avclub-717729ce391c20ef3e722c3e6ef79a58--disqus
The Elusive Robert Denby
avclub-717729ce391c20ef3e722c3e6ef79a58--disqus

Reality: Easily eradicable diseases are making a comeback because of paranoid idiots like Jenny McCarthy.

My Big Fat Greek Political Instability

My Big Fat Greek Economic Meltdown

I dug Nabin's review of the Eagles in his country music odyssey; but even better was the angry Eagles fan who told him that he hoped "Don Henley crashes his fucking 911 into your ballsack and gets out and spills cocaine into your peehole."

And their keeping of billy goats on roofs — to hell with all of them!

My Big Fat Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints Wedding

Where the hell are the in-line citations, NBC? I'm sorry, but I'm going to have to mark this as a *failed* good article candidate.

Star Wars: Sounds in a Vaccuum! F-you, Harlan Ellison!

Nothing that is recorded in a medium of communication is legitimate punk.

The most popular part of the show is when he throws Phil Ochs out of a moving vehicle.

Read about the sordid developments of the Branson dates in the tell-all pamphlet, Hammer of God.

Well, the original stand-up incarnation of Pee Wee Herman was PG-13. Pee-Wee's Playhouse was a looooong way from that.

I was six when it aired, and I can't honestly remember if I watched it or not. What stands out more for me is the reaction to the episode in the media and by my parents. Both were very positive.

"Big Bird, don't you remember what we told you? Elmo is DB Cooper."

Well, I think Pete Hammill did it first with HIS novel, Forever. I've wondered how much New Amsterdam and Forever owe to that, although I think both have dispensed of Hammill making the price of his protagonist's immortality an inability to ever leave Manhattan.

Also notable that despite being on screen for maybe less than a minute, Minnie Driver's character is still one of the five strongest and most well-developed female characters in the history of the James Bond franchise.

The doors of Bonnie's Valhalla swing open, and Woody, Buzz and the other toys march out to their heroic but doomed battle with the giants.

No no no no no no. The third had an absolutely perfect ending, and the shorts are giving us everything else we need from the universe.

1) Didn't HBO already do this movie in the 90s?
2) I remember that Peter Guralnick detailed the Nixon-Presley summit in Careless Love. What stuck out for me was Elvis telling Nixon that the Beatles were responsible for the nation's drug problems.

Am I mistaken, or did the movie's writers include William Goldman?