It's messed up that you know that.
It's messed up that you know that.
It did seem like a dream sequence. I think it was the cinematography - the odd shot of the 3 heads looking at him, they seemed almost distorted. I wondered if he was hallucinating it.
Wednesday used to be much better. I can remember when Wednesdays meant West Wing and Law & Order back to back on NBC.
Not just you. I used to do this when House and How I Met Your Mother were on at the same time (they may still be on at the same time).
People also make plans that often encompass an entire evening. You may be a family that stays home on Thursday to watch TV, but on Fridays you go out to a movie or dinner (or a book club or poker game or whatever). So even if one of your favorite shows is on Friday, you might be unwilling to stay home and watch it…
I think as a programmer, though, you want people to pick one or the other. There's no value to you in people watching shows on other network.
These are not the yogurts you're looking for.
This seems pretty obvious - no one is asking why Pepsi bothers to try to sell soda in stores that sell Coke. They want you to see Pepsi and Coke both being offered, and they want you to pick Pepsi.
You know those guitars that are like, double guitars?
*whispering*
The Dutch Voice sounds like it could be some kind of sex act.
LEADER! LEADER! LEADER!
Does it seem like we've had an inordinate number of shows about Tom Tucker? Given he's basically the FG equivalent of Kent Brockman, he's been a central focus of at least 4 episodes I can think of (Meg loves him, he sleeps with Peter's mom, Peter's "Grind my Gears" segment, and now this one).
What do you have for us, Sideshow Luke Perry?
I saw this in the listings last night, and I was shocked that it was still on the air. Maybe I don't watch ABC enough to see commercials for it, but I assumed this had already gone the way of The Playboy Club.
He's still recovering from that yogurt headbutt.
I missed it when I dropped their newsletter in favor of NAMBLA - the National Association of Man-Barber Love.
This is a stupid comment, but it does give me an opportunity to point out that the Grammys do a much better job handling the "in memoriam" segment than the Oscars do.
One of the funniest Newsradio moments: Matthew betting Joe that the next song on the radio would be a good one, and then trying to convince him that he wins when Wichita Lineman comes on the air.
Nice writeup. It's not a show I watched during its first-run life, but the ubiquity of reruns have ultimately broken me, and it's become one of those non-offensive background shows that make up the white noise of my home life. Peter Boyle is the best reason to watch this show - he took what could have been…