De cómo un neoyorquino ansioso intenta dar consejos cotidianos, mientras él mismo se enfrenta a sus propios problemas personales.De cómo un neoyorquino ansioso intenta dar consejos cotidianos, mientras él mismo se enfrenta a sus propios problemas personales.De cómo un neoyorquino ansioso intenta dar consejos cotidianos, mientras él mismo se enfrenta a sus propios problemas personales.
- Nominado a 3 premios Primetime Emmy
- 3 premios ganados y 14 nominaciones en total
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Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIt took two years for John Wilson to capture the footage for the first season of the show.
- ConexionesFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Underrated TV Shows of the Last Decade (2024)
Opinión destacada
National Geographic documentaries seduce the viewer into believing that the cameras easily catch the drama and spontaneity of the wild as easily as an American teenager takes a selfie. The reality is that for every adorable clip of baby meerkats playing freely on the savannah, the camera has spent thousands of hours filming everything from empty grass to zoo enclosures to zebras wandering listlessly in the heat. National Geographic doesn't necessarily set out to capture baby meerkats playing. It happens to capture them, and then builds the drama into the documentary the viewer sees.
John Wilson uses the same approach to documenting the wildlife of NYC. Because he doesn't know when he is going to catch the human equivalent of playing baby meerkats, he films everything. And then he tells the story the images he as gives him. It really doesn't matter if that is the story he set out to tell. In the process, he tells us about himself, the people of NYC, the human relationship with garbage, his love for his landlady, risotto. Etc.
The result is hilarious, and, at times, poignant. Wilson treats all of his subjects with dignity, respect and grace, saving the punch line to aim at himself.
Watch it. It will remind you that life is a wonderful/awful mix, and that even the wealthiest person on earth doesn't know what to do with old batteries,
John Wilson uses the same approach to documenting the wildlife of NYC. Because he doesn't know when he is going to catch the human equivalent of playing baby meerkats, he films everything. And then he tells the story the images he as gives him. It really doesn't matter if that is the story he set out to tell. In the process, he tells us about himself, the people of NYC, the human relationship with garbage, his love for his landlady, risotto. Etc.
The result is hilarious, and, at times, poignant. Wilson treats all of his subjects with dignity, respect and grace, saving the punch line to aim at himself.
Watch it. It will remind you that life is a wonderful/awful mix, and that even the wealthiest person on earth doesn't know what to do with old batteries,
- aarpcats
- 25 dic 2021
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- How many seasons does How to with John Wilson have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución30 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 16:9 HD
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What was the official certification given to How to with John Wilson (2020) in Australia?
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