Or the face of Troian Bellisario.
Or the face of Troian Bellisario.
Listen to the dialogue at the hearing. He clears her subject to her meeting the terms of his prescribed treatment. Once she refuses those terms (which include taking drugs that will make her a walking vegetable and coming to his office every day), she is in breach of her furlough agreement, meaning that she gets…
I liked this movie better the first time I saw it, when it was called Malice.
The Supreme Court of Canada disagrees.
The Supreme Court of Canada disagrees.
Irrelevant aside: Since you don't seem to be familiar with it (although maybe you are), I'll just point out that that question originates with an infamous Barbara Walters interview of Katharine Hepburn.
Oh, what the heck, I'm gonna be "that guy":
I don't think the Charlie Brown gang ever tackled MLK day. Then again, they probably couldn't improve on Boondocks' version.
She really does look like Troian Bellisario in that picture.
I've heard she's more of a Steelers and Giants fan.
In psychology, affect is more commonly a noun than a verb (pronounced differently, of course).
I don't know if this is intentional, but part of what made Angela's reaction so funny for me is that Kathy Ireland has become super-Christian and essentially made herself into a real-life Angela.
I don't know if this is intentional, but part of what made Angela's reaction so funny for me is that Kathy Ireland has become super-Christian and essentially made herself into a real-life Angela.
I was really confused by that too.
I was really confused by that too.
He does have an excuse for how he treats Nellie — she did something awful to him.
He does have an excuse for how he treats Nellie — she did something awful to him.
Sounds like they stopped on the first page of that baby book.
Sounds like they stopped on the first page of that baby book.
Perhaps the series will end with Andy walking on water.