I can top that. I saw it a few times, thanks to the sweet 20 dollar morning tickets, and the first time, I sat two seats down from Richard O'Brien, who had stopped by just for the hell of it to check out the new cast members.
I can top that. I saw it a few times, thanks to the sweet 20 dollar morning tickets, and the first time, I sat two seats down from Richard O'Brien, who had stopped by just for the hell of it to check out the new cast members.
It was pretty excellent. Luke Perry was Brad, and he was pretty good, too. And Dick Cavett was the narrator, which was predictably amazing. That show had a comparatively short run, but pulled in some pretty awesome actors.
That was actually a plot point on an episode of Chuck.
Ichabod worked with the Mohawks, who were allied with the British, so I assumed his Britishness helped him win them over. Of course, that show varies wildly between showing off their impressive research and just making up whatever they feel like, so who knows. As for the slavery, total brain fart. But I'd just woken…
Well, that was helped by making him British. They had already abolished slavery, and the Natives were generally more fond of them than of the Americans.
Ted is cheap, but he's also the kid of person who would tip, making him that worst of all tippers- a bad tipper who thinks they're a good tipper.
Well, he thought the tablet was gone for good, after his (so he thought) thorough search turned up nothing.
Well said, son.
Best Jamm episode in a while. Pairing him with Dexhart and constraining him in the council was a good idea.
And I'll pour one out for Andy Barker, PI. I miss you, you six episode wonder.
I really thought the "Robin needs to befriend a woman" thing would lead to her meeting the mother.
Actually, Rupert, his last album debuted at number 9, his highest chart ever, and his last one before that went gold, with a platinum single.
I literally just watched this, and when Logue's name came up on screen, coincidentally just under his face, I thought "Ooh, I wonder who he'll be playing." I didn't realize for the entire episode, and had forgotten about it before reading this. A young, trim, short haired, beardless Donal Logue is basically…
WROOOOOOOOONG!
It's a big flaw, but I love that he's shown actively trying to control it, and now we know it's a side effect of the super-soldier formula.
CasaDeTroBed, don't you mean a world without Troy and Jeffrey, and Annie and Britta, and Shirley and Pierce, and Abed and Jeffrey. Just a few of the most special students in the world!
Wouldn't it be more fair to say Cranston joined Sadler?
I feel like he did it one other time also. But I may just be thinking of some other moment of general lawyer histrionics.
Agreed. It's kind of like the fat jokes on Elementary's otherwise excellent Charles Augustus Milverton episode. They weren't particularly bad, but it's annoying because you know they can do better than this lazy crutch. (Though it's still better than the trans* stripper and the Sassy Black Woman in the Lassie's…