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Perturbed Prince
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Well, Chase is on his first heart….

I must disagree. Harmon has his flaws, but there's no doubt that the man works as hard as anyone in the business to put out one of the best shows on television.

Yet Deion Sanders is a football hall of famer, a decent baseball player and somehow managed the two.

If I remember right he's even banned from hosting SNL, although not from appearing on it. He reminds me of Keith Olberman. Both are very talented, intelligent men who left their mark as innovators on their respective programmes (Olberman on Sports Center and MSNBC, Chase on SNL) but just seem to lack the ability to

I normally love the show but this week was one of their worst episodes.

I was re-watching The Patriot the other day out of curiosity. There's an excellent movie hidden in those bloated two and a half hours and some really nice action scenes. Maybe if they hadn't turned Gibson's character into something that never existed, or was incredibly rare (Catholic landowner in South Carolina who

I thought he was pretty good in Rob Roy, as well as his brief role in Gangs of New York. Plus Schindler's List. But his credits are a lot weaker than I thought they were before I looked them up.

She's the first person I thought of when they mentioned new women on the show. Not sure how she is live, but I enjoyed a lot of her work on College Humor. Perhaps she'll stick around as a writer for a bit and gradually move into performing.

I agree whole heartedly.

Somewhere Ken Marshall's sense that someone out there remembered his starring role briefly flickered to life.

Oddly enough, Ed Harris is 5'9", which puts him roughly around average height. I think he seems taller due to the explosiveness that he can portray on screen.

Rubio, Portman or McDonnell are probably the big three, but you do have some dark horses like Allen West or Rand Paul. I'd be shocked if any of the current candidates get on the ticket with the nominee, who I'm assuming is going to be Romney. Unless we get a convention fight, which would be awesome.

If it's Biden, it's going to be more like one of MSNBC's lesser offerings. He's not stupid, but that man's ego and arrogance clearly outstrip his intelligence and abilities. He was one of my senators while I lived in Delaware and I never could fathom how he kept getting re-elected.

It's a fun read and probably the best work we have about the 2008 campaign right now. I think it'll eventually be surpassed though, as we're able to look at those events from a greater distance. That being said, each cycle seems to have a definitive volume. Richard Ben Cramer's "What it Takes" for 1988, which is so in

I'd like to see Edwards' story pan out in real life, what with his facing up to 30 years in prison now, before anyone takes a crack at making a film about his life. His story really is fascinating though, but I've always had a weakness for golden boys gone bad as a subject. I see it as the reverse of Shakespeare's

As someone mentioned above this tv movie really does have the feel of something that seemed like a great idea two years ago, even with the heavy Palin angle, but now seems almost superfluous given that the former governor of Alaska has largely receded into the background.

Michael Hogan would give us the chance to relive the Tigh/Roslin meme of years past.

He's in a three way tie for third.

I'm going to go for a minority view and say that '64 was the one I'd change.

I just wrote a decently long screed, but I wonder at this point what counts as oldies. For me it's anything the major classic rock station doesn't play, which, where I live, Baton Rouge, is roughly anything before Led Zeppelin. Even The Beatles and the Rolling Stones are starting to get left out, let alone the