Monday

TV Round-Up


I'm not loving Sunday as much as I used to. The only nudity in True Blood was the male variety. Dudity is becoming the specialty of this show. I know it has a devoted gay following, but I'm hoping they will reach out and throw a bone (boner?) to us straight perverts as well. Some of the cable shows with nudity (Game of Thrones, Magic City, and Californication, e.g.) are fun for me to watch, but I hate having to sit through all that campy vampire crap without some reward.

Weeds didn't have any actual nudity, but it at least offered us some titillation in the form of partially exposed female bottoms.

Kat Foster got bound and spanked.



Two women named Jacyln Becker and Jocelyn Cruz pranced and wiggled around in bikinis. So there's that.



You will find some nudity from French TV down in Defoe's section

  • * Yellow asterisk: funny (maybe).

  • * White asterisk: expanded format.

  • * Blue asterisk: not mine.

  • No asterisk: it probably sucks.

OTHER CRAP:

Catch the deluxe version of Other Crap in real time, with all the bells and whistles, here.










 

"Magic City"

all of season one in 1080p clips and captures

  episode 6

Olga Kurylenko



Willa Ford













 

TV

Lauriane Sire in Talons Aiguilles et Bottes de Paille, s1e4, in 1080p

Ophelie Koering in the premiere episode of Inquisitio in 1080p

Films

Clara Ponsot in Les Infideles (2012) in 1080p

Agathe de La Fontaine in Train de Vie (1998). It is in 1080HD, but in a 4:3 aspect ratio.

 









CLIPS

Lynn Collins in Angel's Crest (2011) 1080p



Bien de Moor in Code Blue (2011)



Yasmine Vox in Good Luck Chuck (2007) in 1080p



various women in the Good Luck Chuck montage sequence




Pics and Collages

Miss USA 2011 Alyssa Campanella



Francoise Dorleac, Catherine Deneuve's sister, in Polanski's Cul-de-Sac, 1966. Here's the Wikipedia description of this film: "Cul-de-sac (1966) is a bleak nihilist tragicomedy filmed on location in Northumberland. The general tone and the basic premise of the film owes a great deal to Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, along with aspects of Harold Pinter's The Birthday Party." Well, anyway, Francoise was my first celebrity crush, so there's that ...




Francoise died in an auto accident about a year after making this film. She was 25.