Yes, but you have to hunt down the specially processed cocoa that turns red in the batter.
Yes, but you have to hunt down the specially processed cocoa that turns red in the batter.
50/50 shredded potato & zuchinni (with the juices squeezed out).
S & P, flour, & beaten egg.
For my NY'sE money it's Kathy Griffin & and Anderson Cooper on CNN.
Granted, the quality of tthe evening is dependant on how risque Griffin tries to be on live television and how many nips of scotch Cooper needs to get through it.
Adn this year they are live for over 4 hrs, but there are drag queens in Key West to break…
Noah's election night show was spot on (and better than Colbert's) . But night-to-night, not so sharp.
You will enjoy this, and you will roll your eyes a few times.
This movie is quite conventional in many ways EXCEPT that it is about black women who are about the smartest people on the planet (certainly at NASA).
The character animation here is terrible. Truly awful.
Ugly character design, unnatural movement
The rest of this serial is fine, but the character work is very amateurish
Tl;Dr
2 words- Toaster Oven
I think Ozzie's hallucination supposed to be 'hit ' a deer, not 'ate' one.
True - and due mainly to Lucy being 'with child'. But I submit Roseanne took it to a new level.
In a little shoe called NCIS: New Orleans. Is that still on?
BSG reboot
Roseanne did that all the time, and the stories would carry on in subsequent eps. I think it was the first serialized sit-com.
The CW is a broadcast network built on 80%+ light sci-fi and fantasy.
Add the long-running TNG universe (21 full seasons) + Enterprise. Then throw in BSG (4 full seasons) and, hell, Outlander.
It's a slangier, more vulgar version of IRL (In Real Life).
For my money, The Daily Show w/ Trevor Noah did a better job of what the reviewer said this Colbert ep did.
Well, no- this is an examination of two people who clearly should simply no longer be together, and the misery that ensues when they lie to each other and themselves about it.
It's like a Denny's- with pies made on the premises and a full-service menu, breakfast through late-night.
Stephen Sondheim's Little Red Ridinghood said the same thing, and you're both right.
No- Gail made up the incident of his parents getting a divorce, and he's such a neurotic man-child, he made up the story/said it took place when he was 30.