I didn't know there was such a series. I guess I'm not the ideal audience for this movie.
I didn't know there was such a series. I guess I'm not the ideal audience for this movie.
On the Internet, nobody knows you're a man.
W.I. — I think too many people thought these TOH episodes were too frightening. They were also the good ones . . .
_And_ you're British, Washington Irving. Or Canadian.
Also in the over-thinking it department: this episode was good not only because of the theme of live television through the ages, but the sub-theme of TV morality through the ages.
Also in the over-thinking it department: this episode was good not only because of the theme of live television through the ages, but the sub-theme of TV morality through the ages.
I'm surprised nobody else mentioned the Marx Brothers.
Oops.
Christian Socialist Feminist Democrat.
This version of "Ukulele Lady" has a strangely mournful undertone.
"Autocorrect is your best entertainment value."
I previewed it before the review; I'd never seen it before. The "happy family" doesn't seem as happy as it might be. There's tension between Billy's mother and grandmother before the latter has her seizure. And Billy has the worst of both worlds: at first the parents lie to him, and then bring him up into the bedroom…
Hurrah! _The_ Jaime Weinman!
Yes, yes, yes! Why not?
I missed this episode. I don't have TV.
Aldo Kelrast: Susan isn't in hell in _The Last Battle_. She isn't dead, for one thing.
_Jacob Have I Loved_, by Katherine Patterson.
Umbriel, re season: You have it right. Fact beats opinion.
Fond memories of the TV "Paper Moon." There was one episode in a very strange one-room schoolhouse.
How many of the "seasons" were repeats? Saturday mornings often took the cheapo route: one production run showing for two or three years.