This show had potential but the weird and inaccurate dialogue ruins it. Who the hell talks like this? This is the Wild West, not Shakepspear!!!!! Lame and boring. More shooting, less crappy dialogue like this. I was one of many who glad when this stupid show got cancelled.
You have no idea what you are going on about fool. People did talk that way, which you would know had you ever read a novel from that period. Don’t read much?
@@jamcrane3 they didn't talk this way. It is Shakespearean dialogue in a time that it was no longer spoken in America. I know because I am from the South and we still use Elizabethan terminology. Also I have studied American history and literature. This type of rhetoric was not common even in the 1850s-90s. And I own books from that period.
that thumbs up from richardson warms my heart.
I heard that. Truly a winning smile.
If anything were to happen to anyone here. *HEARST IS GOING IN THE BULL!*
Richardson, Richardson, Richardson. When will come the quiet hours of our declining years?
RIP Ralph Richeson
"Who indeed could miss her?" lol
E.B. Is as manipulative and conniving as he is Shakespearean and eloquent...
So not.
You can't get much better than this.
It's amazing how much language has changed in the last 150 years. If I wasn't educated, I wouldn't understand anything they said.
Ok... you know that, as in Shakespeare, this is not the language of the setting portrayed, right?
@@chadmichael03he said he was educated, didn't he?
Uriah heep knock off, ever so umbly sir?
Just what i was thinking. A good one too😊
Didn't know diversity hire was a problem at the time
This show had potential but the weird and inaccurate dialogue ruins it. Who the hell talks like this? This is the Wild West, not Shakepspear!!!!! Lame and boring. More shooting, less crappy dialogue like this. I was one of many who glad when this stupid show got cancelled.
Every man is entitled to his opinion, but it will often reveal much about his character.
And wits.
And tits.
You have no idea what you are going on about fool. People did talk that way, which you would know had you ever read a novel from that period. Don’t read much?
@@jamcrane3 they didn't talk this way. It is Shakespearean dialogue in a time that it was no longer spoken in America. I know because I am from the South and we still use Elizabethan terminology. Also I have studied American history and literature. This type of rhetoric was not common even in the 1850s-90s. And I own books from that period.
I love Richardson