Yes, they were.
Yes, they were.
In an era before when NBC could just send the news coverage to MSNBC, or the game to CNBC, etc.
I remember watching it and assuming we had a Budd Dwyer moment in the making. When the Bronco doors opened at Brentwood, I couldn't watch.
In my fantasy, Reigns turns heel to cost Ambrose his chance at beating Lesnar at Fastlane — even vice versa could work — and we get Triple H/Lesnar and Ambrose/Reigns in Dallas instead of Triple H/Reigns.
It'd be a hell of a plot twist for R-Truth's increasing confusion to be attributed to CTE damage.
Thank goodness we know enough now about CTEs that Bryan Danielson gets to live a long, happy and hopefully healthy life with his wife and, some day, kids. *No one* would argue, in 2016, that he's a wuss for not competing further.
They hadn't said anything to Simpson about foul play. He jumped to the conclusion that someone had killed her.
It would make him look suspicious because they hadn't yet said anything about there being foul play. I imagine the writers deviated from that to make Simpson's obvious guilt less apparent.
Actually according to Marcia Clark, it was worse than that in reality:
No, that's actually what happened, and it was telling — if the police tells you your ex-wife died, don't you want to know why? (Unless … dun dun dun … you already knew.)
Um, that's how Shapiro looks.
Travolta can still act. Go watch PRIMARY COLORS. So good.
None of them cracked the pop culture space the way OJ did; how about Michael Strahan?
I think when she has to pose in public as still being supportive … I mean, have you been watching this series? Because this is its premise. He went to jail, she had to go back to work to support the family.
Yes, O'Malley won over a dozen counties in fictional Iowa, which is how you know the show's taking some liberties with reality.
No, the Marvin Gaye/Thicke thing is what they did the last time with Rowby, as translated through Jonathan Coulton/Glee. And "Thicky Trick" was amazing.
No, they've run out of ways to run with the original premise of the show — a humbled woman re-entering the modern world of legal practice, the compromises involved in politics. Everything they've done for the past year or so just rhymes with or rescrambles past situations.
Honorable Mention for The Sultan (Rikishi), Iraqi Sympathizer, Sgt. Slaugher, and third-generation superstar, the blue-chipper Rocky Maivia.
And thank goodness nothing bad ever happened to him because of a helicopter ever again.
Anthony Edwards said it unbleeped in his final episode.