avclub-432a3e9b6d24139828390fbefef76e69--disqus
Mike Smith
avclub-432a3e9b6d24139828390fbefef76e69--disqus

Don't forget Iron Man 1, since they playing both back-to-back to get attention on Iron Man 3!!!

Me, I getting the Thunder over the Girlies (They did have the Z's, but, they went out to get some Bud Lights)!

I hope Shout! Factory is listening to this so we can buy a lot of copies-the same way they did to They Lives, largely to the classic South Park Cripple Fight!!!

I like that one, too, but I like Streling Hollaway's reaction at the ending the best.

Wondering what magazine Vibe subscribers going to get to fill out their subscriptions? Good Housekeeping???

Which one?

I remembered one Mad version of it, written by someone named Cheddar Cheese, or someone like it!

In fact, they do always when they doesn't like their picks. In fact, I was watching NFL Network tonight, and they pick the Jets fans booing as the #2 Draft Day Moment (After Aaron Rodgers in the Green Room).

I was watching NFL Network, and the Jets fans booing is the #2 Draft Day moment (After Aaron Rodgers in the Green Room).

HOLY HUSTLER!!!

Yes.

Yes.

Just wait till tomorrow when they placed the Grimm episode they preempted, I hope.

CC did that to MST3K, only to come back on Sci-Fi and undo the babies stuff!!!

Heinz Ketchup>Hunt's Catsup.

Hope they get a change of heart by tonight, so can see the Grimm episode we missed!!!

There was an episode of Valerie like that that would perfect for A Very Special Episode (In case when or if Harper died, and when or if they bring that feature back), about the boys crashing a car from watching a episode of a fictious sitcom.

3-strip Technicolor was used in Leave Her to Heaven. Didn't started using Deluxe color film until 1955.

Homer and Linda Ronstadt follow it up with a bizarrely faithful cover of Willie Nelson’s “Funny How Time Slips Away” that retains some of the original’s wistful melancholy, even though it’s being sung partially by a fictional cartoon bumbler.

Agreed. It's called "You Nazty Spy!" and it was released on January 19, 1940, months before Chaplin.