corgitoy
Alan Ramsey
corgitoy

Go to the H.E.B. website.  I’ve ordered all sorts of Whataburger condiments from there, and have gotten free shipping.

Go to the H.E.B. website.  I’ve ordered all sorts of Whataburger condiments from there, and have gotten free

I read that this thing was filmed in a week.  How could any reasonable human being expect that it be watchable?  And it’s not a case like the version of Fantastic Four that Marvel shot in literally a day, for some legal reason.

While I don’t think I could ever vote for Weld, I do remember a funny story he told when he was appointed to the Justice Department in the Reagan administration.  When he was asked what portrait he would like in his office, he asked for the Robert F. Kennedy portrait, due to that fact that they were both from

I can’t wait to see what Captain Bone Spurs donates to the White House when he leaves office, which is a tradition that all modern presidents have honored.  Most notably, the Kennedy family donated a Monet Water Lily painting.  My money is on Trump donating a tacky faux Tiffany glass painting of himself and the First

If I were the head of Amazon Films, I would have pulled the plug on the deal after he handed in the smoking crater that was “Crisis In 6 Scenes.” I’ve said before and I’ll say it again. The man worked with titans during the golden age of TV comedy in the 50's and in television until the early 70's, and it was like he

Now if this guy were reviewing 1960's Lincolns, Cadillacs, and Imperials, that might be a different story altogether, quality wise. I remember reading that it was the general consensus that in the 1960's, the best automotive plant in the world was Wixom.

We’ve come a long way in my lifetime for presidential television viewing. I remember reading that JFK only watched the evening news, and every so often, a NBC News White Paper, or CBS Reports documentary, but did manage to carve out enough time to watch the Jack Benny Program every week. He also read 6 newspapers

Bring your boxing gloves.  Goldfinger would like to have a word with you.

Eleanor Ford, the widow of Edsel, told Henry Ford to his face that “You murdered my husband.” And a lot of people in Detroit who were in the know agreed with her.

Both Edsel’s wife, Eleanor and Henry’s wife finally took Henry I to task after Edsel’s death, with Eleanor telling him that he murdered Edsel to his face, and Clara threatened to divorce him if he didn’t get rid of Harry Bennett immediately, as he and his cronies were running the company into the ground, so much so

Sun Chips? Really? As Daniel Tosh said in a bit about his wanting to take over Jered’s job as Subway spokesman, “Has anyone actually purchased a bag of Sun Chips in real life?

A lot of “Location” came from another Spalding Gray monologue that turned up on HBO back in the day, called “Terrors Of Pleasure,” which dealt with among other things, Gray and his long suffering girlfriend buying a vacation home in Upstate New York, with less than dazzling results. It was a lot funnier, if only for

And she was also Jimmy Gator’s (Philip Baker Hall) wife in Magnolia.

Even with Larry David trying to prop him up, Ricky Gervais is incapable of being funny.

My only quibble with The Comic was that it suffered from not having a big enough budget.  Van Dyke and Rooney make it really work, but the movie suffers from having that “1960's backlot” look.

The closest we got to Dick Van Dyke playing Chaplin was in Carl Reiner’s The Comic, from 1969, with Dick playing silent movie comic Billy Bright, who was a mash up of Chaplin, Stan Laurel and Buster Keaton.  It’s not a great movie, but watching Van Dyke channel his heroes makes it worth watching, if only for the

I’m from Eastern Ohio, and while Sherrod Brown is here so much that I swear he has a vacation home in St. Clairsville, Rob Portman seems unable to find us, even with the assistance of a compass and a map.

I watched the debut episode, out of curiosity.  To say that it delivered on being horrible is an understatement.

I’d like to see Dave do an episode with all the people he came up with at the Comedy Store in the ‘70's. Tom Dreesen, Elaine Boosler, Jeff Altman, John Witherspoon, Merrill Markoe, and the ghost of George Miller.

Talk about odd.  I’m on a Facebook classic TV group, and a photo of the cast of “Grady” turned up there yesterday.  I vaguely remember the show, but still find it amazing that Whitman Mayo was in his 40's when he played the Grady character.