Or Cola-based Sodas.
Or Cola-based Sodas.
I also thought that was kind of a lame thing to throw in for several reasons. 1- Richard didn't see the seed scene nor has any understanding of why they'd be important. 2- Peter didn't have a bottle of sesame seeds, he had all the burgers so there was no reason for that. 3- Richard wouldn't have had any reaction…
The guy who did a Google Map search for the show jumped off the top of a parking garage…
That whole "explanation of his death" scene is one of the funniest things I've ever seen.
The omnipresent Double Gulp is such a perfect character trait, and I'm so impressed the show finds these things to help define the characters so well.
Brockmire.
Please watch the first handful of episodes of Brockmire if you haven't, people! It's so damn funny and incredibly well-written, to the point of being almost poetic at times. Hank Azaria's killin' it, and there are a lot of profanely laugh-out-loud moments each episode. Check it out if you haven't!
This one was baffling. I can't eat chicken, I need to eat "wordplay on one of my songs" chicken. Just bizarre.
And Jimmy. Terry Lewis has to wait outside.
I don't want the world, I just want your half!
I heard that whatever they gave him, he loved them just they way they are.
I'm guessing a belt or suspenders.
She said it right before she went out for cigarettes. That was 17 years ago next Thursday…
Sega of Japan really blew it by not letting Sega of America keep following its leadership and ideas. While reading the book, I became so sad for SOA and how SOJ basically sabotaged them. Like you implied, Sega was its own worst enemy.
I popped on here to recommend that book (I read it, but I hope the audiobook was good, too) to anyone with even a passing interest in the Sega, Nintendo, and Sony competition. It's a particularly fascinating look at why both Sega and Nintendo struggled by holding on to outdated business philosophies.
Agreed with Genji here. I haven't seen it in ages, but I still remember one of the opening lines being lifted directly from "Beyond The Valley of The Dolls." Yes, there's some Bond stuff, but it's a lot more in the Flint vein and the ludicrous psychedelia movies of the time, like "BTVOTD." It's really a silly…
I remember my girlfriend at the time really liked the song because she thought the line was, "I'm a martyr, you know what I mean, as I do my little turn on the catwalk," which really does make it a much better song. Once she learned it was just, "I'm a model," she was so disappointed. I totally agree with her.
It is always funny. And stop calling me Shirley.
I love that movie and think everyone in it does a great job, but Alan Arkin absolutely owns that film. The way he puts his hand to his mouth in thought after his "rant" is such a fantastic choice. Everything he chooses to do in that role is awesome.
You tell her.