Zack Braff raised 3 million dollars?
Zack Braff raised 3 million dollars?
Since when did Hayden Panettiere and Reese Witherspoon become the same person?
Can't win, I guess.
I think that's a pretty solid observation, there.
That in one of those "Sorkinisms" videos?
I'd put it this way: 1999 Aaron Sorkin was a fairly successful but still unknown writer, and therefore presumably a geek. 2013 Aaron Sorkin is a famous person who had about a decade of non-stop acclaim, mostly from The West Wing and the Facebook movie. And the differences show: all of Sorkin's characters are sort of…
"Sorkin-Schlamme walk-and-talk blocking style"
Isn't that all Schlamme? Back when he was working on The Larry Sanders Show he shot scenes in exactly the same way. And none of Sorkin's movie projects have presented information that way, unless I'm forgetting something.
“Anybody who thinks they can change the world by making films is sorely mistaken.”
"His DNA is being rewritten!"
Thought that was Glenn Beck's book. The one where he dresses up like a Nazi, which is apparently a reference to Hogan's Heroes, a show I don't know much about other than as a joke on Community.
Eww! That relationship was creepily paternalistic. Schumacher must have been instructing O'Donnell to deliver every line in a, "You can't make me, dad!" tone, and Clooney to deliver every line in a, "I don't want to talk about this after the day I had in the office!" tone.
Because who doesn't love an energy-less, smirking, so-over it Spider-Man?
I remember at one point, Tyson made a big thing about becoming an evangelical Christian, said that it had helped him to overcome his anger and personal issues. And the evangelical community just leaped on it, Mike Tyson's a Christian now. Growing up in that kind of community and that kind of family, it was definitely…
Gotta be "Two Cathedrals" for me, though I don't think it gets much better when it comes to Sports Night.
"The Cut Man Cometh" was definitely the stand-out for me of the series. The comedy is so good that it overshadows some real gut-punch emotional moments. It's definitely something to show to people who insist that Aaron Sorkin has never produced anything good ever and he's just a complete talentless hack. These people…
I heard Basic Instinct 3 is in the works.
It's not a case of simple attraction.
I don't really have a high regard for Shandling as an individual. He crossed the strike line at the Comedy Store, and according to Tom Sharpling he went on an odd online rampage over some innocuous questions that he thought insulted him. Seems like a narcissist to me. Of course, this doesn't stop me from still…
Simple. Larry's narcissism makes him worry about what other people think about him. Sure, his selfishness makes him oblivious to it many times, but if he becomes aware that he's pissed someone off or hurt someone, he'll usually try to make it right, if only so that he can know that the other person doesn't hate him…
Which is contrasted by (spoilers?) later in the show, when Jon Stewart actually tries to do edgy (and actually funny!) comedy and gets pummeled by the network.