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onthewall2983
avclub-90248d0a98105fa534cf2b0696ddd12f--disqus

Doubt he was that smart, though.

Also plays Biff's mechanic in the alternate 1955.

This, certainly. The 1955 stuff, too. Especially considering that one of the key characters is only represented in the old stuff, it still comes off as seamless.

I heard that, too. I'd always thought he was fired from the show for doing that "memorable" Spring Break show on MTV, and using characters that were his own that could have been part of SNL.

The presence on this planet of Creed and Nickleback disagrees with this. It was dead for a little while but then rose up like a half-dead Phoenix from the ashes and engulfed the already-dying carcass of Grunge and became this vulgar half-dead beast flying through the air(waves).

Saul leaving Lockhart in the conference room got a nice chuckle out of me, especially the little childish back and forth they have.

The Who's performance was bad simply because they chose to do a medley of songs that absolutely cannot be done as such.

Watching Top Gun has never been this painless.

John Candy's performance in Planes, Trains & Automobiles is probably one of the best ever not just in comedies, but in film period. Steve Martin's too, obviously.

There's also the incident in Germany where he did the Nazi two-step on the apron during a tag team match that got everyone's panties in a twist. That itself could just be a sign of how tiring those overseas trips are on guys.

Piper legitimately didn't like T at the time, more because he didn't like that an outsider was coming in and given such high placement on the card right away simply because he was famous.

And nearly all of those examples and others were also big in the south to an extent too. At least Koko, JYD and Steamboat. So it wasn't like this dynamic was reversed where one would expect it to be either.

I'm trying to remember some of his other bits, but I thought they were funny at the time too.

I think it's because with JBL it may very well have been a shoot. He is a Republican, and was (maybe still is) a fixture on Fox News.

I was thinking that it would be cool if all these schools' marching bands had a tournament of some kind and the winning band plays the halftime show. Though it probably would be Ohio State every year.

It's interesting how that's happened. I barely listen to the radio at all except if I'm in someone else's car, and it's usually either oldies or classic rock anyway. I can't muster up any hate for pop music because I barely know what it sounds like, though I do have some idea.

There's also been a ton of xenophobia, homophobia and misogyny as well. I love pro wrestling when it's done right, but I cannot defend that stuff at all. I especially hated it during the "attitude era" WWF, when it seemed to be shock value for ratings. A lot of it worked, but what worked were things that have worked

As a long-time wrestling fan, that episode of South Park had me in stitches. It had everything dead to rights.

His father named Terry Bollea Hulk Hogan because he wanted him originally to be an Irish character.

Apparently a few of his fellow wrestlers, like Eddie Guerrero took grave offense to that and almost came to blows about it backstage.