"This is Don Pardo saying, 'This is Don Pardo saying, good night.'"
"This is Don Pardo saying, 'This is Don Pardo saying, good night.'"
Not always. Louis himself is an example.
But do we recall that Pamela's son, Serge, was a black kid with dreadlocks? That's the only thing I found unusual about Pamela bringing it up. If a black baby came out of her "juicy white pussy", why would she care about a white baby coming out of a "juicy black" one?
He didn't say more intimidating. He said when a black woman tells you something, "it's more". There was no word after "more".
Come on, Todd. You remember.
It wouldn't be on the air if it wasn't. Networks tend to not like that sort of thing. Businesses, in general, really. The only way would be if the show's ratings were so low that major advertisers didn't want to pay for time. That ain't happenin'.
He left the show before in 1980 and NBC found a way to keep it going. Why? Because NBC owns the show just like they own The Tonight Show and The Today Show. They'll keep it going as long as it makes money and they'll figure out a way for it to make money with or without Lorne.
There was one episode in the first season where two different actresses played the same daughter in different segments. Like Full House but not as self-indulgent.
No "surprise" about it. Who are the most outwardly homophobic people? He also made homophobic remarks in his memoirs.
We had Jay Leno. Did you hear about this?
Wow, you got here fast, The Book Was Better Guy!
Phil, I think you pulled something making that "David Gale" stretch.
"Twenty D Energizers."
According to his IMDb, Eddie Tagoe was also in Top Secret, Pink Floyd The Wall, and Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend. So his high ratio is still intact.
Get Smart was the first violent sitcom, It was the first sitcom where characters got murdered. Many episodes hinged on the murder of a good person played for laughs. And as incompetent as Max was, when it came to physically fight the bad guys, he always kicked ass. Get Smart paved the way for pretty much all of Adult…
OK, but what about Kings of Leon? Did they rock or not?
Firstly, "psychedelic" does not equal "bowl-smoking". You're talking about two different things. Unless you're putting DMT in that bowl. Secondly, are you really gonna debate Sgt. Pepper's impact on the Beatles' artistic growth and popular music in general? You're better off debating how many songs McCartney wrote.
Yes, you're right. I'm guessing they wrote it but it didn't WORK!
The thuggish persona Busta adopted in the past few years is overcompensation for that.
It's not debatable. Sgt. Pepper is considered when the Beatles "changed" and music changed as well. There are 13 songs on Sgt. Pepper. McCartney wrote 5 himself, 3 with Lennon. Magical Mystery Tour has 11 songs. McCartney wrote 5 himself, 2 with Lennon. There 17 songs on Abbey Road. McCartney wrote 6 himself, 3 with…