All in all, you won't go wrong with this series if you are a fan of the gay genre. The episodes run around 10 minutes, which I wish they were a bit longer, maybe 15-20 minutes, but it does make for a fun, fast ride. Particularly fond of the acting of Marc Sinoway and lead Ben Baur, but all the cast does fantastic jobs. The series is for mature audiences as there is some frontal nudity and depictions of sex, but lends to the realness of the show. Very good acting, even by secondary cast members (such as the main character's straight co-worker who he takes underwear shopping in one episode). It is cleverly written, witty and a realistic look at modern gay life in NYC. I discovered this series recently and watched season one (2012, eight episodes) in a couple of evenings.
A must to watch! Hats off to leads Ben Baur and Marc Sinoway for their acting skills.
I highly recommend renting both seasons the first season's episodes are 10-14 minutes or so, but cleverly written, well acted and some nice graphic nudity scenes Season two, longer episodes, but more graphic nudity scenes of the hot young male actors. “So Canada is absolutely stuck in this very awkward place.Lots of male nudity of cute actors in both seasons of Hunting Season. “The price of oil is not high enough to justify Canada to be a commodity superpower, and the Canadian dollar is not weak enough, and certainly the manufacturing sector has not healed enough, to have Canada be a manufacturing superpower either,” Enenajor said. Almost all agree the Canadian dollar won’t be seeing parity again any time soon as the country struggles to fire up new growth engines. cents it hit in December, a growing number, including Bank of America’s Enenajor, expect it to fall further to 69 U.S. Though most forecasters see 2016 marking the end of the decline, predicting the loonie will finish the year higher than the 11-year low of 71.44 U.S. “So we’re going to have to go back, having lost a decade on the technological side,” he said. In its effort to become an energy superpower, Canada neglected technological development, Dodge said. The road he sees ahead is to restore the emphasis the Mulroney government in the 1980s and the Chretien government in the 1990s placed on building up the manufacturing and service sectors. The steepness of the dollar’s drop indicates the markets have little confidence that investment will return anytime soon to the high-cost and carbon-intensive oilsands, Dodge said. Article contentĬanada’s relatively strong performance in the Great Recession “looks more like a blip” in retrospect, he said in a telephone interview. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. As prices began their ascent to US$100 per barrel and beyond, investment flooded into Canada’s oilsands, the third largest crude reserves in the world. China’s rapid industrialization was driving up demand and prices of commodities worldwide, including crude. Shortly after becoming prime minister in 2006, Stephen Harper, who represented a Calgary constituency in Parliament, went around the world talking up his country as an “emerging energy superpower” and comparing development of the oilsands to the building of the Great Wall of China or Egypt’s pyramids. In the 90s, Canada was the manufacturer to the U.S. “In the 2000s Canada was the commodity producer to the U.S. “Canada is in the midst of an identity crisis,” said Emanuella Enenajor, senior economist covering the country for Bank of America Merrill Lynch in New York.