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

I'm not sure. She did work many years at CBS and a few "Fox & Friends" women hosts have gotten jobs at other networks like Alisyn Camerota and Kiran Chetry. Both of them tolerated the wackiest right-wing F&F stuff without necessarily joining in.

1. That would be morally reprehensible and illegal. Would a wealthy, successful mother whose husband is quite rich risk going to jail for a contract ploy?

Gretchen Carlson was something of an anomaly at Fox. She had a fairly successful career at CBS and I believe she was still on their Saturday morning show when Fox brought her over to a more prominent weekday gig. Very few of the other big-time Foxcasters have significant experience or opportunity at other national

Aaron (talking to Jane on the phone about how Tom walked out of her hotel room): "He must have been great looking."

As I remember it, the technology of the time made it much more difficult to cut to live shots during a broadcast, particularly from far-off locations.

A another great little moment in that scene is when the passed-over Brooks is feeding information from home to Hunter, who is using it to give Hurt questions in his earpiece ("I say it here and it comes out there.")

I keep waiting for someone to consider that the segment might have more bite and interest if the celebrity subjects expressed their distaste for modern songs generally well regarded among the cool set.

I remember. I took quite a beating after buying it on the first day and shouting, "I'm loading this thing up with Anthrax!"

You might also be thinking of the character Dennis Haskins played on It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.

And the actor who offered Kelly pot was at the school filming an anti-drug commercial. They must have had Jonathan Swift in the writers' room that season!

After the biscuit, half of the restaurant's patrons are transported halfway across the country for unspoken reasons.

When I read Gabriel Sherman's The Loudest Voice in the Room, I nearly moved past disgust to pity based on numerous examples of his pathological paranoia.

And, vice versa, as O'Reilly's constant on-air shilling of his books and other personal moneymakers drives Ailes nuts.

Gretchen Carlson's husband is Casey Close, the agent for Derek Jeter and many other baseball stars. Her family's financial security might enable her to eschew the deep pockets and focus on Ailes' personal behavior.

I believe that would earn you a "cuckoo" sound on the original show, but now I think it's a buzzer.

True, and Tiki acknowledged what he did (in a horrendous way), while the Strahan issues were never really adjudicated. But the accusations Strahan's ex-wife made against him were gross as well, and, if true, worse than what Tiki did.

Strahan doesn't have the neatest personal history either. The divergent public image fortunes of the two ex-Giants is fascinating. Unfortunately for Barber:

"Things that an AV Club commenter says!"

I expected something a little classier from Chuck Barris.

The great Johnny Olsen, who also was a fixture on The Price is Right.