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Joey Jo-Jo Jr Shabadoo
avclub-2a234ded7e3087053301c741dedbe89b--disqus

It's true, and you think Hollywood would be more cognizant of making films with and always giving rewards to those films with those same cliches.

There was a weird period in the early 90s when I remember going to suburban department stores at the mall and seeing them selling Malcolm X hats in the youth clothing section(in a town in California that was basically all white and Latino with hardly any black population). I think it was sort of a crossover from the

A lot of times the actress nominees roles aren't just ill, they have to die to get nominated. And if a white woman plays a mother in some film and gets nominated, you almost know there's a 50-50 chance she died in that flick.

That's true and Whoopi Golberg was playing a con artist psychic who helped a white ghost. And even Forrest Whitaker playing Idi Amin had the story told through a Scottish doctor.

Oh yes, and I actually saw Coraline and liked it and forgot about it myself.

Don't worry, I'm sure he'll remember soon enough after Paul Allen's goon squad tosses him into Lake Washington…

Yeah, it's funny since Anheuser-Busch has bought up or bought stakes in so many formerly independent "micro" breweries for years now. Though they can do that on one hand and then on the other hand try to appeal to the piss lager crowd by going, "Hey, we're not like those fruity hipster beers, we've got the low

The NASCAR dad Nissan commercial was the sappiest piece of claptrap I've ever seen for a Super Bowl commercial. Someone I was watching the game with was just like—"Is this the American Sniper thing?"

Corn can also be used to make "tortillas". Do we have any Mexican-Americans with us today? Well, buenos dias!

It's got the best instrumental score outside of the original Bond theme itself, Diana Rigg at her hottest, an awesome ski chase(that invented the Bond ski chase) and a bobsled chase, and it's got a sort of stripped down feel to it that's close to the Fleming novels(as opposed to the gadgets galore of You Only Live

I think Top Gun was one of the first to be released with a reasonable price but there were a bunch of Pepsi commercials at the beginning of it.

As a really little kid in the 80s, I remember grouping together The Dark Crystal, The Secret of NIMH, and The Last Unicorn as the sort of "scary" films. Though there was something cool about them that they had these darker moments(I could never get with the really saccharine kids entertainment even as a 4 or

Ah, but they're such a nice couple, they settled down and opened a bed and breakfast on Dantooine.

Cassettes are great because you have to listen to the album in order unless you're really motivated to fast-forward or rewind.

I remember that film. Apparently according to Wikipedia the production costs were underwritten by McDonalds product placement. Films about divorced dads totally make we want to run out and get a Big Mac…

Yeah, speaking as someone who grew up not far from San Francisco and used to live there, he seemed to have no sense whatsoever of what working-class whites in the Bay Area would be like(let alone in San Francisco). It was basically a New York story with the backdrop of San Francisco scenery.

"And the 2022 Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical goes to Neil Patrick Harris as Tyrion Lannister in Thrones!"

It's basically a extended version of the kid sitting in his room with just a couple paragraphs for his 4th grade essay, playing video games instead of just finishing the damn thing—except that he has several million people worldwide and large corporations waiting for him.

So if George R.R. Martin dies than we'll have new Game Of Thrones books released yearly for the next decade?

I thought Match Point was the good one. The Rome one was a stinker.