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Michaelcerajessicaparkerposey
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Definitely applies to his "music"

Since Fargo and some classic episodes have already been covered, I'll give a shout-out to NBA Live 96; it's definitely the 1996 piece of pop culture I poured the most hours into. 96 took the relatively fast-paced, dynamic isometric angle of the previous game in the series and for the first time allowed you to create

Pertinent:

***Yahoo Screen waits eagerly, ready to pounce on the rights***

Does Warren Beatty count???

Si!

I only know him from a couple of appearances on Conan where he and Ice Cube promoted Ride Along by driving around with Conan (also, from that Party Down episode with JK Simmons!). He had some funny moments with Conan. Also, not gonna lie, I laughed out loud at that "bedbugs and bananas and biscuits" rhyme.

I remember reading that article. For some reason (maybe less douchiness), I actually find that endears me to Quinn though I can understand Pollak's view, too.

The amount of apparent preparation and commitment that Leto put into what sounds like (not having seen the film) a glorified cameo reminds me of that Mr. Show sketch where an actor gets lobotomized for a small role as a mental patient.

I think really good shows like The Sopranos and Mad Men have a mix of both, where each episode is obviously part of a larger whole but each episode has a satisfying story structure and thematic resolution that allows them to mostly function on their own.

The trailers for that movie make it look like The Wolf of Wall Street
for the illegal arms industry, only trading in Scorsese for The Hangover
guy. So, utterly repellent.

Come on, there's always room for giallo.

Couldn't they have put down Animal Collective instead?

And what about their other brother, Skeet Ulrich?

It's their "Creep."

In terms of bad habits, it seems like Bart used to have more actual emotions and insecurity. Now he's just a ADHD-riddled monster.

I might be wrong about that, actually. I can't remember where I got that idea, but my impression was he's basically just signing checks nowadays (as is Groening, who wasn't a huge part of the show's golden age in terms of writing).

Scully was pretty bad in terms of keeping the show grounded and bothering to write a decent ending, but I agree those episodes were pretty good compared to now just on hilarity alone (and he wrote some episodes with heart, like the hockey episode). The general wisdom as far as I've gleaned is the decline began with

I think it helps if you view the original trilogy as highly entertaining adventure movies rather than cinematic masterpieces or anything. I don't watch Star Wars for innovative plots or deep characters, and I really liked it (especially the interplay between the characters—I thought Ridley and Boyega really sold

"Happy Together" in Adaptation
Grandaddy's A.M. 180 in 28 Days Later
Hold On in Bridesmaids