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chalmers13
avclub-a91870dc58b20b7cdebac91b273da315--disqus

This isn't a harassment story, but it is related to the old CBS News patriarch, Walter Cronkite.

The Newhart wedding clip in the CBS promo must have seemed odd to anyone who was familiar with the show. Dick and Joanna Loudon had been married for years when the series started and that shot was from an episode where she forced him into a vow-renewal ceremony after 18 years.

"[Working for the FBI's Division of] Fish and Wildlife doesn't mean we're Boy Scouts."

In the novella, the response to Mr. Lachance's "a thief and two feebs" characterization is longer:

Yes, you lose the "what's next?" excitement for two-thirds of the show and find yourself thinking, "I'm two songs away from that bathroom break."

Hoopz dated Shaq for awhile.

My favorite Flavor of Love moment ever (really the only one I remember besides the spitting) was when New York's mother, "Sister Patterson," came up to meet Flavor Flav.

I believe Sean Hannity has actually asked, "Mr. Trump, your campaign has the momentum of a runaway freight train. How do you explain your incredible popularity?"

Thanks! I would check for it whenever someone brought her up, which I guess means that no one has done that since before March.

Here's one of mine, where she plays Scottish pop star Christy McDoon going through customs.

He never would have made it past the opening credit reading "Starring Dick Butkus."

They could have walked a few avenues west and taken a ferry to where the actual Hamilton gave his final performance.

And when Donald Sutherland as Clark Clifford is brought in by LBJ to argue the case against Vietnam escalation, he's OK with "losing" because he trusts MacNamara so much based on how he stood up to the generals in '62.

In Path to War, they show a version of the engraved silver October '62 calendar (with the 13 days bolded) that Kennedy had made at Tiffany as a keepsake for the key actors (and Jackie).

LBJ used to say behind his back, "I think Adlai sits down when he pees."

This film is referenced in the classic Sopranos "Pine Barrens" episode, Paulie talks about the Cuban Missile Crisis and Chrissie responds:

That's why the Russ Hodges radio call of Bobby Thomson's "Shot Heard 'Round the World" was recorded. It wasn't a Giant fan who put a tape recorder to the radio, but a Dodger fan who wanted to luxuriate in the misery of Hodges, who was an inveterate homer.

I was playing Candyland with my kids the other day and won on a walk-off double blue!

"You're the smartest person I know."
"But you don't know anybody."

And though it certainly wasn't as easy as portrayed here, and Woodward and Bernstein did a great deal of legwork, there is a point to be made about how luck plays a part in a lot of ground-breaking journalism.