Don't expect to find out what happened to the Russian in the Pine Barrens.
One of the best episodes ever. Paulie and Christopher stuck and lost in the woods. Too many great lines to quote.
Column: Appearance on 'The Sopranos' an offer Jets coach Eric Mangini couldn't refuse
As if NFL commissioner Roger Goodell didn't have enough wayward players to worry about, Jets coach Eric Mangini was caught on camera in a New Jersey restaurant last week meeting a known mob boss who has wagered large sums of money on his team.
Fishy, no?
Yet a call to league headquarters Thursday to find out how Goodell planned to deal with Mangini generated this kind of response:
Fuhgedaboutit.
Before going any further, let's clear up a few things.
That was indeed Mangini and his wife, Julie, on HBO last Sunday night dining out, and the plates of food set out in front of them were real, too. Everybody and everything else, from Tony Soprano to the restaurant itself, the Nuovo Vesuvio, was fictional.
After a cameo on "Sesame Street" last year, Mangini decided to add some dramatic bona fides to his resume by playing himself on last Sunday night's episode of "The Sopranos." That's one of the show's rules. Lauren Bacall, Ben Kingsley, Nancy Sinatra and Lawrence Taylor all went along. So did Mangini.
And so in the next-to-last show of the long-running series, the Jets coach is glimpsed dining at a restaurant owned by Soprano's childhood friend, Artie Bucco.
"The Sopranos" heads for highly anticipated climax
By Arthur Spiegelman and Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - His pompadoured henchman, Silvio Dante, is barely breathing and full of holes; his brother-in-law Bobby is dead and Tony Soprano himself is left in a darkened bedroom, clutching a machine-gun -- like a frightened child holding a teddy bear.
He is so abandoned that even his long-conflicted therapist has dropped him as a patient after being convinced by colleagues that "the talking cure" doesn't work on sociopaths.
In case you haven't figured it out, the end is near -- on Sunday, to be exact -- for one of television's most riveting programs and maybe for its chief character, North Jersey mob boss and all around family man, Tony
The HBO series concludes after six seasons spanning 8 1/2 years, having broken new ground for television: portraying a hero who is thoroughly evil, a man who corrupts everyone he comes into contact with while appearing perfectly ordinary to his neighbors.
And he suffers from the same worries and fears the rest of us do -- even if he occasionally relieves the tension by killing someone.
Actor James Gandolfini's performance as Tony Soprano has been hailed as a tour de force, as has the acting of other cast members.
With New York gang rival Phil Leotardo getting the jump on Tony's crew as warfare erupts between them in last Sunday's penultimate episode, Tony sends his family into hiding and huddles with his dwindling cadre of underlings in a New Jersey safe house.
By most reckonings, Tony appears likely to end up either face down in the proverbial plate of spaghetti or in the federal government's witness protection program.
A seemingly less probable outcome would have him killing Phil first and consolidating power as a mob super boss; Tony has proven very resourceful in tight spots before.
Bodog.com wrote:The odds on Bodog are 1 to 3 that he lives and 2 to 1 that he dies.
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