avclub-e6c1142acfaceea3982a09641b33fc04--disqus
MarkInTexas
avclub-e6c1142acfaceea3982a09641b33fc04--disqus

Kill two for matching clogs!

"Steve, Jarod, I know who can stop ISIS. Get Captain Underpants on the phone!"

So he'll either get an invite to appear on the real Ellen, or he'll get a restraining order. I'm pretty sure there is no in-between here.

There will be a half-hour gap in the Mountain from the end of SNL at 11 to the start of the instant rerun at 11:30. I'm guessing that Mountain affiliates will run their late news an hour late those nights.

Lately, they've been doing sports programming for the entire evening, or a movie, or a movie with an SNL Vintage. This weekend will be Fast Five for the entire three hours, and next weekend will be Despicable Me 2 followed by SNL Vintage.

He also appeared as one of the Ambiguously Gay Duo's villains during the live-action skit. I'm assuming the reason he's never hosted is because he's never wanted to host. It's inconceivable that he's never been asked.

I'm interested in how NBC is going to schedule primetime those weekends, given that they'll have to program 3 hours in two time zones, 2 1/2 hours in another, and 1 1/2 in the third. It wouldn't shock me if they just tell their affiliates "Hey, those non-SNL timeslots are your responsibility this evening. Have fun!"

I think King stood by Akin's statement after the fact. But King is too busy worrying about all those evil darkies who are salivating at the thought of destroying Western Civilization as we know it to really worry about how women prevent getting pregnant after a rape, except of course when a virtuous white woman gets

Back when I was 14 or 15, I somehow managed to pump some gas all over my shorts and legs. I think-or at least I hope-I was trying to refill the gas can for the lawn mower, since if I managed to do that while pumping gas into a car would be really embarrassing.

He was born in 1944, so he was in his mid-30s. Being bald by that age I'm sure still sucked, though.

Mary Tyler Moore holds up very well, as does All in the Family, if you can overlook that many of the issues that Mike and Archie argue over haven't been controversial in years.

It's been years since I've seen it as well, but I vaguely remember it being Three's Company, if the focus was on Mr. Roper, who is also Janet and Chrissy's actual dad.

Even more impressive is the later zoo opening credits, where he has to lose his balance and hang off a fence by his his knees and hands, while smiling and looking directly into the camera.

I was actually thinking he might have had a late career arc similar to Ted Danson's, which probably means he'd be playing a major supporting role on a highly acclaimed but low rated sitcom right about now.

It was pretty prominent during the Roper years, since Mr. Roper would usually reference it at least once an episode. It was only rarely mentioned during the Furley years, leaving me to wonder why they kept the gimmick after the landlord change.

Tambour also popped up on the original show at different times, playing different characters. He was in a short-lived sitcom a few years back (checking IMDB…I'm pretty sure it was Welcome to the Captain) where he played a former Three's Company staff writer who wouldn't shut up about the awesomeness of having been a

As late as 1996, there were some NBC affiliates that refused to air the Friends episode with the lesbian wedding. I wonder what those station managers thought two years later when NBC premiered a sitcom where half the characters were openly gay men.

The plots could be repetitive for sure, but I think the show is still pretty watchable even today. The Dukes, on the other hand…in college, one of the country fried networks started running daily repeats, and after a week of watching, I realized that every episode had one of two basic plots: the Dukes had to stop

Actually, Annie Hall was rated PG. Granted, it came out 7 years before the PG-13, but still…

Logo also will frequently marathon it on the weekends.