That grapefruit scene was beyond painful.
That grapefruit scene was beyond painful.
I more or less expect if I like an episode it will get a bad grade here. Happened the last half dozen times.
We ultimately don't know one way or another about how his daughter was raised, or what happened to the mother.
tl; dr
The first episode did not need four plots. Three should be the max. With Leslie's frenzy, the ep sort of gave me a headache.
Not a fan of the hunting at night. That sort of crosses the line. Not a hunter myself, but I know any number, and the regulations are needed.
She's less a Mary Sue and more a magical she-gro.
I think Lonely Days and How Can You Mend A Broken Heart were on their Best Of Volume 2. They broke up following that first batch of hits, with Robin going solo for a while and the two non-brothers leaving. Then a comeback, of shorter duration than the first run, but with some really big hits. Then they REALLY…
The Zombies only had two actual albums released, plus some non-album singles. I don't think there's enough material there to listen to them exclusive of other bands.
In later years Arness had his contract altered so that he didn't have to appear in all of the episodes.
The lack of respect thing was one thing I was conscious of as a child and as an adult. At some point you just stop getting hassled in certain ways, and it gets a whole lot easier to make whatever point we are trying to make at the time.
Hingle earned his arrogance, he was great. Anyone who can steal a movie from Clint Eastwood (Hang 'Em High) has something.
Your mom doesn't care that you're alive? Lucky you.
One problem I have with Hitchcock and Perry Mason is that basically every episode had to have a murder in it. I would watch a few and the actors or situation would be interesting, and it's sort of a letdown to require a murder every single time.
As far as Salmi's acting in "Cliffordville" is concerned, that was sort of his shtick. A big loudmouthed guy who you'd enjoy seeing get punched out by the hero. The perfect Bluto.
Yes, but the restored Feathersmith still had 50+ years to change his existence. He didn't have to become a janitor. Even if he had no memory and special knowledge, he didn't have those the first time either.
It wouldn't be time travel without a time travel paradox.
I guess the problem would be why would you want to go back to the 1980s? How could it be any better for the rich than today? Unions weren't completely destroyed in the 1980s yet. I guess if it was a guy like Featherstone, maybe he watches Fox News all of the time and still in 2013 thinks unions are some sort of…
"An album a year from 1969 to 80." Piffle. Try Jandek. 70 albums and counting.
Effeminate men aren't all homosexual, either.