So much nostalgia… don't know where to… start…
So much nostalgia… don't know where to… start…
Good point. In another show, I would simply attribute that to the writers' laziness. But that's always been a minimal issue with "Breaking Bad." The writers of this show aren't known for overlooking.
My wife and I were channel surfing the other night and happened upon "The Warriors." She had never seen it nor even heard of it. So, as the scene played in which the Fury battle the Warriors, I tried to explain the movie to her, and why it was considered a cult classic, etc.
Hmm, that sounds so similar to a lot of hillbilly horror movies that now I'm tempted to watch the show.
"'Sesame Street' is well educational. Why don't they make a version for kids?" Ali G.
Yes, so significant is the persecution complex of the Christian Right that they even came up with their own conspiracy theory about "Duck Dynasty" being banned by "atheists and liberals":
"Meat is murder… murder most fowl" - Morrissey
You take away the paranormal aspect - replace "Saucer People" with "the Obama administration," for instance - and it could really be lifted directly from Glenn Beck's show, as well as many others.
Kind of like addiction itself.
I liked the one about the woman who went through the intervention and was 'cured' of her addiction to painkiller lollipops, but then was promptly committed to a mental institution. Of course, she did deserve it.
I've always wondered if the figures they show in the crawlers are embellished. You do the math and it's like, I don't know anyone who even has access to that kind of money.
Recently uncovered an old, old copy of "The Demonologist" in my parents' basement.
A couple years out I'd say TPG hold up as well as it was reviewed upon its release. This is definitely not a case of the Emperor's New Clothes.
Damn straight! I'm on this weird Shakespeare kick right now, and just last week I looked up that article - funny as hell.
@avclub-bfc58c81e954a4ee8722992437a86d9d:disqus Man, that brings back repressed memories. I remember how that album came out just as school was starting back up (I too was entering senior year).
If she were being forced to smell the glove, that would be sexist, but she clearly WANTS to smell the glove, which is a different thing altogether.
What's weird is that the Reuters article sums up that role thusly: "a similarly sympathetic wiseguy."
At the time my friends and I were way into "Screamadelica." Got psyched when we heard the coming spring would see the release of a followup.
Swervedriver?
Heard about this case originally on NPR's "This American Life," which prompted me to track down this documentary on YouTube.