When he does an impersonation, it's like a carbon copy of the actual person.
When he does an impersonation, it's like a carbon copy of the actual person.
Those were heady days.
Lou Diamond Phillips is a real gem.
They liked to rock.
Agreed. I couldn't get through it. Sometimes IRL I get stuck listening to people who work together talking shop. They're usually having a blast, but I'm bored as hell and looking for a chance to escape. That's what this was to me.
For a nice look at Le Studio in the late '70s, look up April Wine's video for "I Like To Rock," which was filmed there.
Something something something
Ice cold beer
Love that bend at the very end of the song.
Seconded.
Congratulations. You've redeemed the internet.
Fair enough. I wanted to ask because that sort of admission is pretty uncommon in this type of forum. Thanks.
What made you change? Just curious.
Oh, shut the *beep* up!
Popular trends occasionally become political and legal realities.
Good point. No one has ever actually tried to suppress the thoughts and words of others, up to and including imprisonment and execution, in real life. The concept is purely a figment of some writer's imagination.
All I know is that she's within about four years of being college-aged, so I think his anecdote was applicable.
If a 15 year old thinks that what you said means he can call his father a racist following the proper, non-racist use of a word, then you just proved Seinfeld's point.
So you're saying that validates calling one's father a racist just because he correctly used an adjective?
The college-aged people he's referring to are part of her generation.
I grew up with My Two Dads also. Quality programming.