And in closing, Axl would like to say: He hates you all. He thanks no one but himself. As of today he, Axl Rose, is finished with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
And in closing, Axl would like to say: He hates you all. He thanks no one but himself. As of today he, Axl Rose, is finished with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
That might be the greatest MwC episode of all time. That, or the two-parter where they are competing against the Darcies at Foody's ("You Better Shop Around", I believe.)
No, but I remember Matt LeBlanc's "Top of the Heap", also a spinoff.
Hooters, hooters—yum yum yum . . .
And in closing, I'd like to say: I hate you all. I thank no one but myself. As of today I, Al Bundy, am finished with softball.
As do I. Sadly it's applicable on a daily basis.
This episode contains a personal favorite: "WHY must there always be a problem?!?!?" Pitch perfect.
The sound effect that the game makes after it's been obliterated and George is face-down on the street gets me every time.
I don't recall "demanding complete originally" from this show, nor do I think that asking a show that I have come to expect a lot from to be more original means that I'm "demanding the elimination of all TV shows forever". One of the reasons I like the show is b/c it does a lot of things I haven't seen before, and the…
Didn't see all of this one, but isn't the plot about the kid teaching the adult to win at video games a ripoff of an old Simpsons episode? Replace Jimmy Pesto w/ Bart and it seems like the same thing.
I was and always will be a Jamie Dantzscher guy.
I believe Fey's take on it is that the show itself was pretty different in its original incarnation. Supposedly it would've focused much more on the actual TGS show, with a greater amount of TGS skits being shown. When the direction of the show changed, they found they didn't need a "sketch" actress (Dratch) as much…
I gave "Blood and Fire" a listen b/c he went off about how good it is, but it sounds like "Skyscraper"-era Roth crossed with "Two Tickets to Paradise" plus a vaguely Creed-esque intro.
Will Schneider try to fuck *him*, too?
No, zero is more than enough for me when it comes to that genre.
Or mahjong.
. . . but that's our last bowl!!!
Agreed. That's my favorite plot of the whole episode. "Will people still be using napkins in the year 2000, or is this 'mouth vacuum' thing for real?"
I don't think that's the best explanation. I think the theory would be that George—more confident thanks to his successful confrontation with Biff outside the dance—would also be more confident in the other areas of his life such as marriage, parenthood, work, etc, and that the subsequent results would be positive. If…