For me it was when he was gunned down in cold blood by Ray in episode 8. "How can this happen?!"
For me it was when he was gunned down in cold blood by Ray in episode 8. "How can this happen?!"
If anything, Lynch and Frost were trolling with Dougie last night. "So they think Agent Cooper is a zombie who does nothing but talk about coffee and cherry pie, huh?"
I loved her look of pride when she dropped Dougie off at work. I also liked how she immediately went about unbuckling his seat belt and opened the door for him. People have complained about how Dougie is able to behave like this and no one notices something's wrong, but I thought that showed the adaptability of…
For me, the whole time I've seen people complain about Dougie and thinking Cooper will be himself the following episode, I've found myself wondering if they read "The Metamorphosis" and ten pages into it say, "Alright, I get it, he's a bug. Turn him back into a human and let's get on with the story."
Yeah, it's only been on message boards with this revival that I've learned people hate that scene. As I've said elsewhere in this thread, it leads into one of the scariest scenes of the whole series! I was actually excited to finally get the song when it came out on the "Season Two" CD in 2007.
One that I thought was him trolling certain fans was making Hawk so important in the new series. There's an interview on one of the DVDs (it might be FWWM) where Michael Horse says something about how everybody loved Hawk and Hawk was their favourite character, and I remember people online making fun of that,…
One that I thought was him trolling certain fans was making Hawk so important in the new series. There's an interview on one of the DVDs (it might be FWWM) where Michael Horse says something about how everybody loved Hawk and Hawk was their favourite character, and I remember people online making fun of that,…
It wasn't until this season that I found out, because of internet message boards, that people hate the original "Just You And I" scene. That strikes me as crazy because, as you point out, it leads directly into what is one of the most terrifying scenes in the original series with BOB climbing over the couch. To me…
I wouldn't argue this point with someone with a Tim Curry in Rocky Horror avatar.
Having lived in Canada my whole life, I had never heard anyone talk like this. And then one day I ended up working for someone who does. Over the next year I came to realize how many words actually have an "out" sound in them, and how odd they sound said with "oat".
It's the issue with Perry Farrell for artist of the year on the cover. As I said, it was the first issue I'd ever bought, and because it was a year end issue with all sorts of best of lists, I read it a lot. The following month, Nirvana was on the cover, and The Fannies got a smaller story, and Spin seemed to…
I was never a huge LL fan, but last year I picked up the "Goin' Back To Cali" b/w "Jack The Ripper " 12". Man, that thing is a beast.
Run DMC were never on Def Jam (were with Rush Management and produced by Rick Rubin, so they were pretty close), but LL was certainly in the same cohort with them and the Beasties in that initial wave of hip hop becoming a huge part of pop music in the mid-1980s.
This just showed up, so something may be coming: http://www.neilyoungarchive…
The album was originally scheduled to come out today, but for some reason Reprise/NY kept putting off making the official announcement despite the fact reviewers had been given a stream of the entire album to listen to. This is why MOJO or other boomer rock magazines have printed reviews published in their most recent…
Just a slight correction, the original Warner-era Neil Young recordings ends with "Re-ac-tor".
That was the first issue of SPIN I'd ever bought. The other notable thing in that issue is that My Bloody Valentine's "Loveless" got a yellow rating (this was when records were ranked green, yellow or red like a traffic light). It's always more interesting to see how things were actually thought of at the time vs…
Well, that's certainly every Carsey-Werner production of note, and no elephants in the room with this announcement.
I remember watching an episode of Y&R circa 1986, and Gerard Ford's son ended a scene by starting to kiss someone hello (they were in Paul Williams' office, so there were other people around, it wasn't a love scene), and returned to them half an hour later, and they were ending their kiss, and we were all, "Have they…