan Creek is an older, more comedic show about a magician who solves difficult crimes. There is sometimes blood but it’s not gory. Vera is one of my faves for excellent competence from the heroine, who is both prickly and kind. Shana: For British mysteries? I love Rosemary and Thyme: it’s about two women who have a midlife job/life change and design gardens together while solving crimes-often with a plant-based hook. Sarah: Any recs, Shana? I wish to join you, please? Or both? My guiding principle during the Weirdness Home Stay is, “Do what you feel like doing, and be gentle with yourself, and others, and especially with yourself again.” It’s $7US per month, or $70 for the year, and, yes, there’s a one-week trial. Sarah: BritBox is a subscription service full of British tv, as the name might imply. We have watched an embarrassing number of hours during our free trial. ![]() It seems to have every BBC and ITV show ever made, and I’m watching all the British cozy mysteries. Shana: I splurged and got a Britbox subscription. In a recent discussion of things we’re loving that are getting us through the Strange Quarantine Times (side question: how many ways in email, marketing pitches, and news articles have you seen the current situation described? I might have a complete bingo board’s worth at this point) Shana brought up… BritBox. ![]()
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