I never liked Pete at first, but in later seasons when he got immensely quotable and would get all up in a huff about something, he got likable. I think he's just best when he's outraged over something mundane.
I never liked Pete at first, but in later seasons when he got immensely quotable and would get all up in a huff about something, he got likable. I think he's just best when he's outraged over something mundane.
Yeah but Joan and Hedda surely acted quite a bit classist towards Bette for her upbringing. Stuff like "She's living like a goddamn Yankee" and then talking about how she doesn't really belong in Hollywood either.
Well for some good pulpy speculative stuff, check out Hollywood Mysteries and Scandals on Youtube. It's an old show that ran on E! about old Hollywood folks and all the controversies they had. I believe there's an episode Crawford and an episode on Davis. It's nothing groundbreaking or factual, but it's at least some…
Can we get Jackie Hoffman to do this for charity or something?
IIRC I think Joan and Bette were both Aries.
Can I just say that I kind of love the whole rapport between Bob and Bette? It just delights me (though knowing how this whole show has been going down, it'll probably be short-lived).
The reveal of the fact that she was wearing a weighted belt was hilarious.
I remember in Mad Men in the scene where it broke (the scene with Pete complaining to Harry about "Kenny and his haircut" getting the job he was gunning for) they started off with the Cronkite version at first. Then when everybody came rushing in, they made a point to change it over to NBC and get the Brinkley/Huntley…
I agree with you about Rudy and Louise (but only in a flash forward sense) but man do I disagree so hard on the last two. Pokeshipping is the true shipping. And the ship that mattered the most in Gravity Falls became canon so I can't complain there.
IIRC, the entire 86-91 cast were up there (Nora Dunn, Dennis Miller, Jon Lovtiz, Hooks, Victoria Jackson, Mike Myers, Dana Carvey) with Lovitz starting the introduction (and nearly breaking down in the middle of it) followed by Jan introducing the segment…I actually have the entire 25th anniversary on tape somewhere…
They only picked him on name recognition only. Only thing with Rob Schneider I even remotely enjoyed a little was The Sensitive Naked Man.
If Phil Hartman was the glue of that cast, then Jan Hook was the duct tape.
To be fair, according to Seth Meyers, Kate was one of the writers of the "Twin Bed" sketch so I don't think she was as bothered about it.