the joke about the deer bust falling off the wall. that's all I really remember. I remember thinking the entire thing was a huge waste of time after I was finished with it.
>NoOOoOoo we HAVE to have the funeral RIGHT now! It's a super busy community and everyone has a ton of stuff to do, we can't wait a few hours to solve the murder because... we JUST can't, okay?!
Seriously, I'll never understand that
Might sound strange but I love that series of scenes where James fricks off out of the main plot and stays with that one b***h. I like these parts because there's a season's worth of melodrama happening around James yet he has absolutely no agency in it whatsoever. It's comedic. Like an afk player in a shooter round that's popping off.
my only problem with that is that it is 100% unrelated to anything else
it never ties back to Twin Peaks and it's not resolved by the end of the season
Never understood why the network was so insistent that the city limit sign have over 50k population when it was pretty obvious from everything else in the show that the population was maybe 1/10th of that.
I mean there is a very large hotel and a few decent sized businesses in the area. The town I live in actually has a population of almost exactly 50000 and it definitely still has a small scale feeling to it if something like a murder happened here it would be a big event that would affect the people in the immediate area deeply. Twin Peaks definitely feels small but that's mainly due to the lack of exterior shots and the way all the characters see each other all the time, I think it makes sense if you consider that the show doesn't actually take place all over the town, but mostly in the sheriff's department, hospital, the hotel etc. where significant people are most likely to encounter each other, and then of course the Palmer residence and the houses of people who all know each other.
>The population of Twin Peaks was originally only supposed to be 5,120. However, there was a backlash against rural-themed shows at the time, as networks were fearful that the burgeoning urban and suburban population of America would not be able to sympathize with shows set in small farming or industrial towns, so ABC requested that the sign read 51,201. In a "Visitor's Guide to Twin Peaks" tie-in book authorized by creators David Lynch and Mark Frost, a note tells readers that the population was indeed 5,120, but that the sign had a "typo."
Early on, it felt like it was pretty much just a mill town and if that shutdown, the town would mostly collapse. The Great Northern provided some service jobs but was mainly there for people who wanted to go on hunting or fishing trips and wasn't there because there were lots of people wanting to visit Twin Peaks itself. in 'Twin Peaks: The Return', it felt much larger. Of course it had been nearly thirty years so it could have grown a good bit during that time.
An active backlash against rural shows like Peyton Place and Andy Griffith Show was already underway since the 70s, it was one of the first big anti - white media campaigns.
I am being dead serious, it's this scene sweeping up the bar for like 5 minutes
I laughed the entire time
It's like an Adult Swim bit put into a serious production
Lynch is a fricking master of comedy
>Cooper's first dream in episode 3 where I realised the show is not just a crime drama mixed with soap opera parody >Cooper finding Audrey in his bed and establishing their friendship >The Tibetan method >My son was standing there >It is happening again >Cooper recording what he thinks are his last words when he has been shot and still being a beacon of optimism and good will >Cooper helping Leland die in peace >Jimmy Scott, the red room
My favourite scene, and it's not close, is the one with the rock throwing divination and the bottles. Show was made by wizards and that's what really gave it away.
I watched the og run over 3 weeks, so unique scenes don't stand out to me. But I did like the guy from robocop doing forensics, he was my favourite side character.
Rural shows had high ratings. There was no public backlash, it was the israelites at CBS who wanted to push the "modern unmarried women in cities" crap, which then expanded out to other attacks on traditional values. It didn't take long for the word to get around the industry that if you wanted israelite approval for your project, you had to have a "modern" take on things. No one wanted to be the person who greenlit a rural show out of fear of being blackballed.
the joke about the deer bust falling off the wall. that's all I really remember. I remember thinking the entire thing was a huge waste of time after I was finished with it.
Can't pick between these two.
>yfw you notice the log lady can see him
Based, this scene blew my mind when I saw it, had to instantly look up the song.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAND IIIIIIIIIIIIIII'LL SEE YOUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU
holy shit I remember this being so kino when I first saw it. The final episode (at the time) but it felt like things were only just beginning
Doorknob lady
The scene where they get Ben Horne’s memory back through some confederate song is the only scene I clearly remember
Oh yeah, and that one scene in FWWM with Laura and the log lady outside the. bar with the red lighting. Fricking love that scene
the scene where the log lady attacks bobby and it's never explained why
twin peaks is know for many unexplained and weird happenings anon
are you joking, it's clearly not the log lady
>is carrying log
>not log lady
who else?
the log trans former FBI agent gone crazy, what's his name
It's Windom Earl dressed up as the log lady
oh the shit it come out of my ass
who was in the wrong here
while albert might've seemed like a dick at first, he was right
>NoOOoOoo we HAVE to have the funeral RIGHT now! It's a super busy community and everyone has a ton of stuff to do, we can't wait a few hours to solve the murder because... we JUST can't, okay?!
Seriously, I'll never understand that
ike the spike killing the woman
Polack accountant
This scene always gives me chills for some reason.
I like the scene where they drink coffee and eat sweets
Might sound strange but I love that series of scenes where James fricks off out of the main plot and stays with that one b***h. I like these parts because there's a season's worth of melodrama happening around James yet he has absolutely no agency in it whatsoever. It's comedic. Like an afk player in a shooter round that's popping off.
my only problem with that is that it is 100% unrelated to anything else
it never ties back to Twin Peaks and it's not resolved by the end of the season
Yeah I have no idea why they just dumped a filler arc in the middle of the season headed by JAMES of all people
When the actors were forced to shill on Japanese tv for coffee in a can.
There was a scene where Audrey refers to Cooper as a tall mysterious stranger or something. Anyone remembers that exact scene?
Not my favorite but it's a badass scene. Spoiler for The Return
The one where Cooper goes THAT'S D-WORD GOOD COFFEE 😀
I loved that scene too
after I saw it I just had to go to youtube to see a clip of it an reading all the fun comments
Canadians are dirty.
Never understood why the network was so insistent that the city limit sign have over 50k population when it was pretty obvious from everything else in the show that the population was maybe 1/10th of that.
I mean there is a very large hotel and a few decent sized businesses in the area. The town I live in actually has a population of almost exactly 50000 and it definitely still has a small scale feeling to it if something like a murder happened here it would be a big event that would affect the people in the immediate area deeply. Twin Peaks definitely feels small but that's mainly due to the lack of exterior shots and the way all the characters see each other all the time, I think it makes sense if you consider that the show doesn't actually take place all over the town, but mostly in the sheriff's department, hospital, the hotel etc. where significant people are most likely to encounter each other, and then of course the Palmer residence and the houses of people who all know each other.
>The population of Twin Peaks was originally only supposed to be 5,120. However, there was a backlash against rural-themed shows at the time, as networks were fearful that the burgeoning urban and suburban population of America would not be able to sympathize with shows set in small farming or industrial towns, so ABC requested that the sign read 51,201. In a "Visitor's Guide to Twin Peaks" tie-in book authorized by creators David Lynch and Mark Frost, a note tells readers that the population was indeed 5,120, but that the sign had a "typo."
Early on, it felt like it was pretty much just a mill town and if that shutdown, the town would mostly collapse. The Great Northern provided some service jobs but was mainly there for people who wanted to go on hunting or fishing trips and wasn't there because there were lots of people wanting to visit Twin Peaks itself. in 'Twin Peaks: The Return', it felt much larger. Of course it had been nearly thirty years so it could have grown a good bit during that time.
the main real city Twin Peaks was shot in had a population of 2,537 in 1990
An active backlash against rural shows like Peyton Place and Andy Griffith Show was already underway since the 70s, it was one of the first big anti - white media campaigns.
I am being dead serious, it's this scene sweeping up the bar for like 5 minutes
I laughed the entire time
It's like an Adult Swim bit put into a serious production
Lynch is a fricking master of comedy
>Cooper's first dream in episode 3 where I realised the show is not just a crime drama mixed with soap opera parody
>Cooper finding Audrey in his bed and establishing their friendship
>The Tibetan method
>My son was standing there
>It is happening again
>Cooper recording what he thinks are his last words when he has been shot and still being a beacon of optimism and good will
>Cooper helping Leland die in peace
>Jimmy Scott, the red room
there are far too many to choose from
>There was a fish in the percolator!
My favourite scene, and it's not close, is the one with the rock throwing divination and the bottles. Show was made by wizards and that's what really gave it away.
not many people are choosing scenes from the return. interesting
>interesting
Is it? Is it, really?
Filtered
I assumed OP meant the original series only, otherwise I would have picked the scene in Fire Walk With Me where Best Donna and I get married.
If we're including the Showtime series, it's this
I never fully watched this because it's boring let's be honest
but the dream room scenes were memorable
>I'll see you in 25 years
I watched the og run over 3 weeks, so unique scenes don't stand out to me. But I did like the guy from robocop doing forensics, he was my favourite side character.
Rural shows had high ratings. There was no public backlash, it was the israelites at CBS who wanted to push the "modern unmarried women in cities" crap, which then expanded out to other attacks on traditional values. It didn't take long for the word to get around the industry that if you wanted israelite approval for your project, you had to have a "modern" take on things. No one wanted to be the person who greenlit a rural show out of fear of being blackballed.
Evil Coop intro