avclub-a91870dc58b20b7cdebac91b273da315--disqus
chalmers13
avclub-a91870dc58b20b7cdebac91b273da315--disqus

The 20ish guy who oversaw our small-town New Jersey day camp was going over the summer's field trips with us counselors:

"I can't call you. You have to call us."

"Jackson Cage?" Oh no, that's about Great Adventure, New Jersey's mainstream Six Flags amusement park.

The Chief Justice of the Nevada Supreme Court is played by Rose Abdoo, Gypsy the mechanic in Gilmore Girls. Quite a promotion there, though where I live, a good mechanic probably earns more.

Do you know what kind of things can fall into an industrial sausage press not excluding rodent hair and bug excrement?

(stunned Hanks double-take face)

Hard Copy is going to have a field day with this story!

An M Squad episode depicted a Chicago cop taking a bribe. That was it for Mayor Daley.

There's an odd deleted scene from The Blues Brothers that fits your description almost to the letter. Elwood has decided to re-form the band and is leaving his job at what seems to be a small factory.

In the same interview he said "I believe marriage is the headstone of American society."

There might be a tie-in with Jo Firestone's WFMU radio program, "Dr. Gameshow" here.

The most enduring moment from CPO Sharkey is when Johnny Carson jokingly stormed onto the set to confront Rickles about breaking Johnny's cigarette box the previous night when Bob Newhart guest hosted.

If the character who's bigoted in the beginning eventually realizes that they have a lot more in common with the Chinese people than they ever thought, I think you've got a winner.

I think the movie just got slaughtered in the media. The reviews weren't necessarily bad, but in the wake of the scandal, most focused on the notion that this was Woody's declaration that great artists are entitled to their own moral code.

The sentence might also work if you replace "the two slots" with "J.D. Salinger and Neil Simon."

Brett Somers only got on the show because they wanted Klugman so badly for the debut.

She was often in the last "funny gal" spot and when the question was clearly set up for one answer like mine was, she would throw in something else, which usually was clever but seemed to bug Gene Rayburn.

Patti Deutsch? I've missed you!

That's baseball-lineup terminology. Which reminds me: Susie dated that Dodger player for awhile, but dumped him because he didn't have any BLANK.

I loved the ‘70s Match Game as a kid and still love watching those reruns now. I
could deliver a TED talk about what we can learn about good management
principles by studying the array of permanent and guest panelists. (Sidebar:
Did Joyce Bulifant belong in the “dish” fourth spot or “funny gal” six-hole?)