I seem to recall that Hank The Angry Dwarf died before Stern left terrestrial radio.
I seem to recall that Hank The Angry Dwarf died before Stern left terrestrial radio.
Additionally, there was far less polarization and more overlaps and consensus among the politicians 43-44 years ago. To a lesser extent among the public as well. People who at any point had supported Nixon (which roughly 5/8ths of voters had done just a year prior) didn't view him being removed as some sort of…
I once read that Gleason was very resistant to casting Audrey Meadows as Alice because he was going for a more realistic sitcom and thought it wouldn't have been plausible a schlubby bus driver would have a wife that attractive. So you can't blame him for willingly creating that particular sitcom trope.
Whole, comprehensive, alphabetized inventories of which actresses some random Turkish cinephile masturbated to………. NOW LOST TO THE AGES!
The baddies in the second Die Hard movie forged their bond in the fires of Granada.
Lifetime Presents
Just got back from old Hanoi
Lock the choppers Oh Boy
do do do
looking out Skull Island
Except for a couple of issues that would personally impact him (battling the FCC) I never got the sense Stern had any consistent or thought out beliefs. While he defaulted to a kind of half-assed left libertarianism most of the time, he would fluctuate pretty wildly in his opinions. While not hyper-ly so, he was…
Haven't listened to Stern since he left for Sirius 11 or 12 years ago, but does this mean Crackhead Bob and Beetlejuice are also banished?
I immediately thought of that story as well.
Stadiums ands arenas.
Try pairing it with pineapple juice first
Rope 2: Pushing Rope
He must have found out this dude was an Auburn fan.
I think HBO now tends to save their newer stuff (no GOT for us cheapskates). But all the 00's heavyweights (Deadwood, Wire, Sopranos, Carnival, Rome, etc.) , Mr. Show are there and the first two seasons of Veep. Much of Boardwalk Empire is there as well I assume but I've heard meh things on that one.
The latter for sure. A goofy sex comedy, possibly too chaste for Skinamax.
Was Larry the origin of the pervy-wacky neighbor? Or even the not-necessarily-the-main characters'-friend-wacky neighbor (Ed Norton and Barney Rubble pre-date Larry, but they were clearly Ralph Kramden and Fred Flintstone's best friends, so they had a reason to be showing up all the time).
Is that the one where they think the plant Mrs. Roper entered in the garden contest got mixed up with weed, so Mr. Roper has to dump a ton of dirt on it so it won't win?
Somewhat similarly, I honestly preferred the 1979 TV remake of "Alls Quiet On The Western Front" (with Richard Thomas and Donald Pleasance) to the 30's original. It was presumably still seen as relevant despite involving no Americans (I think. IIRC in the book I think the main character gets killed by an anonymous…
I haven't seen this film or the original, but, the German army in WW I never made it into Paris (though they came close early in the war). So I take it that the title character was stationed there before the war?