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Texas Ranch House by Barnaby Coughlin, Bobby Birleffi, Christopher Ragazzo, Ilana Trachtman
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DVD detailsActor: Bill Cooke, Hannah Cooke, Lacey Cooke, Lisa Cooke, Robby Carbezuela Director: Barnaby Coughlin, Bobby Birleffi, Christopher Ragazzo, Ilana Trachtman Brand: PBS Producer: Amanda Karrh Producer: Anna Park Producer: Anne Vega Producer: Annie Heringer DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Color, DVD, NTSC, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.85:1 Running Time: 480 minutes DVD Release Date: 2006-06-13 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: Pbs (Direct)
DVD Reviews of Texas Ranch HouseDVD Review: Five Stars for the Cowboys! Summary: 5 StarsAfter watching a few episodes I really began to see the guys turn into real cowboys. Now the Cooke family, what a mistake in casting. They feed each others ego so they will never believe in constructive criticism. Lisa Cooke was so self righteous, you wanted to gag. The meaner her husband was to the cowboys the more turned on she became. The Cooke girls were boring because they were on their way to becoming little replicas of Lisa Cooke. Mr. Cooke started out being very pleasant but gradually became absorbed with the power and praise he received from his wife. I think at one time he could have been liked by other people but after the master manipulator told him what to do, he was doomed.
DVD Review: Horrible! Summary: 1 StarsI agree with the majority here, save your time and money and get one of the other series, NOT this one. The casting is horrible and the man that is supposed to be the leader of the family is a wife-fearing wimp and should be embarassed for the rest of his life to have acted like this. The people that chose these individuals should have reconsidered their choices. I, personally, would have loved to have the opportunity to participate in something like this, however watching these people make me wonder. If the real people back then had acted like this you can believe the the whole history of the united states would have been different (and not for the best).
DVD Review: If only the cowboys HAD guns... Summary: 3 StarsBoy, this was almost painful to watch. But before I start my review let me point out that we see only 8 hours of 2.5 months of Ranch life and that means that we don't get the whole picture. For example, when the family sits down to have their first meal on the ranch it is said they asked the cowboys to leave. But a source on the internet says that the cowboys were invited to eat with the family and declined. So take everything with a pinch of salt. After saying that let me start:
The Good. The best of the Texas Ranch House is the cowboys. Out of them I could not help but like Jared Ficklin, also known as Slim, and Robby Cabezuela, who went from top hand to foreman. Jared, because of his family's history in the west, was truly focused on being the best cowboy he could - serious, but with a touch of humor, willing to work hard and yet with a strong sense of honor that would have made any Westerner proud.
Robby, while sometimes seeming a tad protective of his position as foremen, gained the respect of the men under him because of his knowledge of ranching and because of his protective feelings towards them. He thought of them as his men and even continued to sleep in the crew house after being made foreman.
I also found Rob Wright, a late comer to the ranch, interesting as I wanted to see how he would react to the problems and the divide between the family and the ranch hands.
The cowboys, by the way, were said to be ill mannered forwards the daughters of the family. This comes up again and again. But they only have one clip, about 2 minutes long, to show whenever this comes up. I am sorry, but if after 2.5 months you can only find one scene which shows two cowboys acting like jerks towards the daughters then you need to drop that charge.
The Bad. Stan Johnston, the first foreman, a retired military, seemed to do a OK job but kept missing chances to bring everybody together. He was fired, but I will not say why, and in the end wasn't on the show very long. I think, frankly, his ideas about how to run a ranch were one of the problems. He saw it as a military unit with a chain of command and it only worked up to a certain point.
The Cooke Family were just not ready for living on a ranch house. Bill Cooke being a businessman thought of it as a business. Yes, it is, but instead of the cows being the most valuable items on the ranch it was the cowboys. THAT major point was missed by him who thought of them as his employees. Also, he had no idea how to run a ranch, he messed up his book keeping, failed to get his sums correct, so on, so forth. IT is sad when I find myself seeming to know more about running a ranch.
The daughters did OK at first. They worked hard, tried to make friends with the cowboys and handled being ruled by their mother with few complaints. By the end of the show they were living in a dirty ranch house, with clouds of flies, wearing nothing but undergarments. Was it too hot? Was there nothing clean to wear? Or did they just give up when the cattle drive started? And why is it, whenever things start to get rough or the women don't like something, they start using the word sexism? Sexism, racism, socialism always seem to start popping up in the House series whenever somebody feels they are doing too much work or are being treated badly by 21st Century standards.
The Ugly. Two people are on this list. First, Ignacio Quiles, who was the cook nicknamed Nacho. He was a chef from New York City who failed, in the end, to be a good cook. Sometimes he made a great meal but most of the time he made them beans and flatbread and real cowboy food. So real they got sick on it. Now, in his defense running a restaurant, with helpers and dishwashers and modern equipment, is not the same as being a cook for a bunch of ranch hands. Been even so, as most of the other reviews will point out, he was disgusting.
Lisa Cooke, the wife of Bill Cooke and mistress of the ranch. I don't care how the show got edited, there are some scenes with her that make me hate her. When her husband broke a promise with Jared in the last episode she praised him! She called the cowboys employees, she was paranoid about Robby, and while complaining about Nacho and his cooking she rarely shared the food that the family grew in the garden.
And at last there is Maura Finkestein, who was the Girl of All Work, the maid, and who also got to go on the cattle drive. Half the time she seemed happy or totally upset. I don't think she knew what she was doing or why she was there. I am not saying she was a bad maid or a bad ranch hand. She did both jobs well. I just don't think she really understood why she joined up. At one point she even compared herself to Calamity Jane. Not the only woman in the House series to do so - but I don't think people understand the history and background of Calamity Jane, otherwise they wouldn't compare themselves to her.
There is more I could say - a ton of things really. If you are interested in cattle drives and ranch life I suggest going someplace else. If you are interested in how people can come to hate each other because of egos, paranoia, bad food, harsh living conditions and, in some cases, no ethical backbone this is the DVD set for you!
DVD Review: A Stubborn, Unruly, Self-Righteous Cast Ruins It Summary: 2 StarsThe PBS House series is notorious for quality programming, a historical spin on modern reality shows. This is not a good example of the series.
The idea is not a bad one. A family is transported back to the mid-1800s to experience life on a Texas Ranch House after the Civil War. Strangers are put in place as cowboys, the foreman, the maid, and the cook. The goal is to capture enough cattle to pay the debtors at the end of the season and still be productive enough to carry on for another.
Unfortunately, the cast is awful; they cannot seem to get along long enough to experience what life would have been like during this time period, and when they do get along, they refuse to adhere to the rules. Mr. Cooke changes his mind at the drop of a hat because Mrs. Cooke wants to have her foot into every conversation and decision. She feels the need to wave the flag for women's rights when she is supposed to be living in a time when women did not even have the right to vote. Her insistence that Maura, the maid, be given a chance to become a cowboy is preposterous and a thinly veiled attempt at exerting her power over the ranch. PBS misfired when they gave Nacho, an ex-homeless man, the duties of cook. He allows the food to rot and several of the cowboys get sick. Many of the cast members are dismissed from the show, and the constant fighting makes it hard to like anyone for very long.
The biggest redeeming factor of this show is the grand finale where a fight erupts and threatens to take the entire show with it. The big evaluation is a riot to watch and almost makes this season worth watching, but only if you don't have to pay an arm and a leg to see it.
In spite of the quality of this installment of PBS House, I hope another one is made. The other entries are lightyears better in comparison.
DVD Review: don't take this too seriously Summary: 4 StarsAfter reading all the reviews, I decided to review this one even though I have not reviewed in a while. This is my favorite of the series.
Is it living history....NO....is it reality....NO....is it just plain fun to watch. Yes! How many of us know of the married couple with the manipulative B***** and the Boss who is a weakling? It is great fun. When the Indians come down it is priceless....
Come on people, this is not history, this is a reality show with 20th century people trying to live in the past....it is fun, because you hate everyone...except Jared....he is cool. Well, I recommend it whole heartedly. It is not history, it is just plain entertaining...like watching Nascar to see the crashes. I liked it very much.
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