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Post by ARENA on Sept 15, 2016 9:08:10 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Sept 15, 2016 15:26:42 GMT
I could never get into this, seemed to be based on an inaccuracy. They had the Coroner running round looking for clues or evidence to solve the case, in my experience the Coroner sits like a judge and hears all the evidence at the hearing Does she still live with Jonathon Kerrigan?
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Post by ARENA on Sept 15, 2016 17:28:53 GMT
I could never get into this, seemed to be based on an inaccuracy. They had the Coroner running round looking for clues or evidence to solve the case, in my experience the Coroner sits like a judge and hears all the evidence at the hearing Does she still live with Jonathon Kerrigan?
She lives in Ealing with husband TV producer Craig Woodrow and their daughter Amelia.
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Post by HILD on Sept 16, 2016 11:52:05 GMT
I could never get into this, seemed to be based on an inaccuracy. They had the Coroner running round looking for clues or evidence to solve the case, in my experience the Coroner sits like a judge and hears all the evidence at the hearing Does she still live with Jonathon Kerrigan?
She lives in Ealing with husband TV producer Craig Woodrow and their daughter Amelia. Coroners in other countries have control of the entire case, including directing the police and questioning people. Coroners here would typically expect others to do the questioning but they can direct others to investigate certain facts pertaining to the case. I think a Sherriff or Procurator Fiscal in Scotland might have similar powers.
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Post by honeybear on Sept 16, 2016 12:29:31 GMT
Why don't you join us ,Hilda. Were really quite nice.
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Post by althea on Sept 17, 2016 14:34:16 GMT
I enjoyed the series.I don't watch much TV in the day,as I have a low tolerance for rubbish. Now and again,something really good comes along,like Father Brown and The Coroner.Then I make an effort to watch or record for later. I do like a good murder mystery.
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Post by aubrey on Sept 18, 2016 10:22:42 GMT
Why don't you join us ,Hilda. Were really quite nice. Speak for yourself! I've not seen The Coroner, and I did not like that new version of Father Brown - why update it to the 50s, for one thing - the stories seem to me to be a product of the 20s and 30s, and full of the weird cults and things they had back then, as a reaction to WW1*: there's even a kind of surrealism about them, and about the Kenneth Moore version: the recent version - what I saw anyway - just made it into another Cosy, which I don't think Chesterton is. * I think of Sayers' Peter Wimsey stories as essentially WW1 stories, even those that do not explicitly mention the war: the unmarried women living in lodging houses, gossiping and sniping at each other, the slightly or more than slightly damaged characters that keep cropping up (and Wimsey's reasons for taking up detection in the first place), the air of sadness that pervades everything, even the wild parties that Wimsey goes to (usually for information).
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Post by anybody on Sept 18, 2016 10:57:15 GMT
I loved the Jesse Stone series.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 18, 2016 11:16:45 GMT
We like Midsommer, Foyle, Lewis, and watch George Gently being MS fans but am unsure about the relationship between George and his junior Bachus. I do not thing a junior would be so disrespectful in those days - think he would have been out on his ear
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Post by althea on Sept 18, 2016 15:36:55 GMT
I loved the Jesse Stone series. I loved it too,anybody. Not many people seem to have watched it. I loved the moody atmosphere and of course,Tom Selleck played Jesse perfectly.
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