I knew that from when she dealt the cards on Card Sharks!
I knew that from when she dealt the cards on Card Sharks!
It's the kind of song that would only be a hit at the end of a string of hits, that gives the first hint that they might be starting to run out of gas.
It's like needing a touchdown to win a game, having the ball on the 25 with ten seconds to go and running it up the middle. Sure, it won't get intercepted and maybe you'll break off a miracle run, but it's certainly not the percentage play.
What makes it really strange to me is that THEY DON'T KEEP THE MONEY UNLESS THEY WIN!!! At that stage they're really just points, not dollars. What they hell are they saving them for???
The impact of the small DD3 wager was that the game went from being decided by Kerry being right on FJ (around a 60% likelihood) to being decided by Jon being wrong on FJ and Rand making a tiny wager (combined estimated probability around 20%).
Jeopardy! recap for Tue., May 30 - Champ Jon took the lead on DD2 and continued to widen his margin until Kerry was correct on DD3 late in the game. However, Kerry only made a small bet and as a result, Jon kept first place into FJ with $18,000 vs. $13,000 for Kerry and $11,000 for Rand.
For comfort food, Americans are watching a repackaging of The Beverly Hillbillies, except with nerds instead of country folk, called The Big Bang Theory.
I don't think any show in TV history was retooled with a strategy of increasing the ratings by making it smarter.
I think they're bringing it back for next summer.
I can't imagine watching two hours of sitcoms consecutively anymore. Even if I liked them all, I'd save a couple for later.
The "tough guy" apology was when Trump apologized for the "pussy grabbing" comment, but in a way that made it clear that it was everyone else's fault for getting offended, that he was pissed off as hell for having to do it and didn't really mean it.
But those guys don't apologize.
Recent examples, just from NBC: The Blacklist, Blindspot, Revolution, Smash…
"Where all the excitement is" = where the outcome of the bets are determined.
NBC clearly got cold feet at the idea of a horribly-rated sitcom (Great News) leading into their breakout hit in a new time slot.
NBC tends to make sitcoms you have to actually watch to get anything out of them. Unfortunately, the audience for those kind of shows has largely deserted the broadcast networks and those that are left prefer their sitcoms with families, laugh tracks or both.
The premise was threadbare even back when it was called "Wait 'Til Your Father Gets Home".
That there would even be a discussion of Wonder Woman being R-rated is bizarre.
And the most disturbing part? The majority of military voters supported him and would likely do so again.
Summer ratings check-in: