My friends are pretty cool, yeah. But they obviously don't know the rules of the game.
My friends are pretty cool, yeah. But they obviously don't know the rules of the game.
I read it! I may not have commented, but I always check out your 100 Episodes and TV Club 10 articles, as well as a lot of TVCC's. Sometimes there just isn't much to say.
Well, maybe not legally, but you can find the rest! I think you might be able to find the show with songs intact if you look hard enough.
Dagnabit!
They already have "Thanksgiving Orphans" planned to discuss.
It's a shame, since there just isn't much interest in older shows on the site, and I understand that, since we're still in the Television Renaissance, and there are so many great series to watch now. But I get about as much laughs from a WKRP or Mary Tyler Moore or Bob Newhart episode as I do from a Parks and Rec or…
Did you know that Old MacDonald was a bad speller?
And I have to admit- I may probably be the only person on the internet who actively dislikes Friends, but the Thanksgiving football game episode is a classic.
Ugh, picking between Bewitched and WKRP was a tough choice.
Leapfrogs? Life Behind Larry? THE STATE? CLASSIC SIMPSONS? LEGENDS OF THE HIDDEN TEMPLE? ONE MORE FOR THE FUCKING ROAD? Not to mention Seinfeld, Batman: TAS, Pete & Pete, Roseanne…
Same!
Iron Maiden
Black Sabbath
Van Halen
Foo Fighters
So, what about Agent Carter?
Doug is a show intentionally made for kids his age and younger. Which is fine, but there isn't much to it for anyone older.
I was on the Mad Men>Breaking Bad train for a while, but after BB's final batch of episodes, I think MM has hell a tough act to follow
Man, the one thing I REALLY miss from the first 3 seasons is Paul Kinsey. Don't get me wrong, his episode in season 5 is a hoot. But his love for Twilight Zone just made him a client after my heart!
Yeah, I was fascinated by the show at first, but wasn't necessarily in love. By the end of season 3, I officially became hooked.
When Michael Crichton visited the ER set all the way back in the first season, he lamented that the show basically turned into a soap opera. One of the producers replied to him "yes, but don't say that out loud!"
Fair enough! I have to admit, I find more pleasure in rewatching The Flintstones or Jonny Quest over Scoob nowadays, but that would be a fun article to read regardless.
Yes, Dick Van Dyke is also fantastic and deserves some rediscovery, but it seems like the majority of TV fans of this generation simply do not want to discover anything that's "too old". Which is just sad as far as I'm concerned.