avclub-53a91f2f576c749bc795a5bd2ad22163--disqus
lugnut
avclub-53a91f2f576c749bc795a5bd2ad22163--disqus

It's see-able, but all I found was a pretty beat-up-looking copy.  I watched it on Youtube last year, imagine it's still there.

Jesse and the Rippers were much worse.  They never seem to have the same lineup in any given episode, their only gigs all seem to involve school dances or the lame-ass Smash Club and even then something wacky always causes the show to go wrong.  They were big in Japan for one episode, but for a shitty cover of a Beach

Sex Feet!?  I thought they shut that place down!

And surprisingly intact, too.  The "fuck"s are muted, but everything else remains.

I'm not sure HBO ever owned it, I think it was produced by Sony Pictures, whose tag is at the end of every episode.  It's possible HBO may have just been essentially licensing it from them in the first place.

You're not, I liked it quite a bit too.  Maybe it was the beer and the marijuana talking, but I thought it waszksfkzmm dmmhhjhzzw…five dollars?  Get outta here!

If it makes it any better, I did laugh at the callback that nobody seemed to notice later in the episode when Homer strolls by Bart's room now wearing a cowboy hat himself.

FWIW, Drop Dead Fred was recently added on Netflix Streaming.  I think the DVD is long out-of-print and pretty expensive though.

Let me have a Three Musketeers, and a ball point pen, and one of those
combs there, a pint of Ol Parker, a couple of flash light batteries and
some beef jerky.

I actually can't remember what the final LN monologue was, but I do remember that downright haunting version of "We're Gonna Be Friends" that The White Stripes did, in what was probably one of Meg's last performances too.  (And I never realized until much later that the arrangement of the tune wasn't just slowed down,

Here's my nomination for one nobody else will ever mention.  The ending of the very-flawed-but-also-underrated "More American Graffiti."  Anyone who's seen the first film already knows Milner's fate, but actually seeing that '32 Ford heading out on a lonely stretch of highway, dipping down a hill not seeing the car

@Miller & @avclub-5e5e0bd5ad7c2ca72b0c5ff8b6debbba:disqus  - Since I'm still too dumb to figure out the Disqus system you guys probably won't see this anyway, but if you weren't aware, XE is back and alive and healthy under a new name.  dinosaurdracula.com  If you liked XE, you'll like DD, 'cuz…well, they're the same

I believe it is indeed, something really catchy like

I wanna be a Hulkamaniac, have fun with my family and friends.

I always thought so too.  I don't think he ever did any of the "Chuck Norris jokes," but I definitely think it was the Walker Texas Ranger Lever that really turned Chuck into a fun figure to mock on the net.

He really has always been the rhinestone cowboy.  He don't care what Glen Campbell has to say.

I always liked the one for Pontiac, but I think I'll just let you fine folks figure that one for yourselves.

Exactly what I associate with JITB.  There's never been one in my area really, so I've still never had it, but on a family vacation to Texas back in '91 or '92, the first thing I saw on the local news when we arrived was tons of stories about a food poisoning outbreak traced back to JITB.  Safe to say we never ate

Weird, I had no idea studios still did that.  I remember that there was a PG-rated edited cut of "Saturday Night Fever," presumably so the kids could go see the movie they all bought the soundtrack to, but it was the only version available at my local video store growing up.  Rented it to see why it was so

@avclub-734ffb84cfa214922893511fae356b45:disqus - Nah, probably just because the Pinto was more fun to make fun of.  But if Mr. Hollywood is talking about the infamous mid-late '70s "Mustang II" models, they pretty much weren't anything but glorified Pintos to start with.