Back in the 60s there used to be an American prime-time soap opera called Peyton Place. It was the first of its kind and was immensely popular. At its peak it ran three times a week and had fans from all over the world. All I remember about it were the sophisticated bacchanal lifestyles it introduced and the heavy criticism it received for the sexual themes with which it dealt. The words Peyton Place became a byline for confusion in family and public life.
When I decided to return home in the 70s, I was warned that indeed, a lot of Trinidadian behaviour would fit nicely and easily into the Peyton Place scenario.Game of Thrones is an American fantasy drama television series. It is an adaptation of the novel A Song of Ice and Fire by George RR Martin, and as I write this, is about to start its fourth season.The series is a morass of moral ambiguity. It is populated by smartmen and smartwomen disguised as fantastically wealthy "lords" who seem to have no basis for their richness and do as they want, chopping of heads and sundry body parts at will, as they hump each other's wives and husbands.
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