Television HOUSE OF THE DRAGON (Renewed for Season 2, post #571)

Would love for the GOT genre to put movies out. Say a movie about the long night, a movie about the Doom of Valyeria , etc.
 
Good first episode, but holy shit, the mayhem in that first scene was nasty! That cart full of severed body parts...

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That blonde Brother of the king is a twisted piece of shit of epic proportions rivaling only the Sausage king from GOT. I can see he's gonna be a PROBLEM... :p
 

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I'm just going to wait for the entire season to air and determine the answer to this question then. And then decide whether to watch it or not. GoT was way better when binge watched anyway.

I hated the last couple seasons but if you rewatch it over a few days or weeks it’s not really that bad. Watching one episode at a time definitely magnified the shittiness of the last season.
 
Having not read the book this is based off I'm surprised 2nd season was announced as I swear I remember this being one season only.
 
Ya that is what most guys say, but the mistake is guilting or forcing the small percent who are truly phobic and dreading it but feel they have to, or they will be shamed and hated by the wife, as 'everyone else's husband comes in'.

I know most doctors are aware of that now and will advise a wife not to push the husband too hard if it seems he will not be able to handle it.

Yeah, a lot of nurses don’t like a husband that’s going to faint or whatever to get in the way and will take a no nonsense approach to getting the husbands the fuck out of there if they think they’ll be a liability.
 
Well I'm certainly not checking it to confirm.

Weren't all three of Dany's dragons male? Drogon, Rhaegel and Viserion seem like male names.
 
Yeah, a lot of nurses don’t like a husband that’s going to faint or whatever to get in the way and will take a no nonsense approach to getting the husbands the fuck out of there if they think they’ll be a liability.

It seems like men weren't even allowed to be around their wives when babies started being born in hospitals. Old movies and even cartoons portrayed fathers waiting for a birth in a room with other expectant fathers. I think the first I heard of a father in the delivery room was into the 1970s.


In 1938, half of all American babies were born in the hospital; by 1955 it was 95 per cent. Yet along with professionalized medical care, an expectant mother now found herself “alone among strangers” on a kind of conveyor belt moving from admissions to a prep room, where she was shaved and given an enema. Then she was moved to the labor room, where she stayed, mostly alone and sometimes sedated, during the long hours while her body got ready for delivery. She then was taken into a separate, sterile delivery room, indistinguishable from an operating room, where she actually gave birth, and then went on to the recovery room. She awoke in a maternity ward room, where she stayed for as long as two weeks before going home with her baby. During the long hours of labor and delivery, the men were segregated, kept away from the action, and relegated to an all-male waiting room, where they fidgeted, paced, smoked cigarettes, and anxiously awaited news of mother and child.
https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/116291
 
It seems like men weren't even allowed to be around their wives when babies started being born in hospitals. Old movies and even cartoons portrayed fathers waiting for a birth in a room with other expectant fathers. I think the first I heard of a father in the delivery room was into the 1970s.



https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/116291

Shaved and given an enema? What for?

And lol at two weeks in the hospital. These days they’re punting the family out in like 12 hours.
 
Shaved and given an enema? What for?

And lol at two weeks in the hospital. These days they’re punting the family out in like 12 hours.

I suppose the enema was to flush the colon so they don't shit when pushing the baby out. The shaving was to be able to see the vagina. Before women started shaving, the hair could get pretty wild.

Some women could pop out kids without missing a beat like this Monty Python scene.
 
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