I was really hoping Beck Bennett would replace Seth when he left, mostly based on those AT&T commercials with the little kids.
I was really hoping Beck Bennett would replace Seth when he left, mostly based on those AT&T commercials with the little kids.
That was actually one of the bigger laughs of the night for me.
I came down into the comments to say this exact thing. "I like everything but rap and country" in my experience, is shorthand for "I don't really care about music."
That was before we found out what they were doing to the soil.
No, it's hyphenated, like Jean-Luc. So it'd be something like "He-Man Garfinkle."
Your name is "He-Man?" Damn, middle school must've been rough.
True. I enjoyed this one much more than my wife did, but she also didn't like the claymation episode either because she feels like it becomes a different show if you don't see the actors. I liked it, but would rank it low for S5.
Yep. My best friend at that age that I played GI Joes with (all of which were his; I was more of a Transformers kinda kid), also somehow had a few issues of Soldier of Fortune magazine. We spent a lot of time talking about customizing guns and building bombs for no other reason than it was cool and badass. I think…
When I burned a copy of The Red Album for one of my friends I did that and it was 1000% better. I don't know what they were thinking.
Thirded. I think Monster was too loud for the REM fans who'd spent 3 years waiting for a follow-up to Automatic and not "grungey" enough for all the teenagers who bought it because it was hyped as REM's "grunge" record (at least that's how I remember it). I always liked it but never actually bought it until after Up,…
Diplomatic relations?
This is still true. We took one of our friends who is thinking of moving here to 6th St. just to show it to her and she got bummed out and felt really old (she's in her late 20's). I think once you become an adult, you kind of graduate from that whole East 6th scene and move on to bigger, better things.
The Jack Black cold open is probably the one where I first really fell in love with this show.
Nope, as long as your answer was right, if you rephrase it as a question before your time is up, it will be counted correct. If, on the other hand, you say, "The Rhine! I mean, 'What is the Danube?'" you will be counted as wrong and the next contestant could ring in.
When I was there last year, we picked a semi-random night to go to the Bluebird Cafe, which ended up being a songwriter round-robin-type thing. I'll be damned if just about every one of the songs that the four songwriters played wasn't better than any song that's been played on country radio since. I guess there's no…
200th like! Well done, sir! *slow clap*
Seconded. The first time I watched "The Pioneer Woman," she made enchilada sauce. The first ingredient was a can of enchilada sauce. That was the last time I watched "The Pioneer Woman."
You can kind of tell that his two sous chefs on Throwdown kind of hate him, but have a grudging respect for him. Every now and again, they'll both get a little snippy whenever Bobby gets a big head about something and/or needlessly wants to put chilies in something.
I feel bad for saying this, but I was unaware Dumas was black until I read this comment.
I dragged my parents (and their friends, I think) to see this, and nobody liked it but me. I haven't seen it since, but I'm glad to hear that it likely holds up better than Batman and Robin, one of the other movies I remember dragging my family to see. I promptly apologized for that one.