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Curly Jefferson
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Is it Australian? From the trailer, I thought it was Mel doing his best Ray Winstone.

Come to think of it, there are some black comics who are almost as brutal about kids as Louie, if not more so. Bernie Mac's kids weren't his biological children, but I think they were legally his (they were his nieces and nephew) and he was relentless about them.

Really hot, actually. I don't know what she's doing with that guy. If it were a fictional series, I'd say it was unrealistic.

Yes, they weren't even subtle about it—David Cross's costume is Larry the Cable Guy's. My roommate watched that once a week for about a year. I'm pretty sure you can find it on Google Video. There are some lines from that that get quoted on a daily basis in my apartment.

They're good, but usually he's just squeezing in his stand-up material, which is what most all non-Norm comics do anyway.

I feel like Patton probably cares what people think a bit more. I'm not sure he's as willing to lay himself naked on the stage like Louis is. He's not willing to go places that are as dangerous. I don't say that to knock Patton, but more to suggest that Louis is unique in that aspect. I mean, here's a guy who talked

Ghost Town? No? Okay, I give up.

I think his reasoning was two fold: 1) he is sick of the actual act of making movies, at least in the traditional way, 2) he wants to give himself a good ten years of painting every day without the distractions of filmmaking

His part in Role Models should be taught in comedy schools (I know they don't exist) as an example of making the most of a small part. Of course, he had a hand in writing it, but it's so funny, he steals every scene he's in.

I like it. It's a little long, and that animated sequence bores me, but there's a lot of good stuff in there. Marino's section is good, as is the Mol/Theroux Jesus section. Lots of quotable stuff, like how Rudd's character is supposed to be dating Dianne Wiest ("More like Hannah and Her Dollars!").

He may have been on more than once. I recall one episode where he joined the force temporarily.

I bet there's some songs with very pretty choruses and unlistenable white-boy rapped/scatted verses, since that's almost every RHCP song that has been released in the past 15 years.

That album To Record Only Water for Ten Days had some good stuff. Kind of new wavey, but with a lo-fi sound, if I remember correctly. The song "Moments Have You" is very cool (I think there may be a Vincent Gallo directed video of it out there).

Walkabout, Falling into Grace—those are some great songs. My favorite RHCP song is Soul to Squeeze. Still love that song. But Frusciante is the only thing that kept this band listenable for me since Californication. Can't imagine this is any good.

I didn't goof. I did it AS a goof. (Marino's "how do you not get that?" face is so amazing on the line)

There's sort of an NYC faction (Sho, Black, Wain) and an LA faction (Lennon, Garant, Kinney). Lo Truglio and Marino (and Kinney, to an extent) go between both. Don't they all show up in Reno 911: Miami, too? I'd say Paul Rudd, AD Miles, Zak Orth and a few others could be considered honorary members and have probably

Yeah. They could have separate sections for Chicago, Minneapolis and Austin. It'd be great.

Right, because it's the 1930s.

No one's made a District of Columbia joke yet?

It looks like a remake of La Femme Nikita. An "urban" remake if you know what I mean. Nudge nudge. Get it? Cause she's black. And urban is code for…oh forget it.