Les images de cheminée dominent actuellement le classement des meilleures émissions sur Netflix

Les images de cheminée dominent actuellement le classement des meilleures émissions sur Netflix

Period of Tranquility

The top TV shows list on Netflix was pleasantly calm last week. Ricky Gervais’ new comedy, “Armageddon,” sits at No. 1. A Spanish-language series, “The Manny,” landed at No. 3 and the Wattpad adaptation “My Life With the Walter Boys” at No. 5.

A Surprising Entrance

By God, it’s “Fireplace for Your Home: Classic Edition,” and “Fireplace for Your Home: Birchwood Edition” entering the ring with a steel chair! Two of the top TV shows on Netflix currently are actual fireplace footage. They are beautifully curated and presented in 4K-UHD, and they are beating out big names like “Young Sheldon” and “The Crown”. These fireplaces are clearly well thought out for this season.

Well-Thought-Out Programming

The “Fireplace for Your Home” series is seasonably appropriate and fulfills a cozy need for people who don’t have a fireplace. Viewers don’t receive just any footage, but rather the snaps and pops of a real fireplace as the wood slowly burns.

These fireplace specials are just a few of the “Fireplace for Your Home” series available. Netflix offers a three-part series showcasing a “Crackling Yule Log Fireplace”, a regular “Crackling Fireplace”, and a “Crackling Fireplace with Music”.

Netflix has poked fun at the “Fireplace for Your Home” series before, creating a dramatic trailer in 2013 with dramatic pull quotes such as “I cried when the fire spread to the other log” and “Fireplace For Your Home is about a fireplace in your home.”

George Ford, the director of the fireplace specials, attributes the popularity of fireplace footage to a “primal” human desire, stating, “For millions of years we’ve cooked on the fire. We used it for safety. We’ve used it for light at night. It’s all about the fireplace.”

Source : www.businessinsider.com

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Mikael Buxton

Mikaël Buxton est fan de séries télé depuis l’enfance. Il a lancé Series-80.net en 2003 pour partager sa passion des séries cultes des années 70, 80, 90 et début 2000. Aujourd’hui, il continue de faire vivre ces souvenirs en écrivant sur leurs retours, reboots, et secrets de tournage.