MetroStyles
Stylish Dinosaur
- Joined
- May 4, 2006
- Messages
- 14,586
- Reaction score
- 30
Man, let's not take it too seriously. It's not a super-accurate representation of the real world. It's just fun.
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The show would've been much more inetersting had he stayed in Queens and start auditioning for TV work or something else. Getting show back to LA back to big movies is going to kill it. How many times can you see Entourage strolling past sports cars and chicks in mini skirts.
You seem to not have a brain. It has nothing to do with what I think of Vince. It's a TV show, I really don't care. However, it is a show that is billed as being a realistic representation of hollywood. Head On was a cheesy action film in which Vince's acting was completely and utterly panned. Then in Medeillin, where they had 100% artistic license and control, he was a laughable disaster. A total and complete catastrophe. Everyone including his friends and family panned him. Remember how mad Ari got when E let him see the reviews from Head On? Again, you are comparing him to DiCaprio when they couldn't be more different. DiCaprio established himself as a serious, noteworthy actor LONG before Titanic. Ever watch This Boy's Life (where he stars opposite ******* Robert DeNiro) or What's Eating Gilbert Grape (a movie that includes Johnny Depp), then how about Marvin's Room where he works with Merryl Streep, Robert DeNiro and Diane Keaton? All of this, including Basketball Diaries happened BEFORE Titanic.
This pretty much confirms you still can't separate real life and this show from one another.
No, it confirms like everyone else thinks, that a show that is billed on its reality (notice how most of the famous people in the show play themselves in real life) just **** the bed? Read everything that's been written about it. They always wanted to make it a fun, realistic portrayal of Hollywood. Well, that ending to anyone who is involved in entertainment, or actually really, anyone who reads Variety once every 5 years with half a brain could tell you, was bullshit. Again, many of the famous people are not made up, they come on the show with their real life reputations and their real life personas, so the fictional parts of the show should fit those.
I get your point - which begs the question: why did Marty agree to participate in this story if it's so out of line with what he would do in real life?
It was a favor to Mark Wahlberg, who as you know was in Departed.
That's your answer?
Again, you're answering a different question (why did he agree to appear on Entourage?) but that's fine. I just wanted to instill a little bit of doubt in your absolute certainty that it was an impossible story - not sure that I succeeded...
No, it confirms like everyone else thinks, that a show that is billed on its reality (notice how most of the famous people in the show play themselves in real life) just **** the bed? Read everything that's been written about it. They always wanted to make it a fun, realistic portrayal of Hollywood. Well, that ending to anyone who is involved in entertainment, or actually really, anyone who reads Variety once every 5 years with half a brain could tell you, was bullshit. Again, many of the famous people are not made up, they come on the show with their real life reputations and their real life personas, so the fictional parts of the show should fit those.
its a tv show you spanner head, not a documentary. i thought the finale was great because it made me happy for the boys and gave me a laugh. dont know about everyone else but thats all im after when i watch entourage. if i wanted realism i'd watch bio or the history channel