Plus the Mermaid Avenue stuff during that era, too (and some great Tweedy songs on the Golden Smog albums.)
Plus the Mermaid Avenue stuff during that era, too (and some great Tweedy songs on the Golden Smog albums.)
"…he looked like a comic book artist’s fever dream."
Nicely written review. I've only listened to it a half dozen times, and while there are some keepers "Cry All Day" and "Quarters" (and surely more), I'm so far a little underwhelmed. Which is disappointing as "Star Wars" was my least favorite Wilco to date (I adored "The Whole Love" and saw it as their best since…
The new CBR is a mess! I mostly go there to read Brian Cronin and now I have trouble finding his stuff (and I don't want to comment through Facebook. Blech.)
Good comics? At least the Millar/Hitch Ultimates, and first few volumes of the X-Men, and then I'd say Millar's Ultimate Fantastic Four as well. Probably some others but I think that's all I read (as well as Ultimate Spider-Man which was pretty strong throughout, if a bit repetitive.)
It's Marvel Zombies or the Merry Marvel Marching Society. Not Marvel Fanboys. 'Nuff Said. Excelsior!
Does McDonald's offer a value meal with the Egg McMuffin and french fries and a soda (Diet Coke in my case)? That would be a hangover cure for the ages.
Why was she in it? To have some secret identity stories? To keep it from being two dudes and their butler living together? I never quite got that.
The Six Million Dollar Man does not hold up at all. While The Brady Bunch can in its own nutty nostalgic way. Otherwise… good list!
The makers of Cap'n Crunch got sued that year. Just sayin'…
He would make a good Captain Stubing. Colin Hanks could play Gopher.
I thought he did a good job but I wish they hadn't tried to do Harvey Dent's whole story all in one movie (as they already had the Joker storyline as damn compelling.)
How so?
But wasn't she saying the black man did not have sexual feelings about her? Isn't the historic stereotype the opposite?
Nah. The character on the show is not self-aware (as established in the first episode with the voice of a generation joke) and Lena is usually self-aware but still says regrettable things at times (but then shows regret, which Hannah does not.)
How is she harmful to those causes? I'm not asking in a snarky way but just curious. It seems she made a show about her experiences, as many writers/directors do (especially at her age.) And I do seem to recall her support of Planned Parenthood, which helps women of all economic backgrounds.
For being immensely talented at a young age? She does say some silly (and even grating) things sometimes, sure, but I look forward to see what she does after Girls.
The almost being Cheney]s (muted) support of gay marriage.
My understanding is that it wasn't advertised that way but more what the interviewer and Steve Martin wanted to talk about, but the audience wanted them to talk about film and comedy stuff.
I liked when he returned to SNL as host and admitted he did Best Defense for the money.