americanerrorist
Corwin Haught
americanerrorist

The fact that it is “the show before Bob’s Burgers” means that I’m in for a lot of inert watching of it.

The NBA and NHL play games that day, so...

The Batman serials are in fact still owned by Columbia Pictures.

The difference is HBO is locked into deals with cable companies that mandate a $15 a month price. HBO also has certain programming standards, none of which apply to HBO Max.

*cough*

All this hand-wringing over which network should air which show seems kind of silly as until fairly recently TNT and TBS were both general entertainment stations.

Deadline says Disney Television Animation.

CBS and Paramount Television were united in the original Viacom-CBS merger, and CBS took the old Paramount shows, such as Cheers, in the split.

Disney has announced that Marvel Studios has been officially assigned to the X-Men, Deadpool, and Fantastic Four portfolios, but their actual use has yet to be determined.

Garth is streaming exclusively on Amazon.

Anyone know which studio would win in the adjusted-for-inflation category? MGM had some pretty incredible years a long time ago.

Warner Bros. actually owns that, so off to HBO Max with you.

I was wondering about Spidey being the successor hero to Iron Man: does Pepper Potts pay him now or does he just get expenses?

A reminder: Netflix doesn’t own Tuca & Bertie. It is owned by The Tornante Company, a venture owned by Michael Eisner, former CEO of Disney. Bojack Horseman is also owned by Tornante.

Those characters are owned by major publishers, while Hellboy is owned by his possessive creator.

It’s produced by The Tornante Company, not Netflix.

Kelsey Grammer is a Republican, but the show hinted that Frasier and Niles are Democrats, most likely in the Hillary camp. Likewise, they hinted that Marty is a Republican who might consider Trump.

The following tale of alien encounters is true, and by “true” I mean “false”. It’s all lies, but they’re entertaining lies, and in the end, isn’t that the real truth? The answer is “no”.

The PBS show means it couldn’t be titled after the main character, so there would be a name change or some other workaround.