The piece in (I think?) The Atlantic from a couple of weeks ago was distressing. People who used to work 16 hours a day are now there 9-5 and taking 3-hour lunches, because they have nothing to do.
The piece in (I think?) The Atlantic from a couple of weeks ago was distressing. People who used to work 16 hours a day are now there 9-5 and taking 3-hour lunches, because they have nothing to do.
Yeah, the fact that his offer is showing up in the press without anyone taking him up on it makes me think he doesn't have much in the way of bigger fish for law enforcement to fry.
Maybe he said it to the wrong person's face and is still recovering from the subsequent dick punch.
THANK you. Had to scroll down way too far to find this.
Everything, and instantly.
I remember them too, which is why I believe them to have been popular more towards the latter part of the period you describe, since I was 8 in 1982 and really not paying attention to clothes at that point.
I live in downtown Toronto. I don't think you know anything about my neighbours.
I'll take your word for it. He sounds like a radical fundamentalist to me.
Counterpoint: the stuff about Pence that came out today.
That explains a lot, actually. Do you have any links to an article or anything that explains this? Not that I don't believe you, but I know some people who would be interested.
All true, but less shitty is still shitty, IMO, especially when the company is a near monopoly in one area.
I was thinking that we don't seem to ever have seen Elizabeth and Phillip worried about being bugged themselves. I know they're hugely trusted operatives, but between Phillip's obvious reluctance over the years and the history of the USSR spying on its own citizens, I'm surprised this has never been a concern for them.
I found it interesting that Elizabeth's spy wardrobe seemed to jump ahead a little this episode. I've lost track of what year it's supposed to be precisely, but acid wash jeans didn't really start to hit the malls in a big way until '85-'86. I guess being at the forefront of fashion makes sense for a cover identity…
He was genuinely charming in Cupid. He and Paula Marshall had ridiculous chemistry.
Ronin?
Yeah, that's a pretty big oversight. Illinois native, Second City and Steppenwolf alum, loads of character work before Christopher Guest (and Ryan Murphy) made her a household name — she should be on here.
The fact that Jim True-Frost is Campbell Scott's proto-hipster pal in Singles is blowing my mind. I had no idea until reading his entry.
I just watched that again recently with my dad, and got sad about Farina all over again.
Bingo.