Even the Schwim was pretty impressive!
Even the Schwim was pretty impressive!
To be fair, genetics have a lot to do with it too.
I had the same problem watching it with my girlfriend, because some her best friends have been victims of rape. There were times when they'd make a joke and the audience would laugh where I felt it was borderline laughing at the victims (Loretta's "What number is okay?" And nobody saying anything. It handled fairly…
I even liked the "Wrestling Isn't Wresting" (which feels like For Our Consideration headline that never was) and watching it with my friend who's a huge wrestling fan, we both agreed he's clearly a guy that loves hearing himself talk.
Tanaka.
I believe you are correct. Kids got tired of Fred when he went to Nickelodeon and the kid got old. Hope he made his money because I can't see him having any second wind of a career.
I bet she made a mint off of her appearance in "We Are Young." I hope she gets bigger, but she's doing just fine.
That's excellent.
The deleted scene where Borat has the grocery store manager tell what each product is in the cheese section (Hint: It's all cheese) is a master-class of something being repeated ad nauseum but still remaining funny and also the capacity of one man's patience.
Just speaking for myself, "Bar Rescue" gets a lot of watches on Hulu from myself and my girlfriend, so I think those evergreen shows will continue to exist long after Jon Taffer's hair has finally escaped his head.
That's what I was thinking. It has to cost a bunch to film in front of a live studio audience.
Agreed. But when you know there's a gem like "Penelope" or "Good to Sea," it's worth it.
To be fair, I was 10 and borrowed it from the library. Shame on me, right?
Samberg was awesome as host and had a stacked pool of writers. Unfortunately, the public isn't a huge fan of broader versions of "Comedy Bang Bang" jokes, so here's Kimmel ragging on celebrities and probably some Mean Tweets.
Those later seasons of "24" were perfect examples of completely wasted talent.
Yep. The show took a lot of liberties with time, common sense and the audience's ability to suspend disbelief, but the core cast was always committed to it. It never seemed like they were phoning it in even when the writing staff was. Also, Jon Voight's appearance on it is pure ham gold. LET'S PLAY DARTS!
I actually was messing around with one of those (the one where Jack's kicking in the door) and the peg he stood on to make it look like he's kicking the door broke off, so it's absolutely useless. The great thing about that and the "LOST" figures was most of them really looked like the actors. The bad part was there…
It was a nice badge of honor, though. Kids can't say they altered the fidelity of a digital track because they played it so much.
That's my guess, as well. There will be album artists like Kendrick Lamar and such that will likely still release stuff on CDs. At some point, maybe the label won't fund it and they'll have to do a Kickstarter or it will be at a premium price, but I can't imagine it fully going away like vinyl did, especially since…
To take it a step further, I remember on one of Seal's album he had an essay on why he doesn't print his lyrics in the booklet instead of just printing the damn lyrics.