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Spencer Hastings
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I'm a huge fan of Scorpio with Alain Delon, Burt Lancaster, and Paul Scofield.

I thought it was supposed to be "Kuh-poh-tee," especially after Ted Baxter pronounced it "Capoat" and was prompted with "ee" by Georgette, causing him to say, "Oh course!  Truman E. Capoat."

I thought it was supposed to be "Kuh-poh-tee," especially after Ted Baxter pronounced it "Capoat" and was prompted with "ee" by Georgette, causing him to say, "Oh course!  Truman E. Capoat."

Two works sharing the same generic title, with no other similarities, don't really count as adaptations.

Yes, clearly Victorious is the REAL scoop on what those schools are like.

What's even more forgotten is that there was a medical drama that ran for several seasons (and featured Jessica Walter!) that was a spin-off of MASH (technically of the movie and book, but de facto of the series).

I really loved that show.  Its take on the "California Dreamin'" sketch was an instant classic.

That's how I felt about The Betty White Show.

Based on the interview linked in the article, even Joss Whedon, who hates Donald Sutherland for what he did with the Buffy script, thinks he's a tremendously compelling actor.

Is there an inventory on characters who switch from evil to good, or vice versa, between adaptations?  Harry Lime was the hero of a long-running radio series after The Third Man, and Jim Phelps was (spoiler!) a villain in the first Mission: Impossible movie.  Dr. Syn notably figured in two adaptations released in the

Wasn't Tail Spin more or less an adaptation of the live-action Tales of the Gold Monkey TV series?

And Nichelle Nichols actually recorded a version with those lyrics!

What about McCloud, which was officially credited as being derived from Coogan's Bluff (though there were many differences)?  It's at least as close as Moonrunners/Dukes of Hazzard, and a lot closer than Cooley High/What's Happening!!.

Yes, this whole article seems built on a false dichotomy.  Isn't it possible that there are just multiple (at least two) ways to be funny about politics?

The original film was co-written by John Milius and Oliver Stone, who are generally classified as opposite end of the political spectrum, though that shared extremism may point to how compatible their worldviews actually are.

Marius Goring, meanwhile, hit 3 for 3 nationalities in the three P/P films I've seen him in: German, French, and English.

Here's the ballet:

Well, Ray Ford's name was in the opening credits, and Liza Lapira's wasn't … also, Mark says that he and June don't have the same job anymore.  But yeah, it's weird that Eli's apparently a regular and Robin isn't, yet it seems like we've seen a lot more of her.

If he were really ubiquitous, the man he tried to beat to death because of his race would be blind in both eyes.

"She shoots stationary conversations from directly opposite angles, so that characters leap from one side of the screen to another"