Make that ADORA-Bull Durham!
Make that ADORA-Bull Durham!
Parts of it were very in-depth and obviously reflected significant input from Bruce. There's almost a Marilu Henner-type detail from his childhood until the point where he hit it big. After the Mike Appel bust-up though, it started speeding through the years.
"Woody Guthrie? Not a fan."
If that much DiSaronno was included, you can't blame Chrissy Moltisanti for cold-cocking Lauren Bacall.
I was wondering if that was a verbatim quote or not. It almost seems like it would have to be taken from that moment or a reflection of his later saying something to that effect.
Cochran also represented Geronimo Pratt.
Al Michaels lived in Brentwood and was close enough to OJ that he called him the morning of the murder about playing tennis, but OJ wasn't there. Michaels writes in his autobiography that he's forever thankful that he didn't leave a message on the machine.
Plus, OJ had worked several years for NBC Sports and was close to his and Costas's bosses, Don Ohlmeyer (mentioned in OJ's goodbyes) and Dick Ebersol.
I always wondered how many non-fans of (American) football got that Homer likely got the chapter and verse from the (common) score on TV.
Here are three dates. If none of those dates are acceptable, I will provide three more dates. If none of those dates are acceptable, the offer is revoked.
I wish Nipsey Russell were my high school principal.
He was also the team's first pick, which made him very important for community relations in the pre-Shaq/Penny days. He did a lot the poorer sections of Orlando drawing on his experiences growing up on Chicago.
I was wondering if they'd fall for using that sketch. The Superfans didn't hit SNL until January of '91, the night before their playoff game with the Giants.
Those White/Cunningham/Brown Eagles were immensely talented and entertaining. The 30 for 30 series was conceived as telling unfamiliar stories or giving background detail on famous events that never would have been possible at the time. That Eagle group would have fit the concept much better than the incredible, but…
He did live-action work as Uncle Beano in the first-run syndication sitcom Out of This World and as the "neighbor" on the TV-themed game show Couch Potatoes hosted by Mark Summers of Double Dare.
He put a great spin on his guest role on M*A*S*H, as the lieutenant assigned to pick up Hawkeye's body when he's mistakenly classified as dead.
And from one lousy amoeba
millions of years ago…
that today there's some guy with
a winter coat on a corner yelling "Taxi!"
That's right, but after the show achieved mainstream popularity, a revised official script was copyrighted with several changes that made it more suitable for lucrative school and community productions. In there, Greased Lightning is a "draggin' wagon."
Technically, I think "it's a real draggin' wagon." It refers to the drag racing that Greased Lightning does at the end along with the audible pun on the mythical creature.
There was Henry Hill in Goodfellas when they had to dig up Billy Batts.