avclub-dbfe61d5bd9377877e267cc6990d3c6c--disqus
hawkboy
avclub-dbfe61d5bd9377877e267cc6990d3c6c--disqus

I don't see her holding it against Cochran, but certainly Dawn is screwed.

I enjoyed that Cochran and his mother realised that they had no chance whatsoever to win the reward, so spent the time while everyone else was running around chatting, getting caught up on family news.

First time in a while I felt bad for the person getting blindsided, but it really was the only move they could make. The goodwill she built up and lack of enemies would have made her unstoppable at final tribal council.

Yeah, he did basically the same job on both shows.

Doesn't everyone? But that's also because it was a glorified clip show.

I've never been fond of episodes of sitcoms where outsiders come in and point out how all the main characters are jerks. It only seems to work on "It's Always Sunny", but that's because we all know they're jerks to begin with. But I don't need Fisher Stevens telling me what losers the cast of "Friends" are, because

My friend saw him in concert in 2001 - he noticed a young couple sitting up front, and so he sang, "Girl, You'll be a Woman Soon" to the young lady, then turned to her boyfriend at the song's end and said, "She's ready for you now."

Is that Johnny Mathis? Get my gun!

Also, because the studio flat-out said they didn't want to make a Veronica Mars movie, while people were offering Zach Braff money to make the movie, but they dared to ask for such things as input into the production or a return on their investment. The MONSTERS.

I was assuming it would be Melissa McCarthy.

All the girls want to know: Who's the cutest guy on death row?
Is it Steve?
Or is it Lyle?
Or is it the new guy with the unpredictable smile?

And I bet she didn't pay Dzhokhar Tsarnaev for his involvement in her poem, either, because it's about the ART, man.

I prefer the TV edit, where he replies to Clark's request for directions, "What I look like? Christopher Columbo?"

He wasn't a major part of it in any way, but the Kenney biography, "A Futile and Stupid Gesture" mentions him working with Chris Miller on the original story. Miller gets a "Story By" credit, I believe.

Retta can play the John Candy role.

William Goldman told a story in one of his books about how a well-known script doctor got paid a shit-ton of money to take a look at the original script, and his only suggestion was "Make Rodney rich."

"Sure, they're funny and all, but who's going to win the Caddy scholarship? That's what people really care about."

Well t'anks for nuttin'!

And also, if you believe the story that on the first day of filming "Caddyshack", Ramis looked in the wrong end of the camera, it bolsters the case for Landis even more.

Oh, it looks good on you, though. *eyeroll*