Because, um… They're wrong?
Because, um… They're wrong?
Did the Daily Beast get any open letters from the family members of anyone killed by the right-wing regimes in Central and South America that Reagan propped up and armed, too?
But the conception and writing were just horrible. Even my superhero-addled brain could see that.
Definitely in favor of a Kingpin recap. The idea that NBC, in the throes of post-Sopranos fever, would greenlight a cartel drama by the irreplaceable David Mills, seems to defy all logic. In a good way.
The Washington Post today ran an article in which they looked into the scarcity of shows with predominantly black casts on the various streaming platforms and DVD. Former hit shows like Living Single and Girlfriends are nearly impossible to watch today.
It was kind of like the show was helping us get over Laurel's death by showing us how awful she was, for such a long time.
I think the atmosphere in hip-hop is a whole lot different than when most of the music by the above-mentioned artists was released. For a major label to promote a rap artist who isn't doing cocaine infomercials and songs about the strip club (as opposed to songs that can be played in the strip club) is rare. And for…
Yeah, my DVR shut the show off before Miranda could finish the song. Thanks, HBO.
I'll say that the relentless bleakness of season 4 (including the awfulness of Connor and the misuse of Cordelia) nearly drove me away from the show. Thank goodness they rediscovered balance by season 5.
I just assumed that, when the Kings found that she wouldn't be around long-term, they just let her fade away.
If this happened around the time I think it did (early to mid-nineties), this was during the era when artists were making multi-million dollar videos. I can see record labels not just being content to squeeze their artists to recoup those costs.
If you know the date it originally aired, you might be able to locate it on YouTube. Last year, someone sent me a link to the episode of the Weakest Link that I was on in 2002.
Not really. But I didn't travel all over the world, entertain millions of people, and make ground-breaking music, either. Whew. Lucky me.
All I remember from Graffiti Bridge is a scene where Morris Day breaks up a meeting by peeing in a potted plant and setting it on fire (that is, with his urine). Did I imagine that?
If no one has, someone should mention the brilliant b-sides Prince put out during the 80's, a lot of which became hits on their own.
Honestly, if you told me a couple of years ago that I'd outlive Prince, I'd have sworn you were lying. Sure, he was older than me, but the way he lived his life… Damn.
I am stunned to hear this. Prince defined a period of my life so completely, it's hard to accept that he is now gone.
Wow, that comment about Mike Epps' portrayal of Richard Pryor here, fills me with anticipation for Epps' Pryor biopic. Yep.
I briefly thought that they were going to have Martha overdose on Valium to get out of the horrible situation she's in. I should have realized that they'd never be that easy, on her, the Jennings, or us.
One of the problems with these repeatedly rebooted characters is the insistence of over-using certain villains. Sure, Doom is the FF's ach-foe. But after seeing the movies fail repeatedly to get him right, let's move on to someone else. Diablo, Annihilus, the Frightful Four, anybody.