Will do!
Will do!
I think it is if it's said positively.
Every time the AV Club posts something positive about Hillary Clinton it would be nice if they also acknowledge that they're owned by one of Clinton's biggest financial donors.
I think it's naive to think otherwise. I doubt that anyone at the AV Club likes Trump but maybe some of them don't like Clinton so much. I doubt they're employer would allow them to write anything too critical of her.
Of course not. I don't care about Trump. I don't care that the AV Club writes pro-Clinton articles. I just think that they should acknowledge that one of Clinton's biggest financial donors is they're employer.
Another fawning article from the AV Club about Hillary Clinton. Can the AV Club please acknowledge that it's owned by one of Clinton's biggest financial donors?
Can the AV Club please acknowledge that it's owned by one of Hillary Clinton's biggest financial donors?
Does the AV Club ever acknowledge that they're owned by one of Hillary Clinton's biggest financial donors?
How about "Amusing Ourselves to Death" and "Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television"? And for more of a fun read "What Were They Thinking?: The 100 Dumbest Events in Television History"?
Personally I'd rather see somebody do this for "Dancing in the Street". And I do mean the Martha and the Vendellas version; not the one with Mick and the late Mr. Bowie.
Yes, "Quitter's Inc." is superior; frequently reprinted in crime anthologies. King's a great crime writer. "Dolan's Cadillac" is a brilliant expansion of "Cask of Amontillado" and "Umney's Last Case", despite its fantasy elements, has an almost Jim Thompson style ending.
Yes, that was my first thought too when I read that. They probably could have found a better person to use as an analogue.
I saw Audition on its opening night at the snobby Brattle Theatre in Cambridge, MA. Half the theater were young Asians and the other half were elderly white people who would just go to see whatever art film was playing that week.
As the film progressed I would hear the young Asian patrons roaring with laughter while…
One of my favorite radio plays is "S.O.S." from the The Mysterious Traveler. Perhaps not as scary as the shows on this list but it features the greatest twist ending in old time radio. Here it is for your listening enjoyment:
Boris Karloff isn't featured in that recording of "Valse Trieste" from Lights Out; that recording of the play is actually lost. Did the writers of this article even listen to the shows before posting them on here?
I think the Krofft brothers' last foray into television was the 1990s version of Land of the Lost.
That was an episode of The Hitchhiker.
I think I watched that film about ten times before I even noticed that shot.
I love that book as I also love "TV Turkeys" and "Bad TV". Any other great books about bad television?
Except that it was the NAACP that led the protests.