It is, but the five minute scene in the episode "Old Cases" with Pierce and Dominic West in which all they say to one another is variations on the word "fuck" is equally memorable.
It is, but the five minute scene in the episode "Old Cases" with Pierce and Dominic West in which all they say to one another is variations on the word "fuck" is equally memorable.
And fuck everyone—Alou and Blagojevich in particular—who fanned the flames. The guy is a lifelong Cubs fan who coaches Little League and has never sought to capitalize on his infamy, despite offers of literally tens of thousands of dollars for him to do so. By all accounts he's a stand-up guy who reacted just like…
I saw her when she came to my college (free tickets). She was actually really good. Plus she's got Home Movies and a recurring gig on Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me on her resumé, so she ain't all bad.
See you down in Arizona Bay.
Agreed. A lot of people just start the clock with the publication of The Feminine Mystique in 1963, and you have to point out that Friedan herself was shut down at the 1966 Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, that she and her colleagues were just trying to get the commission to enforce laws that already existed,…
I remember those times. I also remember when a Lego set didn't cost $167.00, like the Star Wars one that Amazon is pushing under this article.
Sweet. I'm probably not going to be able to go to any concerts before Low comes through next year. I'd go to the Zombies if they were nearby and I could swing it.
They're on tour right now. I believe they're playing Odyssey and Oracle in its entirety.
I just wrote a little under 30 pages about NotLD for my MA thesis. One of the items that I came across is that about ten minutes of footage—"mostly expository dialogue and character development" according to critic Joe Kane—was cut by Continental, the subdivision of the Walter Reade Organization that released NotLD.
I don't think they'll ultimately place GIF makers in any of those categories. As Sellars says, “courts recognize that appropriation art is in the cultural zeitgeist nowadays, that homages and riffs are a big part of how creators create.” Add to the mix that many GIFs meet the standard of being fundamentally…
Absolutely. The genie is out of the bottle. If some copyright holder finally does try to sue, I'd be flabbergasted if the courts ruled in their favor (and good luck finding the party actually responsible for making the GIF).
I didn't realize Teti is a spelunker. I did realize he's a Pats fan (as am I), and the only thing more tiresome than fellow New England fans' homerdom is how the other 31 fan bases insist on bringing up something that was already discussed ad nauseum when it's completely irrelevant.
FIFA did the same thing with several Twitter accounts (including SB Nation, in fact) during the 2014 World Cup.
Those numbers are slightly inflated. Liz Lemon was buying a lot of those as props to get out of jury duty.
Good point. The Times piece points out that their logo is still one of the most recognizable in the world, right up there with Apple and Nike. I can see why they think they can still salvage the brand, as desperate an effort as it might be.
The number of paid subscribers is down from ~6 million in the 1970s to 800,000 today. Plus they just reduced their workforce from close to 600 employees to around 150 not too long ago. In other words, they're going the same way as most print publications and they're trying desperately (emphasis there) to reinvent…
A friend is covering a shift at our uni's radio station. I just had her play "Are You Ready To Be Heartbroken?" and "Lloyd, I'm Ready to Be Heartbroken" back to back.
I know a certain someone who can't stop poking everybody. With a butcher knife.
They're adding Jane the Virgin and Beasts of No Nation later this month, as well as some decent flicks that I'd pay like an extra quarter each to see again.
Whore Island, at least according to Ser Ron of House Burgundy.