albeti
AlwaysBeenTim
albeti

I have seen you beating the drum that Cracker shouldn’t be in the top and, with respects to last week, I really have to disagree with you. The bikini look was cute and fun, the astronaut look might have been too on-the-nose but it was delightful, and the pink mod look was stun. I thought she did great, last week.

I hate to say it but the pairing of Shaggy and Sting is so ridiculous that I am actually glad that it exists.

I want to say that one of the AV Club writers admitted that they’d never seen Ghostbusters until recently and didn’t care for it and everybody acted really shitty to her.

I have done this exactly once. It was recently but very minor.

I hate Cheech and Chong so much. When Up in Smoke came out, I was a kid in what was America’s Weed Capital (Humboldt Co, USA) and Cheech and Chong were everywhere. Everybody had seen the movies and they were quoted endlessly. I hated it.

Now playing

One of my favorite AV Undercover performances was the Melvins and Pinkus doing a cover of The Butthole Surfers’ “Graveyard” in front of a truck giving away free ice cream. The song is great, the cover was scorching, Buzzo was feeding off the kids presence, 99% of the kids had no interest in the music in it whatsoever

I’m tepidly excited about both of these albums. I love the classic Kanye albums but, with the exception of a few tracks, I haven’t been feeling his past couple of albums.

I remember when this came out and the tepid response to it. When I finally saw it on TV, my own response was, well, tepid. Walter Hill had problems that a lot of 80's filmmakers had, especially when dealing with musicals. It took many of the excesses of 80's filmmaking (gigantic sets that force scenes to take place at

Star Wars - Because, when I saw it as a child in 1977, my world changed. Besides, it has taught me more about Hollywood filmmaking than any other film.

Really? I mean $20 is less than the price of two movies. I mean $10 is an absolute steal but $20 is still an amazing deal.

Few A-list stars have handled sudden fame as badly as Amy Schumer without having an actual public breakdown. She got a lot of quick fame with her show and a lot of unfair backlash (like Lena Dunham) and she became very overly defensive and her art suffered. Her response to criticism was always tone deaf (personally, I

I loathe Marc Maron in 90% of what he does but I love him in this. He was perfectly cast.

What are you talking about? It’s a extremely popular business model. Just about every Internet company that you know has used it and so does just about every single company in Silicon Valley. Sometimes it works (Amazon, Facebook, Tesla) and a lot of the time it doesn’t but the rewards of success are so high that banks

Me too. I love it more than I love most of my family members but, keep in mind, that it is too beautiful for the world. Enjoy it while you can

As a longtime Moviepass lover, I always recommend making sure that you get it through a month to month package or, at least, a very limited (like 3 month) commitment. Don’t get it for a year because it could all fall apart, this summer.

That’s how I feel. Even after it all blows up, it will have been a wonderful ride.

Yes or, at least, it used to back when it cost $35+ a month. The original CEO stated that he hoped that people would get it, use it, love it and then eventually take it for granted. If people were paying for it but didn’t feel like going to the movies that month, then it was pure profit. He even specifically

Essentially, as far as Silicon Valley goes, you don’t have to make money. As long as your stock increases in value, you can borrow endlessly until you start making a profit. This is what Amazon, Netflix and Facebook did. Google is one of the very, very few companies that were profitable from the get-go.

Well, they could jack up the price at later point and have. When I started, years ago, it was $35/month. After a year or so, the price went up to $45/month. I stayed on because I watch 6-8 movies a month and it remained a good deal but I’m sure a bunch of people left and many more ignored it because they felt it was

I am shocked because it always seemed as if nobody liked (much less loved) Club Dread. It’s an odd movie, to say the least. Personally, I enjoyed Bill Paxton’s broken down Jimmy Buffet character but never could dig the rest of the movie.