Yes! Oh god, please!
Yes! Oh god, please!
About six months before this was announced, I read a post on an obscure message board that described the plot - as pitched to NBC - supposedly posted by an executive assistant who overheard it.
My favorite part was when they rewrote the climax of one of the "loops" to have the bandit bank robbery plot cover up for the removal of the sheriff and other characters in the park. After the dramatic action sequence he begins to deliver his speech - tourist bullets ricocheting all around him - that rube shoots him…
I knew it. Don was the man behind "New" Coke.
James Dean's jacket in Rebel Without A Cause was orange, not red.
Since the whole show seemed to be shown from Tony's point of view, I always assumed that if he were to die the show would have to end, or vice versa. There was nothing left to see because there was no one to see it.
He says nobody would wear this in real life, but you can. Magnoli Clothiers has a replica of this jacket for $375. Available in blue or brown!
Who?
Are vampires real? Yup.
Dork.
Until this piece ran I had completely forgotten that Green Day even exists…which is appropriate.
Hey, What do you keep in prisms? Convex!
I know the girl that played the babysitter to young casey in that movie. I tried to make out with her once and was denied. True story!
AMC just announced the first Mad Men spin off entitled, "Harry and the Computer."
I like the not-so-subtle theme about business being more like a love relationship and love relationships being more like business.
These episodes are increasingly hare-brained, which is not to say they are bad. They cook meth in people's homes now…and rob trains…but it still holds together somehow.
These episodes are increasingly hare-brained, which is not to say they are bad. They cook meth in people's homes now…and rob trains…but it still holds together somehow.
I used to work for a man named James Westphal, no joke. He was Paul Rudd's roommate at KU.
You are not sure what theme would be developed? How about this? Bertram Cooper told the Drape at the end of the previous episode that his work has been off since he got married. So, his desire to see Zoobie Zoo succeed as a copy writer has led him to green light this silly commercial. If it flops, it calls into…
It has nothing to do with the "theme" behind the commercial. A lot of advertising uses some variation on this theme. It has to do with the themes developing within the show. If I am wrong, I am wrong. We'll see. I'm pretty irritable about commercials in general - and cave boy and astro boy eating beans sounds…