A lot of them were good, but at this moment I remember the episode with the villainess with the magic paintbrush, and the styles it parodied. My Dear Friend is always quoting one of the lines: "With all that money, I could pay off my student loans!"
A lot of them were good, but at this moment I remember the episode with the villainess with the magic paintbrush, and the styles it parodied. My Dear Friend is always quoting one of the lines: "With all that money, I could pay off my student loans!"
"Bowfinger"?
Here's another vote for "Nashville or bust." That was good writing.
<overthinking> I liked the future episode because of its assertion that a hero is as a hero does. With any number of other shows, the superhero's virtue was shown through acts such as killing an entire race of aliens or eliminating the villain's free will. This episode said that there is good and evil, and each person…
I think the "King of the Hill" episode "Fun with Jane and Jane" is alluding to them.
My favorite version of "Baby, It's Cold Outside" was the one sung by Mikhail Baryshnikov and Miss Piggy.
Cookie Monster: Or it may just be the Net.
I think that was another ongoing narrative of the show. If it wasn't for Hank, Bill would have cracked up, Peggy would have been a cold-blooded con artist, and Bobby would have been a Satanist in his mother's basement. [Spoilers?] Perhaps Boomhauer's profession in the final episode is also a result of Hank's example.
"What use is a book with no pictures or conversations?"
My Dear Friend took New Testament Greek from Dr. Orr, a retired professor at the Seminary. Dr. Orr had a series of strokes soon after. Mr. Rogers had also learned the language from Dr. Orr, and when the professor was in his last days, Mr. Rogers visited him faithfully.
The sequence for "Sesame Street" which showed how crayons were made and that Mister Rogers film have two different approaches. Both have appealing music and visuals. "Sesame Street" has fast cutting and a fast pace. It shows how each sequence _looks_: good film-making. The Mister Rogers piece is, as the article says,…
In my wet blanket mode: The "post-30 Rock world" will be Fey losing some of her co-writers. The new voice will be different. Perhaps as good, but different.
But World War II fashions were awful. Passing grade for all.
Among other reasons, because it exponentially increases the distance between the killer and the killed. The distance increases when even the information is channeled: when it's the CIA who says who will be killed and why, and the public cannot see why.
Why Syracuse?
The Voice fired the guy who compiled it, though.
And Harpo being "the silent one" wouldn't make any sense if all the actors were silent. He stands out because of his wordless anarchy.
"The Yule Ball . . . is a dance."
I try to avoid things that angry up the blood. That's how Satchel Page lived so long.
The Loyal Order of Water Buffalo from "The Flintstones."