They made the cop's story in the beginning into an episode of "Homicide: Life on the Street" (S:6-E:7) "Subway". I saw that one episode (starring Vincent D'Onofrio) when it was first broadcast and it's stayed with me all these years. That was like nothing I had seen before on television. I finally did the research and IMDB had a link to this video for the true back-story to that episode. All these years later, the rest of the story.
The young lesbian woman is a relatively famous screenwriter and actress (Guinevere Turner), she wrote the screenplay for American Psycho a couple of years after this. All these years I thought she was European, but she is indeed American, born in Boston and she grew up on communes across the US. Begs the question...what's with the pretentious fake European accent? I know she's drunk as hell, but still kind of weird.
Wow, you're right. Her wikipedia page also says she's openly lesbian. How did you know that's her? Also, this show is no way fake, is it? I'd like to believe that.
Love this show, but bullshit artist coked up do rag tough guy is super annoying. ANYONE who brags about beating someone's ass the way he's doing here is completely full of shit, like he's verbalizing what he wished happened instead of what actually did.
I find it interesting how this embellisher tells the same story twice only difference between the two is in the 2nd version he manages to be a snitch & a racist so flawlessly. Well perhaps some of this wasn't embellished after all. If this really happened it's horrible indeed nevertheless it definitely doesn't change the fact at this guy being a toal egotistical POS racist snitch!! That woman though OMG "and it's not that he did the wrong thing but hummm (⏸️ ⏸️ 🤔🤔 🦗🦗🦗🦗🦗) ten times the wrong thing. Damn chica` that was deep🤦🤣🤦🤣🤦🤣
i can see alot of myself in that cop. You can tell he holds so much weight on his shoulders and any possible chance he gets to vent he takes it. you can really tell the emotion behind his words and how open he is to talk about it because it most likely eats him up inside
Back when shows like this were REAL , they're not faking and don't really know about secretly filmed tv shows or care about any real world Implications of their actions. This kind of dark sleazy raw voyueristic Interaction and no bs authenticity couldn't exist anymore.
I couldn't imagine telling another man no matter how effeminate he might be I can't believe that he didn't have relations with another woman there's just a certain place in the area that you just don't go with another man. But this woman was drunk and horny. These lesbians fall in love and or lust quicker than anybody I've ever seen. The drama that comes with lesbians is to the 10th power.
Great act, they encorperated various styles and genres. Dance moves with great costumes and stage presents. To bad they didn't catch on like across the pond.
I used to watch these but remember very little. However the girl who hits on the cab driver was the one I recall the most for some reason. I did not actually think I would find it and specially on youtube of all places.
She didn't write "American Psycho". She's a screenwriter who was one of the co-writers who adapted the book ,which was written by Brett Easton Ellis, to script for the film.
@tommyls4357 No, the segment with Guinivere is not fake. She talked about it in a magazine interview a little after it aired. Even though the movie "Go Fish" had been released at the time, I do not see a reason why it would have been fake because she never talked about it or the fact that she had written and acted in a movie and by that time, maybe two movies, "Go Fish" and "The Watermelon Woman". Both being very independent/small budget movies. Also, while I was watching the episode when it aired I had to keep wondering if it was her and only confirmed it through the interview in a UK magazine article when the interviewer asked about it. Her statement was basically that she had just left a bar was very drunk with a compromised memory. I haven't looked at the article in years which I did buy a copy of that magazine (DIVA) issue, but I am not sure if I still have it.
What year was this and they must have been roasting in them outfits. Sublime as ever kid Creole but are you asking Gina about her boyfriend Or is his name strangely Gina
I like the black female driver with the short hair. she asks people about their story kindly and respectfully. she's a natural at interviewing/talking with people
Great entrance bopping out during that great trombone solo, I was fortunate enough to see them a few times opening for Fishbone, English Beat and the Toasters.
I just find it very "funny" that the second passenger (the girl) called men "boring and simple" and you have the male cop tell the horrible shit he has seen and things he had (and still have) to endure in the same video. Quite ironic really.