She had an expression on her face that could have been read either as "Help; I'm at sea here" or as "Why can't I ring in faster?" - but since her arm usually seemed to be in motion, I think it was the latter.
She had an expression on her face that could have been read either as "Help; I'm at sea here" or as "Why can't I ring in faster?" - but since her arm usually seemed to be in motion, I think it was the latter.
That was by far the funniest cartoon Smigel ever did.
I'm old enough to remember when Eisner was "the man who saved Disney." Then he had a few bad years at the end of his career and became "the man who ruined Disney" - Katzenberg and others were retroactively given credit for his successes. The truth is probably somewhere in between, I would assume.
For a person of his generation, I would expect that Apple (or Microsoft) would be the instinctive response for computer before IBM - but apparently not.
Those tires were so big that I almost guessed "Bridgestone and Firestone" (not sure if the former was an actual person or not - I have a feeling not), but then the right answer came to me in time.
I can't figure out if this is a joke or not, so I will take the bait: Wikipedia says Pitchfork was founded by one Ryan Schreiber.
Thank goodness - I thought we were going to have to drag this out forever. It happens to the best of us!
No, 162 to 16 is pretty close to a solid ten to one ratio.
And Grimsley was later prominently featured in the Mitchell Report (even accused of being an HGH dealer, if I recall correctly).
For what it's worth, the NFL rule book gives a $25,000 fine as the minimum penalty.
My father hated this show, and he was right.
I thought I would remember any show of that era at least vaguely, no matter how short-lived, but apparently not.
I remember that ad.
66-34 makes it seem pretty clear that she would have lost anyway. It was a pretty nasty thing to do (especially if he volunteered to do it unasked!), but I never heard of any casting-aspersions-on-her-sexuality angle before. (I seem to recall an E! True Hollywood Story or similar program that played a clip of the…
I agree.
I think this might have reached a level of brilliant absurdity if it had actually been a faithful shot-for-shot remake, but the Kool-Aid man (a joke previously seen on Family Guy!) was kind of stupid.
I think "Wrong Impression" made the U.S. charts, or at least the CVS [a pharmacy] intercom charts.
People on the receiving end of false accusations rarely are "innocent" in the sense of never having done anything wrong in their lives. Do you think the Scottsboro Nine were all saints? Probably not. Falsely accused people indeed often are people who were in the wrong place at the wrong time because of their own…
I never knew that.
I don't think anyone doubts that Brady called Jastremski because of the balls. I would certainly want to know what was going on whether or not I was previously involved in a conspiracy.