Also love that his claim to fame, a short-lived show from thirty years ago, was utterly eclipsed by its own spinoff.
Also love that his claim to fame, a short-lived show from thirty years ago, was utterly eclipsed by its own spinoff.
Yep. Tim Allen may be an absolute toolbag but he had a highly enjoyable standup schtick for the time and parlayed that not only into a very successful sitcom, but also into a later sitcom that, though a bit more ham-fisted in its execution, ran for a freaking decade. And on top of that he’s had some beloved roles in…
It has to really suck to be Kevin Sorbo. Even Tim Allen has a TV series starting on Disney+ and Last Man Standing was on the air for 10 years. Yellowstone is getting a lot of attention, and spinoffs! Outspoken conservatives are getting work. A lot of it. At some level, he has to know that the reason he isn’t is…
I love when people confuse “reasonable” and “agrees with me”.
Thank god I don’t live in California! proclaims man who would race out of a funeral and be on the first flight to LA if absolutely *anyone* would return his phone calls.
Just read what he actually said. He said he doesn’t care if someone liked him before and doesn’t like him now because of his political views. He’s not saying anything about not wanting to influence people or make his opinion known whatsoever.
Finally, you guys got a second joke!
I’m pretty bored of the guys they both have tweeting for them.
Every photo I’ve seen of his mother has that cut--KEEP IT.
She also brings to the fore the fact that Chiguhr can’t be both a force of righteous consequences AND a random agent of death. Llewellen’s fate is set in stone by his own actions, but the “call it” guy in the gas station is just the victim of bad luck? It’s one of the novel’s great feats to make Chiguhr come off…
I prefer No Country to Blood Meridian, and might put The Road above the latter as well.
One of the most fascinating aspects of the adaptation is that Chigurh’s dialogue is heavily cut down for the movie version. In the book he has several monologues detailing his philosophy that were basically all cut which makes him more impenetrable, for the better I think.
I’m still waiting for Hollywood to wake up and realize that bad books are much easier to adapt into good movies than good books
Hotel was only an episode but AHS Camp Redwood he was a season regular. I just love hate watching American Horror Story.
Wasn't even his first appearance on the series. Murder Night in the shitty Hotel season was literally serial killer crossover.
I believe you’ll find that Wonka is a Gene Wilder role.
I was trying to imagine what role Key was playing, then I remembered this is some sort of weird prequel that no one asked for.
And:
And:
I find playing it to be a very cozy experience, but that has nothing to do with critical thinking.