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#riverdale 6.8
spoilertv · 1 year
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riverdale-retread · 2 years
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Riverdale S6B Ep #103 (The Town)
A very normal-length episode recap with completely neutral & fair minded opinions.  Spoiler warning!   I will say, that if this whole bit with the superpowers and the Evil Englishman is somehow still connected to Bunker Rivervale Jughead Narration Creator, then he’s really confronting his unrequited yearning for Archie Andrews in this episode.
When Jughead Jones decides to do something, he always chooses the most difficult possible way of doing it.  When he became a gang leader he decided to be Moses and Jesus and also everyone’s underage father.    When he wanted to be a genre novelist he had the genre happen to him, becoming the dead body that the whodunit was trying to solve. He played dead on a gurney at the morgue and everything.  You can be a hipster writer in New York City without having a drug dealing girlfriend or the mob after you but what would be the fun in  that? So now that he’s decided to a journalist and newspaper runner for his small hometown, Jughead Jones decides he must publish the most incendiary, anti-Riverdale take down submission of all time, and anonymously, at that, taking on the burden of protecting this provocateur himself.  Because of course he does.
In the opening narration, where Tabitha is concerned to be reading this ‘submission’ that Jughead published, Jughead Jones is talking to a “you.” Has he done this before? Break the fourth wall while narrating?  He wants me (and me specifically) to know that he can read thoughts and is still hearing impaired.  Jughead is lying to everyone including his friends that his hearing has returned.  
The question asked is if he’s a bad person for lying to everyone. I say no. “I can read your mind” only makes him sound insane on top of being deaf, for one. People generally don’t react well to magic powers that are this invasive, even in fairytales. It’s not a great choice, sure, but it’s the Jughead Jones way of caring for people he loves - By resisting burdening them with his last possible strand of strength. 
One of the anachronisms I adore about Riverdale is that every person keeps reading a printed hard copy of the paper, obsessively, daily, like smartphones and twitter don’t exist.  Sweet Pea read Alice’s newspaper back in the day, and now Alice reads Jughead’s with … her boyfriend Uncle Fucking Frank. (Shout out to the tumblrina who pointed out that whenever Betty fucks a boy, Alice feels compelled to fuck the boy’s nearest blood relation) (also wondering if this is why Archie refused to date Betty when his dad was alive - he couldn’t do that to Fred).  Reggie and Veronica, and Fangs and Toni all read the paper during their different morning routines.  Veggie haven’t gone to bed yet, and Fangs & Toni are hoping the baby sleeps a bit longer.  Cheryl is very pleased, and the Keller men, because I guess they’re both too macho to cook, are breakfasting at the diner. 
The thing is, Percival is not wrong - there is no performing arts or culture is Riverdale, and when even when it wasn’t quite so blighted it needed to try to recruit teen gang members as deputies to try to clear out the Gargoyles and so forth.  But then the show does a pivot to talk about the “Homeless encampments around every corner.”  Percival is extremely pleased to see his writing in print, so he smiles as he tells Pop Tate he’s very pleased to have moved to Riverdale.  The funny thing is - the writer does not attack the dire stupidity and tokenist representation on the so called counsel, four unelected officials that apparently wield an immense amount of power in the town:  A crazy lady (Alice, you are crazy), a mercenary and petty criminal,  Minnie Mouse gang leader-bar tender who somehow is also given untrammeled access to children, and the girl who has only recently moved to Riverdale to work at her grandpa’s ailing business.   This is intentional, of course.  
The article does not actually mention Archie (He owns - apparently??- a functional business and not in a gang - anymore? - and his sins of violence are not known to Percival - I guess?) but in any case, Archie is pissed.
And that’s what it comes around to, in the end, no?  
Jughead aimed this take-down article at Archie in particular.  Jughead fully knew that its contents amounted to a “razor blade that cut to the very heart of Riverdale,” and published it anyway,  after YEARS of calling Archie Riverdale’s soul, spirit, heart, symbol etc etc. It landed fair and square.  “With no author named, who would take the brunt of blowback but…” is delivered in a long-suffering, irritated way but c’mon Jughead. You wanted to hear Archie think thoughts about you.  You also wanted to take a razor blade to cut into his heart the way he’s done to you since Ep 4.17.  Let’s be real here, ok?   This has to be the most convoluted way of pulling someone’s pigtails to show you ‘like’ them.  You published this article anonymously so that Archie would have NO CHOICE but to talk to YOU.
“Here we go,” Jughead sighs (faux unhappily = happily).   Archie thinks - BACKSTABBER! This constant worry about stabbing Archie in the back and being stabbed in turn is a constant in their relationship. Calling Riverdale the “worst town in America” is a bit harsh, so I give Archie that.  America has like, full on KKK /Nazi towns that POC point out on maps as places to avoid while driving from point A to B. 
Archie asks Jughead: “Why would you publish something like this??” at school (where they’re still coaching and teaching).  Jughead ends up just telling Archie (who doesn’t get it) his true emotional intentions behind publishing this article:  “Let me interview you, and I’ll publish it next week.”  Oh honey.  It’s so desperate, Jughead’s need for Archie’s attention, care and involvement.  Archie probably avoided ‘saying’ anything to Jughead after that initial conversation about his hearing loss, I reckon, because that’s how Archie has been to Jughead post time jump.  And Archie is just a brute - “No screw that!” is his simple concise answer.  Archie doesn’t want to do anything private with Jughead - he wants him to come to the town hall.
Meanwhile at Thornhill, Britta is visiting Grandmistress Rose in her prison. Britta is just such a resilient kiddo - survived homophobic parents, expulsion from her home,  witnessed a demon(?) possession, an exorcism (that Nana Rose called something else), the derangement/ possession of her only guardian, and the trauma of watching an old woman get tossed into a medieval dungeon in the house she lives in. The idea of Cheryl being not quite dissipated into nothing and instead imprisoned in a ‘mental jail’ is the thing that brings this feisty kiddo to some level of alarm.  Nana Rose is the catchall character for all whackadoo magical things.  Sleeping next to someone if they possessed you once is enough to let you inception yourself into their ‘dreamscape.’    The thing is, Britta belongs here because she hears this story and her immediate next reaction is  I COULD DRUG HER TEA. OK but which drugs are these?  Britta has dream-inception drugs that can be dissolved into a tea??  And like all good fairy stories the old witch sets an arbitrary deadline: Britta must ‘emerge’ from the dream faster than Abigail or there will be ‘wrath’(undefined) bear. 
We get a preview of the mental jail that Britta is going to have to brave, literally ‘through a looking glass.’  This next bit was AMAZING.  Riverdale is doing Mommy Dearest!!!.  Penelope Blossom is doing a nightmare parody of Faye Dunaway doing a parody of Joan Crawford as presented by an adopted daughter who absolutely hated her.  They gave the Penelope actress the extremely rigid eyebrows and the big shoulder outfits.  The Blossom twins all their mother, Dearest Mumsy, in unison. 
Jughead is at the town meeting, sitting in the corner, listening in on people’s thoughts.  “Who wrote the article? Probably Alice” is one thought that he hears.  The way this meeting devolves is very interesting.  Alice thinks there is much to ‘dispute’ about the article, but the thing she hates the most is Veronica and Reggie with their casino (but somehow not a gang?).  Veronica tries to makes a case for herself (she brings tourists and employs the locals). Alice says that the true beneficiaries of a casino are its owners. Alice is a moron - this is how capitalism works, babe, not just casinos.  Veronica is sitting right next to Archie but he acts like he doesn’t see her. He only wants to know who wrote the article. 
The writer of the article was Percival.   Toni says Percival’s great great grandfather (on his dad’s side) having led genocide against her ancestors would be a strike against Percival pointing out that Riverdale as a town sucks (and that the Serpents under Toni’s rule kind of suck as is having to deal with on-going gang warfare between weaksauce gangs also sucks).  
Archie ups the ante by daring Percival to come up with ‘real solutions.’   He wasn’t ready for  Percival actually having any, so he instead offers to punch his lights out.   Percival follows the fascist playbook down to the T - he attacks the people on the margins that everyone present has mixed feelings about:  homeless people in Sketch Alley.  Percival  wants to ‘bus-out’ the homeless. What does it mean to HUMANELY bus the homeless out? Bus them where?   Archie counters with a good statement - that you can���t just bus people out of your town - and with a lie “Riverdale takes care of its own.”  But it really doesn’t though.  That’s just not true. They let all those Southside Serpents live a tent village.  Alice Cooper is the prototypical Riverdale resident and she doesn’t even look after her own children.
The homeless are not present to speak for themselves, so the correct things that Archie says (the most destitute are still citizens of the place) rings kind of hollow.
And in any case, when put on the spot, Archie doesn’t have a direct answer for what he would propose instead, and Jughead gets immensely excited: And thus began the battle for Riverdale’s soul, he proclaims.  Which really means, I finally have a project I created for myself and Archie.
Because you know, when Archie creates projects, like his recent Saving Riverdale 1.0 - Avengers Assemble, he only really assigns a tertiary-at-best role for Jughead. Jughead doesn’t bring capital, like Veronica, nor muscle and firepower, like Betty.  If Jughead can control the project, by contrast, he’ll put Archie first, and himself second.   Even better, Betty is out of town while Veronica and Archie act like they’ve never met, so Jughead can really have Archie to himself.  Old habits die really hard.
Abigail comes home to Thornhill where Britta is wearing her long hair in braided devil’s horns. I KNEW THAT HER ELABORATE BRAIDS MEANT SOMETHING!  I love Britta signaling her devilish intentions through her hair. Britta offers to provide handmaid services to Abigail, who accepts them without question.  Britta (like the young Jughead and the young Cheryl) is in a situation that’s hair raisingly terrifying if you stop and think about it too much (her guardian is either demon possessed or completely insane, and the only other adult present has been locked into a dungeon and tells her to drug the guardian OH MY).
Jughead shows up at the Andrews house, where he’s now twice lived in (or attempted to) and twice got kicked (or rather BLOWN UP) out of. The first thing he says is, Don’t punch me in a sardonic, flat way. He tells Archie the obvious, that he himself had been homeless more than once (I mean, if he and Tabitha, god forbid, break up, doesn’t he go right back to being homeless??).    Then come the Riverdale the Show’s statement about the unhoused/homeless/destitute: All of them are without exception good people who deserve resources.   Archie points out that Jughead didn’t say anything at the meeting, but Archie still doesn’t get it.  Jughead needs this 1:1 discussion and buy-in from Archie about their joint project before he’s going to involve himself in this project.  Jughead gives Archie the idea of giving a micro home for everyone in Sketch Alley, and he thought of this in particular because Archie has a construction business.  Of course Archie says yes - this was tailor made for him by a person who’s loved him forever.
Britta with her little devil’s horn hair somehow (Tea + Whooshing sound) invades Abigail/ Cheryl’s dream mindscape where Penelope Blossom is hamming it up to high heaven with an accent that’s vaguely Southern and Mid-Atlantic at the same time.  Cheryl in the dreamscape is in time out, weeping at her own birthday party.  Britta bravely stands up to Penelope on Cheryl’s behalf.  When the dream-inhabitants give Britta a stern look, she escapes the dream, waking up shortly before Abigail.
Reggie and Veronica are in their office with the portrait of Hiram in the space.  Veronica wants to make the casino a clean business because she wants to rehabilitate the Lodge name and contribute to ‘fixing’ Riverdale.  Reggie reminds her that going ‘legit’ is going to be highly expensive, so Veronica gives the go ahead, which is fine enough, but then she does something very peculiar - she wants to hang up a portrait of her dad as a sort of hate-watch, so she can be reminded of who she doesn’t want to be like. This is not how that works.
Percival is buttering up Alice to vote his way at her house.  I don’t know why this scene was necessary - Alice would’ve voted to bury the homeless alive if she thought enough people would go for it. I hope Percival serviced Alice after we pan away (Uhh minors DNI?).
We’re at another town council meeting.  Veronica and Reggie present their proposal for a Riverdale as Atlantic City.   She wants to open an arcade.  Frank says there are too many broken people in Riverdale for a casino to be a ‘good’ option.   So both Frank, who lives off of his nephew that he just described as broken, and Alice, former cult member and child abuser, that the idiotic core four elevated to these unelected super powerful positions and have moreover never launched nor run any sort of successful business are basically naysaying the only person with any sort of entrepreneurial spirit in Riverdale.  Oh boy.  
Next up is Archie, mouthing the things that Jughead told him to say.  Toni likes it, so does Tabitha (who mentions that she’s seen these mini houses in Chicago, which means this was where Jug got this idea from).  Alice says no, because it’s expensive, and Percival points out that his plan is very low cost.   
Archie and Percival have their tete-a-tete, long overdue.  Percival points out the obvious, that Alice (“your neighbors”) would rather the homeless problem disappear.  He basically describes what NIMBY is which Archie describes as warped and cynical.  
Archie  calls on Toni and Tabitha to ask for money ($25K per) to build the microhomes, and both women say yes.  Jughead takes Archie and other irrelevant people to Sketch Alley to let them know they’re going to build them the microhomes.  Doc looks really happy, so you know it’s going to turn to shit, because Doc is tied to Jughead, and Riverdale is a story about taking nice things away from Jughead Jones (If Tabitha dies I will riot).
Reggie meanwhile is giving Veronica a big reality check.  That they can’t go ‘legit’ and ever turn a profit.  And just on the heels of this piece of sobering news they’re told that ‘something bad’ has happened in the ‘private’ gambling room.   A man has committed suicide in there.  These two hard nosed criminals (that’s what they are) talk about what they should do to save their long term business interests right in front of a dangling corpse.  Veronica decides to call the Deus Ex Machina Godson. 
Britta has drugged Abigail a second time to have a go at inception again.  Her hair is back in the demon braids.  I love this hairdo on her, it makes her look like Irish Chun Lee.  She finds Cheryl, but they barely have any time to talk before Penelope Blossom reenacts Mommy Dearest for us all, making her kids  scrub the floors. She even mentions the hanger!  
Next day at Sketch Alley, people are building things without any sort of training somehow and I’m supposed to think this is all good. That is, until Doc wallops Kevin across the head with a hammer. (Who is looking after Baby Anthony right now?)
Alice is all over it at her news channel or whatever that is. What is that?  It’s an opinion channel that commentates on current events?  Tabitha, Toni and Archie are at the diner and very concerned.  Tabitha and Archie are still all in on this very losing endeavor, the microhouses.  I think I’m supposed to think they are good and kind people, but I am not.  I want these two very young women who are struggling running a diner and a bar in a dying town to just look after number one a bit, or at least, their own employees, instead of pursuing this cockamamie plan with Archie.  But that’s because I dislike Archie. 
Reggie has done an interesting thing to actually investigate why the gambler suicided in the private room - he’d been winning huge!  It turns out Percival was literally whispering in his ear.  Okay then.  But they don’t have much time to discuss this because Abuelita’s Godson shows up to ask where the body is.  I love Reggie’s “Jeez, cut to the chase much?”   Reggie like crimes of a financial nature, and Jughead (in Killing Mr Honey) had been very prescient that he would be ill at ease with murder, corpse desecration and other wet work (ooooh I got to say that like I am a tough person).  Geraldo is not amused by his humor.
Britta consults with Grandmistress Rose about Cheryl’s situation.  Is Nana Rose’s character that she’s going through early stages of dementia? Because she goes through lucid phases like this where she’s quite coherent about the underlying family dysfunction (“Penelope has always been Cheryl’s tormentor”) and other times when she’s just gleefully doing batshit insane things without a care in the world.   Poor Britta.  She’s tasked with figuring out the solution to this strange magic/witchcraft/ demon coma problem that the Blossom women have created amongst themselves. 
Percival Pickens knows the power of showing up for people.  He seems to be the only person who actually visited Kevin in the hospital. (Toni, Archie and Tabitha absolutely have not, though they care).   Never underestimate the power of physical presence, friends.  When you want to influence someone, SHOW UP IN PERSON. 
Benjamin Moore donated the paint for future houses, is what Archie says, in front of the finished microhouse. Is this SUBTLE product placement? Or was this Riverdale the Show trying to solicit a sponsorship?  Or are they trying to pressure Benjamin Moore the company to make donations to homeless shelters and microhomes?  …. Youtubers with less than 10K subscribers do a much better job of advertisement for sponsors that Riverdale.  Jabitha and Farchie (Frank and Archie probably fuck, I don’t know, I hate Frank so much) are very happy in the parking lot.
Abuelita’s Godson wants to help Veronica’s business by putting out the word to ‘the wise guys.’  He’s trying to help, so Veronica wants him to investigate Percival Pickens.  The fact that nobody (neither Journalist Alice nor Journalist Jughead) have actually done this is an indictment for both.
Within a single evening, the model microhouses they set up in front of the Diner has been graffitied nastily.  Archie punches the hell out of his car.  Our hero.   Meanwhile, Jughead visits Doc, to ask why he attacked Kevin.  Is this what happens to all of Jughead Jones’s father figures?  They get visits from a very disappointed Jughead while behind bars?   Doc completely takes it as a given that Jughead can read his thoughts. Okay then.
At long last, Jughead has a 1:1 with Percival.  Jughead opens strong by lobbing a Gandhi quote at an Englishman.   I wish the show had let this have a little bit of room to breathe, because that is very, very funny, not just because of Gandhi v Evil Englishman but also because it’s one smug white man doing this to another smug white man.   Jughead gets caught “rooting around inside” Percival’s mind.   Jughead is so scared.
Britta is left handed, with lovely penmanship and knows her way around a fountain pen.  She’s trying to dream inception to rescue Cheryl again.   This time, Cheryl’s hair is all torn up, weeping in a chair in a sailor outfit.  Britta tries to wake Cheryl out of it, but they’re caught by Penelope.  Dream Penelope can tell IMMEDIATELY that Britta is both sapphic and a slut. Awesome Gaydar you got there.  Penelope has to be gay. She has to.   I love the white flowers on Britta’s sweater.  She leaves the note for Cheryl as she gets kicked out of the dream house.   Penelope’s hunched-shoulder flailing around in a rage is EXCEPTIONALLY delicious.  Cheryl, just from this one note from Britta, recovers herself entirely, lipstick, bustier and all. 
Next morning, Jabitha, Frank and Toni are repainting the microhouses.  Just as Jughead is about to convey important information about Percival’s mind bending powers, the man himself shows up to announce that the homeless have been successfully ejected from Riverdale. 
The new fivesome (?) visit the emptied out Sketch Alley that evening (I don’t know why they couldn’t go right away?).  It’s Frank, Toni, Archie in the center, Tabitha and Jughead. I like that there’s more for Tabitha to do than be Girl-Friday for everyone and Toni doesn’t have to try to be some sort of tough which she can’t do, but I HATE THIS LINE UP. The two POC women are still completely subordinate to the whims of Archie Andrews, and they’re the ones taking the biggest risks with their businesses.  
Cheryl is back to herself so she’s visiting Britta in her dreams to say they have to drive Abigail out of Cheryl’s body.
Everyone is applauding Percival for his successfully clearing out Sketch Alley.  Alice is one of the people applauding. I hope once again that she got cunnilingus at least out of this.  Sheriff Keller hires Percival as a deputy and the core four are peeved.  Jughead finally makes a mistake where he assumes that someone he wasn’t looking at said the thought he overheard - Archie gives Jughead a dire look. 
Alice loves exercising all this power over other people. Saying no to people, getting in their way, kicking people out of their own businesses.  Why Alice suddenly despises Veronica (other than Percival’s interference?) seems unsupported to me so I feel the same sort of boredom I feel about any other sort of unmotivated villainy.
As a result, Veronica decides to be her Daddykins’ daughter after all, which is music to Reggie’s ears (he wants to run scams!).  Abuelita’s Iceman says he couldn’t find anything on Percival.  Betty comes back to the Andrews residence, saying she’s lost TBK (what else is new) but she’s acquired an affliction in the form of terrible migraines.  Archie tells Betty that Jughead can read minds, and that Percival Pickens can control people’s minds.   He says the whole town is in trouble. 
I wonder why they didn’t show this very important discussion between Jughead and Archie? Is it because Archie was as indifferent, brutal and irritable as he’d been about Jughead’s deafness?  
In his commonplace book, Percival writes “Jughead Jones ,Mind reader??” but his penmanship is much worse than Britta’s.  He has a murder board set up with Core Four and Uncle Frank. 
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imhereandhistorical · 3 years
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lmao ayo apparently the bronx has reached a population high that we havent seen since the 1970s, but we’re now the 7th largest city in the country??? (if we were counted separately)
oh its about to be obnoxious 
we have a large and growing hispanic population, but it looks like its a second case of white flight-
The largest increase of the Hispanic population in the borough, which increased by 65,050 individuals, was felt the most in the northwest Bronx neighborhoods of Riverdale-Spuyten Duyvil with a 59% increase followed by Pelham Bay-Country Club-City Island with a 50 percent increase, and Morris Park with a 38 percent increase.
The Bronx’s increase of 6.3 percent was below the city’s increase of 7.7 percent. Brooklyn saw the largest increase at 9.2 percent, followed by Queens at 7.8 percent, Manhattan at 6.8 percent, and Staten Island at 5.8 percent.
listen also apparently the bronx is almost on par with queens for a significant asian population.
oh and this is all based off our census from last year! 
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aylakmadamfilm · 4 years
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Baby
Yapımı: 2018  - İtalya                                                                                         Tür:  Dizi /  Dram                                                                                           İmdb:  6.8                                                                                                            Sezon: 3  
          Elite, Riverdale  gibi dizileri seviyorsanız Baby'i de çerez niyetine izleyebilirsiniz diye düşünüyorum.
     İnsanlar kendi seçimleri ile kendi geleceklerini kendileri yaratırlar temalı diyebilirim.  Benim diziye başlamam  instagram'da alice pagani yi takip ediyor oluşum ve dizide oynadığını görmem ile başladı. Bakim nasılmış dedim başından kalkamadım. Bir de olay gerçekmiş, İnsan yok yere nasıl kötü yola düşer izleyince anlıyoruz. Diziyi hem sevdim hem nefret ettim, hem karakterlere sinir oldum hem de onları anladım. İzlenmese bir şey kaybedilir mi ? hayır. İzlendiğinde bir şey katar mı ? mümkün.
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industryfreak-blog · 5 years
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Top 15 Sexy Netflix Series One Should Watch
https://www.industryfreak.com/15-sexy-netflix-series/Netflix was launched in India in 2016 and since then it's the only thing we Indians care about. Netflix is the new age addiction of everyone from a 10- year-old kid to the young generation and from a middle-aged businessman to even a 60-year -old senior citizen is obsessed over Netflix. Today we are going to list the Top 15 Sexy Netflix Series which one can't resist watching.
Top 15 Sexy Netflix Series
15. The Client List 
This show on Netflix is about a woman named Riley who is a single mother and she is leading two lives, one which is for the world and the other which is a secret.This show has 2 seasons and an IMDB rating of 6.7 stars. The cast involves Jennifer Hewitt in the lead role.
14. Easy 
This Netflix show is about a group of friends who want to try and ignite their marriage life, sexual life and love life by exploring technology and culture.This show has 3 seasons and an IMDB rating of 6.8 stars.
13. Wanderlust 
This show on Netflix is about a therapist who tries all the ways to save her marriage which was destroyed after they started having intimacy problems.This show has only 1 season with 6 episodes and an IMDB rating of 6.9 stars.
12. You Me Her 
This is a comedy- drama series which talks about a relationship between three people and this show has 4 seasons.IMDB gave 7 stars to this Netflix series.
11. Riverdale 
This show on Netflix is about a town named Riverdale where there are murders, games, suspense, romance, mysteries, sex everything under one roof.It comes under the Drama Genre and was given 7.5 stars by IMDB. It has 2 seasons and the third season is ongoing.
10. Masters Of Sex 
This drama series on Netflix talks about the human sexuality and sexual revolution. This show has 4 seasons and IMDB gave 7.9 stars to this show.
9. Jessica Jones 
This is an American show that talks about the mysterious Jessica Jones whose superhero career comes to an end and how she opens a detective agency to live a decent life in New York City.IMDB gave 8.1 stars to this series and this show was released in 2015 with 2 seasons.
8. The Tudors 
This Netflix series involves drama romance and history and revolves around the life of King Henry 4th and how he gets married 6 times.The show has 4 seasons and 8.1 rating of IMDB.
7. Orange Is The New Black 
This web series is an American Comedy- Drama that revolves around the life of Piper after she is thrown into the prison as she used to supply drugs.IMDB gave 8.1 stars to this show and it was released in 2013 and has about 6 seasons in total.
6. Atypical 
This show is an American Comedy which is available on Netflix. It shows Sam who is an Autistic and he decides that he is finally ready to open the romance chapter of his life so he tries to be more independent.IMDB gave 8.3 stars to this show and it has 2 seasons.
5. Queer as Folk 
This drama comedy series revolves around a group of friends who are gay and show is set in Pittsburgh.It has 5 seasons and an IMDB rating of 8.3.
4. Californication 
This show is at the fourth position on the list of sexy Netflix series and it revolves around the life of a writer, Hank Moody, who is trying to manage his life, career while he also has to look after his beautiful daughter and ex-girlfriend.The show is set in California and has about 7 seasons and an IMDB rating of 8.3.
3. Bojack Horseman 
This show is an animated series and is a 90's sitcom which was extremely famous and the story revolves around a Humanoid horse who thinks that it's time for him to come back to his world.Though it's an animated series it involves a lot of drugs, alcohol and sex. It has 5 seasons and IMDB gave 8.5 stars to this show.
2. Sex Education 
This British series is about a socially awkward guy who is not that experienced in the intimacy and romance department but because his mother is a sex therapist he is surrounded by so much information and manuals that he becomes a sex expert and he starts his own advisory clinic with a friend to improve his image in college.This show was released in 2019 and has only 1 season. IMDB gave 8.5 stars to this show. It's at 2nd position of the top sexy Netflix series.
1. Shameless
This show is at the top of our list of sexy Netflix series and it revolves around the life of a father who has 8 kids and they all are the same, they don't care about anything but themselves.This show has 10 seasons and an IMDB rating of 8.7. The show is set in Chicago.
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rebeccahpedersen · 6 years
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A Deep Dive Into January Inventory Numbers
TorontoRealtyBlog
Were you a child of the 1980’s?
Did you take swimming lessons?
Does your heart skip a beat when you see………….
…………..THIS!
Yup, there it is, in all its glory.
Many of you have no idea what I’m talking about, and others are already calling your parents.
Starting in 1981, the Canadian Red Cross introduced a graduated program for water safety among youth, and we were awarded different colour badges for each level.
You all know how far you got in the program, don’t deny it.
I distinctly remember vying for my maroon badge (pictured above), and having failed the test, instead of giving me nothing – they gave met yet another red.
In 2019, of course, none of this would be possible.  Every child is equal, they’re all winners, and to actually inform them of their successes and failures, even if it could save their life, wouldn’t meet the social agenda de jour.  But I digress, as many of you do not welcome my old-man fist-shaking…
I’m proud to say that I got as high as maroon, which is the fourth rung on the ladder, and I think it basically meant I could jump in the pool and not drown.  I never did get my blue, although it wasn’t for lack of effort.
Just because I know you’re all trying to picture the badge hierarchy in your mind, take a look at this:
Yellow, Orange, Red, Maroon, Blue, Green, Grey, White.  Then came “Life Saving I,” and “Life Saving II,” and God knows what else, since I surely wasn’t a part of it.
So what does this have to do with Toronto real estate inventory levels?
Nothing.
I just took my “deep dive” analogy way, way too far…
Before the January TREB numbers came out, I predicted that sales would be down, and that the media would have a field day with that statistic.  I also suggested that the true cause of a decline in sales would end up being much lower inventory.
As the readers pointed out last week, I was wrong.
And yet I can’t make sense of these numbers, because what I felt in the market was simply not reflected in the TREB stats.
January was one of the slowest months I have ever seen for new listings, plain and simple.  I had the same conversation with every buyer-client, every couple of days, ending with something to the effect of, “I hope we see more new listings next week!”
I currently have over twenty active buyers, all of whom would buy tomorrow if the “right” property came onto the market.  And yet having sold only two properties to buyers in January as a result of the lack of inventory, I’m trying to figure out why my clients and I saw such a lack of inventory, but the TREB numbers showed we were on par with last year.
So I decided to go back and look at the last eight years of data for January and see how this past January compared.
Have a look:
The first thing I notice here, as I’m sure all of you did, was that whopping 136.3% number in 2018.  Well, that tells the entire story of the crazy spring-2017 real estate market, since listings were so scare.  Just look at the active listings in January of 2017: 5,034, sandwiched between nearly 10,000 in 2016, and nearly 12,000 in 2018.
But that’s an aside, although one you’ll see more of as we go through the rest of the charts.  Yes, there will be more charts.
Looking at how January compared to 2018, we see at 10.5% increase in new listings, and a 1.7% decrease in active listings.  Since active listings are merely the listings left at the end of month, and new listings are truly the relevant real estate for most eager buyers, I tend to think that January of 2019, based on the numbers, gave us far more options than January of 2018.
But then we need to look at the ratio of sales-to-new-listings to see how quickly the market is gobbling up inventory, and even then, we see a decline from 46.6% in 2018 to 42.4% in 2019.
This simply doesn’t match what my buyers and I felt in the market.
So I decided to break things down even further.
Let’s look specifically at the 416, aka “City of Toronto” in TREB language, to see if the numbers tell us anything different:
So here we see an even higher proportion of new listings than in 2018, and an even higher proportion of active listings.  Sales are down modestly, and the “sale-to-new-listings” ratio declined from 54.6% in 2018 to 45.2% in 2019.
That ratio is, however, slightly higher than the GTA-wide figure above; 45.2% to 42.4%.  But is that enough to really suggest that the 416 is way hotter than the GTA, and/or the 905?
I’m not sure.
For that, we have to look at the 905 data:
The sale-to-new-listings ratio is only 41.0%, and in Toronto-416 it’s 45.2%, but that’s still not enough to suggest that the core is “way hotter” than the outskirts.
In the end, I’m left scratching my head, because it’s starting to look like the numbers do not match up with what my buyers and I felt in the market during January.
But let’s continue this look at the 905, just because we’re already here and it’s an informative exercise.
Shall we?
Breaking down the 905 and looking at regions (ignoring the smaller ones), we’ll see how things look in Halton, Peel, York, and Durham:
From what I can tell, this is somewhat consistent with the other areas.
The increase in new listings so far this year is proportionately higher, but comparing the modest drops in sale-to-new-listing ratios to the GTA and 905, we see the same trend.  If anything, now the drop in 416-Toronto sale-to-new-listings looks like the outlier.
How about Peel?
Same story here.  The sale-to-new-listings ratio drops 2%, which is in line with the 3% in Halton, and 1.7% in the 905.
And now I’m seeing another trend that shows Toronto-416 as the outlier: all these other areas saw an INCREASE in sales.
That’s right, Toronto-416 saw sales drop by 6.3%, and yet Halton saw sales increase 8.7%, Peel by 0.8%, and the overall 905 by 4.7%.
The trend continues in Durham:
The 8.1% increase in sales is in line with everything outside of Toronto-416, although the 6.3% drop in sales-to-new-listings ratio is closer to Toronto-416.
If you’re like me, you’re seeing that 235.3% number jump out at you.  I know, it’s nuts.  But that’s how tight inventory was in the spring of 2017, and thus why we saw such a run up in prices.
Last but not least, York Region, and there’s one stat here that really tells a different story.  See if you can pick it out:
Do you see?
Yes, sales are down 1.0%, but that’s not what I’m talking about.
It’s the sales-to-new-listings ratio.  It’s only 29.5%.
Now that is in line with the 29.9% from 2018, but it’s out of whack with the rest of our stats:
GTA – 42.4% 416 – 45.2% 905 – 41.0% Halton – 43.4% Peel – 52.2% Durham – 43.0%
And then we have York Region at 29.5%
Conclusion: York Region has fallen off a cliff since 2017.
Sure, the 67.3% sale-to-new-listing ratio in 2017 was already much lower than Halton, Peel, and Durham (72.7%, 77.9%, 81.0%), so to see it drop down to 29.5% has to be taken in context.  But having said that, Toronto-416 in 2017 was lower than York – 66.0%, and it’s only dropped to 45.2%.
So yes, York Region has fallen off a cliff.
It’s no surprise that the average sale and median sale prices are down 16.6% and 14.5% respectively since then, albeit on small sample sizes that can never be taken as entirely accurate.  For reference, the Toronto-416 average sale and median sale prices are up 6.8% and 20.0% respectively in the same time period, so the median is off, the average is pretty close, and I think the bottom line is that York Region has been absolutely hammered in two years.
But going back to my original point, what do these numbers say about my “feel” for the market in January?
It says my feel was wrong.
At least according to the market statistics, it was wrong.
What I felt wasn’t wrong, and while that sounds like the introduction to a conversation about emotions, because I felt what I felt, dammit, it means that I can’t suggest that the rest of the buyer pool, and buyer agents, suffered from the same affliction.
I can give you examples galore.
Renovated 3-bed, 4-bath in Riverdale?  No options.
$2.5M new-build in Leaside?  Not happening.
$1M brick-and-beam hard-loft conversion in King West?  Nope.
$1.3M semi-detached, 3-bed with parking and finished basement in Leslieville?  Didn’t see it.
1-bed, 1-bath, $500K with low fees for an investor in King West?  Nothing we liked, despite there being “tons” of inventory.
And on, and on, and on.
Every buyer, every price point, every location, every property type – we suffered from a lack of suitable options.
But you know what?  This has been the story of our real estate market for as long as I can remember.  Time-permitting, maybe we could divide all the new listings into categories for “quality” listings and “other.”  Or with even more time, maybe I could lay down on the couch and talk to a bearded-man holding a clipboard and explain how picky I am with regards to Toronto real estate.  But either way, January was slow for my buyers, but this was not reflected in the TREB stats.
So the market bears win.  
January was busier than last year, and there’s more on the market.
The sale-to-list ratio has declined, and that means more inventory is “building up.”
I’m going to revisit the above charts at the end of February to see if the trend continues, but for now I’m still crossing my fingers for more inventory at the start of every week…
The post A Deep Dive Into January Inventory Numbers appeared first on Toronto Realty Blog.
Originated from http://bit.ly/2WU3Du1
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spoilertv · 1 year
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spoilertv · 1 year
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rebeccahpedersen · 6 years
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A Deep Dive Into January Inventory Numbers
TorontoRealtyBlog
Were you a child of the 1980’s?
Did you take swimming lessons?
Does your heart skip a beat when you see………….
…………..THIS!
Yup, there it is, in all its glory.
Many of you have no idea what I’m talking about, and others are already calling your parents.
Starting in 1981, the Canadian Red Cross introduced a graduated program for water safety among youth, and we were awarded different colour badges for each level.
You all know how far you got in the program, don’t deny it.
I distinctly remember vying for my maroon badge (pictured above), and having failed the test, instead of giving me nothing – they gave met yet another red.
In 2019, of course, none of this would be possible.  Every child is equal, they’re all winners, and to actually inform them of their successes and failures, even if it could save their life, wouldn’t meet the social agenda de jour.  But I digress, as many of you do not welcome my old-man fist-shaking…
I’m proud to say that I got as high as maroon, which is the fourth rung on the ladder, and I think it basically meant I could jump in the pool and not drown.  I never did get my blue, although it wasn’t for lack of effort.
Just because I know you’re all trying to picture the badge hierarchy in your mind, take a look at this:
Yellow, Orange, Red, Maroon, Blue, Green, Grey, White.  Then came “Life Saving I,” and “Life Saving II,” and God knows what else, since I surely wasn’t a part of it.
So what does this have to do with Toronto real estate inventory levels?
Nothing.
I just took my “deep dive” analogy way, way too far…
Before the January TREB numbers came out, I predicted that sales would be down, and that the media would have a field day with that statistic.  I also suggested that the true cause of a decline in sales would end up being much lower inventory.
As the readers pointed out last week, I was wrong.
And yet I can’t make sense of these numbers, because what I felt in the market was simply not reflected in the TREB stats.
January was one of the slowest months I have ever seen for new listings, plain and simple.  I had the same conversation with every buyer-client, every couple of days, ending with something to the effect of, “I hope we see more new listings next week!”
I currently have over twenty active buyers, all of whom would buy tomorrow if the “right” property came onto the market.  And yet having sold only two properties to buyers in January as a result of the lack of inventory, I’m trying to figure out why my clients and I saw such a lack of inventory, but the TREB numbers showed we were on par with last year.
So I decided to go back and look at the last eight years of data for January and see how this past January compared.
Have a look:
The first thing I notice here, as I’m sure all of you did, was that whopping 136.3% number in 2018.  Well, that tells the entire story of the crazy spring-2017 real estate market, since listings were so scare.  Just look at the active listings in January of 2017: 5,034, sandwiched between nearly 10,000 in 2016, and nearly 12,000 in 2018.
But that’s an aside, although one you’ll see more of as we go through the rest of the charts.  Yes, there will be more charts.
Looking at how January compared to 2018, we see at 10.5% increase in new listings, and a 1.7% decrease in active listings.  Since active listings are merely the listings left at the end of month, and new listings are truly the relevant real estate for most eager buyers, I tend to think that January of 2019, based on the numbers, gave us far more options than January of 2018.
But then we need to look at the ratio of sales-to-new-listings to see how quickly the market is gobbling up inventory, and even then, we see a decline from 46.6% in 2018 to 42.4% in 2019.
This simply doesn’t match what my buyers and I felt in the market.
So I decided to break things down even further.
Let’s look specifically at the 416, aka “City of Toronto” in TREB language, to see if the numbers tell us anything different:
So here we see an even higher proportion of new listings than in 2018, and an even higher proportion of active listings.  Sales are down modestly, and the “sale-to-new-listings” ratio declined from 54.6% in 2018 to 45.2% in 2019.
That ratio is, however, slightly higher than the GTA-wide figure above; 45.2% to 42.4%.  But is that enough to really suggest that the 416 is way hotter than the GTA, and/or the 905?
I’m not sure.
For that, we have to look at the 905 data:
The sale-to-new-listings ratio is only 41.0%, and in Toronto-416 it’s 45.2%, but that’s still not enough to suggest that the core is “way hotter” than the outskirts.
In the end, I’m left scratching my head, because it’s starting to look like the numbers do not match up with what my buyers and I felt in the market during January.
But let’s continue this look at the 905, just because we’re already here and it’s an informative exercise.
Shall we?
Breaking down the 905 and looking at regions (ignoring the smaller ones), we’ll see how things look in Halton, Peel, York, and Durham:
From what I can tell, this is somewhat consistent with the other areas.
The increase in new listings so far this year is proportionately higher, but comparing the modest drops in sale-to-new-listing ratios to the GTA and 905, we see the same trend.  If anything, now the drop in 416-Toronto sale-to-new-listings looks like the outlier.
How about Peel?
Same story here.  The sale-to-new-listings ratio drops 2%, which is in line with the 3% in Halton, and 1.7% in the 905.
And now I’m seeing another trend that shows Toronto-416 as the outlier: all these other areas saw an INCREASE in sales.
That’s right, Toronto-416 saw sales drop by 6.3%, and yet Halton saw sales increase 8.7%, Peel by 0.8%, and the overall 905 by 4.7%.
The trend continues in Durham:
The 8.1% increase in sales is in line with everything outside of Toronto-416, although the 6.3% drop in sales-to-new-listings ratio is closer to Toronto-416.
If you’re like me, you’re seeing that 235.3% number jump out at you.  I know, it’s nuts.  But that’s how tight inventory was in the spring of 2017, and thus why we saw such a run up in prices.
Last but not least, York Region, and there’s one stat here that really tells a different story.  See if you can pick it out:
Do you see?
Yes, sales are down 1.0%, but that’s not what I’m talking about.
It’s the sales-to-new-listings ratio.  It’s only 29.5%.
Now that is in line with the 29.9% from 2018, but it’s out of whack with the rest of our stats:
GTA – 42.4% 416 – 45.2% 905 – 41.0% Halton – 43.4% Peel – 52.2% Durham – 43.0%
And then we have York Region at 29.5%
Conclusion: York Region has fallen off a cliff since 2017.
Sure, the 67.3% sale-to-new-listing ratio in 2017 was already much lower than Halton, Peel, and Durham (72.7%, 77.9%, 81.0%), so to see it drop down to 29.5% has to be taken in context.  But having said that, Toronto-416 in 2017 was lower than York – 66.0%, and it’s only dropped to 45.2%.
So yes, York Region has fallen off a cliff.
It’s no surprise that the average sale and median sale prices are down 16.6% and 14.5% respectively since then, albeit on small sample sizes that can never be taken as entirely accurate.  For reference, the Toronto-416 average sale and median sale prices are up 6.8% and 20.0% respectively in the same time period, so the median is off, the average is pretty close, and I think the bottom line is that York Region has been absolutely hammered in two years.
But going back to my original point, what do these numbers say about my “feel” for the market in January?
It says my feel was wrong.
At least according to the market statistics, it was wrong.
What I felt wasn’t wrong, and while that sounds like the introduction to a conversation about emotions, because I felt what I felt, dammit, it means that I can’t suggest that the rest of the buyer pool, and buyer agents, suffered from the same affliction.
I can give you examples galore.
Renovated 3-bed, 4-bath in Riverdale?  No options.
$2.5M new-build in Leaside?  Not happening.
$1M brick-and-beam hard-loft conversion in King West?  Nope.
$1.3M semi-detached, 3-bed with parking and finished basement in Leslieville?  Didn’t see it.
1-bed, 1-bath, $500K with low fees for an investor in King West?  Nothing we liked, despite there being “tons” of inventory.
And on, and on, and on.
Every buyer, every price point, every location, every property type – we suffered from a lack of suitable options.
But you know what?  This has been the story of our real estate market for as long as I can remember.  Time-permitting, maybe we could divide all the new listings into categories for “quality” listings and “other.”  Or with even more time, maybe I could lay down on the couch and talk to a bearded-man holding a clipboard and explain how picky I am with regards to Toronto real estate.  But either way, January was slow for my buyers, but this was not reflected in the TREB stats.
So the market bears win.  
January was busier than last year, and there’s more on the market.
The sale-to-list ratio has declined, and that means more inventory is “building up.”
I’m going to revisit the above charts at the end of February to see if the trend continues, but for now I’m still crossing my fingers for more inventory at the start of every week…
The post A Deep Dive Into January Inventory Numbers appeared first on Toronto Realty Blog.
Originated from http://bit.ly/2WU3Du1
0 notes