True, but unless there were a lot of people watching White Christmas over the holidays, I'm not sure why so many were looking him up in the first place.
True, but unless there were a lot of people watching White Christmas over the holidays, I'm not sure why so many were looking him up in the first place.
It's a stacked day today. Although I would have expected Cary Grant to rank higher than Danny Kaye.
I like watching Graham, partly because he tends to have people, particularly British comedians, that I enjoy watching. But he also tends to do this thing where he stops the conversational flow to show something weird they found on the Internet that maybe has a tangential relation to one the guests. And that tends to…
BRITISH PANEL SHOWS:
I was originally going to say Michael Jackson's Bad but I'm pretty sure that was my brother's. It might have been Tiny Toons Sing! or the Broadway Cast album for The Secret Garden. But I also remember playing the hell out of The Lolliwinks and that must have been earlier than those other two.
BRITISH PANEL SHOWS:
Damn hipsters, always watching indie darlings like The Breakfast Club and Dead Poets Society.
I don't have the time to read it now but I'll definitely get to it when I get home. In the meantime, is there any explanation for the Honeybee Inn sequence?
I mentioned over the weekend that I've been re-listening to Michael Jackson's solo albums while following along with a book that goes through them song by song. The most recent chapter I read was about HIStory. I have a lot of thoughts about HIStory but I'm going to limit myself to three:
BRITISH PANEL SHOWS:
Not a bad list. I'm pleased that he ended up performing "Miami 2017" on the show since that's probably my favorite. (I'm hoping that was by request of Stephen.)
Good to see them using actual stand-up rather than actors trying to be stand-ups. And Melissa Leo is always worth a watch.
Exactly. The title implies multiple fences but we only see one.
There's a show in the UK called Dara O Briain's Go 8 Bit that features celebrities playing video games. They've used a lot of classic arcade and mobile games but also managed a bit of Resident Evil and Portal. Some were adjusted specifically for the show so I guess a show over here could do the same if the makers…
NO PANELS SHOWS TODAY:
Ah yes, as any middle schooler in America knows, that was the universal gesture for "groveling."
BRITISH PANEL SHOWS:
I was talking more along the lines of being a Sherlock villain who a) isn't just a watered-down version of Moriarty and b) is memorable and creates a sense of danger. Moriarty will and should always be Sherlock's greatest aversary (dead or alive) but Magnussen managed to be creepy and threatening in his own way.
Haven't read it yet but I would be surprised if it didn't.
It's not the sort of discussion you would expect to hear on television in general, let alone late night.