Tri-C: Cuyahoga Community College
Tri-C: Cuyahoga Community College
They must have been eating Pizza Hut's new three-cheese stuffed crust pizza, because you want to eat it backwards, crust first.
The only reason to have Melissa George show up suddenly pregnant,with her pouty lips calling Peter by his first name, is to raise the suspicion that Governor Florrick is her baby daddy.
I don't think you can say that any interest on the part of a fictional character is serious if it is not portrayed that way. The characters only exist as portrayals.
If I'm wrong, I'm wrong, but I don't think that Lily's trip to Rome to work for Agent Cooper has been presented as anything but a way to live out a fantasy on the dime of a rich kook. I'm not certain I would call Lily's adventures in the artworld a career, and even if it was, her commitment to it does not begin to…
[QUOTE] We’ll be back on November 5 with “Coach.” Until then, let’s discuss how
we’ll be trying to outdo Joey Ramona Quimby and Public Serpent this
coming Halloween. I’ll start: My wife and I are going as two of Kids In The Hall’s 30 Helens.[QUOTE]
I'm not much of a fan for The Grateful Dead, but immediately upon looking at that picture of Lindsay, I started humming Ripple and continued to do so as I read the review.
I think he played a reverend on Bones tonight. FOX throwing some work to its FX brethren.
Moonlighting is 25 years old. It was never a popular rerun, nor did it make a huge splash in DVD sales. Its credit sequence is not a particularly memorable one in the annals of TV history.
Yes. More than any of the other episodes I felt like the humor and the rhythm of the jokes were like a cover band version of The Office and Extras.
My first post contains a completely accurate description of exactly what the Moonlighting credits were—no more, no less.
The credits for HL also use scenes of LA at night but in a much more creative, and creatively specific way.
Your notion that HL is ripping off Moonlighting, in any way, is completely and absolutely…
The Moonlighting credits were a montage of still photographs of fairly generic scenes that one might see at night in LA with photos of the cast included in the montage.
I don't think anyone who has produced a TV series after 1963 can claim that using the credits to establish the setting of the series is an original…
No. The perceived offense only works if the comparison is reversed.
Sorry for the confusion. I replied in your thread but my comments were directed at what Sims said about the sketch in the review.
“If you had told me back then there would be six Die Hards I would have
said that seems a little too many.” Too true, Bruce (there’s only been
five, btw)
Number 6: DIE HARDEST coming to theaters in IMAX-3D in 2015/16
Is the reviewer too obtuse or too politically correct to recognize that the comedic premise of the barbershop sketch was contrasting the entertaining storytelling of BLACK barbers with the boring WHITE barber.
Perhaps the reviewer should need a race-based comedy primer courtesy of the Simpsons:
http://www.youtube.com/wa…
Feeling intimidated and being threatened are two different things, and you are the one who started talking about whether Drew and/or Ryan had broken the law (could get away with it).
Who saw Ryan kick the door open? Drew can say that he returned to HIS residence and had to kick the door open because he was locked out of HIS residence.
He entered the dorm room with Drew, so he didn't break in.
Somehow I recollected the scene the way it SHOULD have been staged: with Douchey McDuke cowering in bed clutching his lacrosse stick like a commie, and Sgt. York holding a baseball bat because he is a real American and a hero.