Good!
Good!
In MST3K circles, I am officially 'Coatimundi Lady', and I am proud of that, too.
@avclub-0ae7484a9f3bbd2a21df420050c032ae:disqus Since I got my ereader (not a Kindle) there's only been one book I wanted to do that to, and it was recommended by a friend.
I've always wondered by GWTW is in frequent rotation on TCM, but we can't watch Song of the South.
Before cable, even networks used to carry science shows. I was always addicted to 'The 21st Century with Walter Cronkite' and all those Jacques Cousteau specials. Then public television happened with 'Nova' and lots of other science-y education-y shows.
I was roughly the same age as the kids on 'Julia' when it aired, and we played Cowboys and Indians ALL THE TIME. Westerns were still big back then - it was either Cowboys and Indians or Americans and Nazis in my neighborhood.
And how the final note of that sequence is actually the crash of the waves.
I got it as a digital download finally. I never did find a CD.
When I was in NZ last year, one station was running 'Morning Glory' over and over. Despite the presence of Rachel McAdams, it still stank.
You're not the only one. I had told a friend that I had spent years trying to find a copy of the Black Stallion soundtrack on CD. One Christmas she gave me the Black Beauty soundtrack and was upset that I wasn't ecstatic.
Even though widescreen is now the norm, I find few directors who know how to use it effectively.
Don't be scared of nature - I've had lots of 'wild animal encounters' and nothing has ever hurt me (except mosquitoes).
Well, if you're talking about Black Beauty (as you mentioned in your post), that's a different movie.
Farley was still a teenager when he wrote it - it's a sort of fanfic in which he inserts himself and a fantasy super-horse into the Seabiscuit-War Admiral match race.
Heath Barkley on The Big Valley was originally slated to die at the end of the pilot (you can even see a stunt man dressed as him get shot during the big shoot out) - but Lee Majors was so good, and the chance to do something really groundbreaking saved him.
I consider fanfiction to be any work that uses the world and/or characters of another author. I think that's a pretty easy definition - in which case, fanfic is about 5 minutes younger than literature itself.
I consider all those Star Trek novels to be nothing more than fanfiction.
Ted Bundy was an extremely handsome and attractive man - it's one of the reasons he was so successful at his murderous endeavors.
I hear you. Although I'm a Civil War buff and have even written a novel involving US Colored Troops, I've never made it past the flogging scene in 'Glory' for very similar reasons. It's something that could not have happened in that time and place, and putting it there was gratuitous and really made me not trust the…
I dunno, I've never fucked one.