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darquegk
darquegk

It was immediately followed by the DiscipleRap.
It's very short.

I've plugged this all over the site, but look up the Canadian series "Nightfall." It's one of the best ever made.

It's called Limon Pepino, and it's made for Mexican-Americans primarily, since cucumber-lime is a popular flavor south of the border that isn't common in the USA (read: among white people).
If you've got a bodega, or a Hispanic-owned grocery or convenience store frequented by Hispanics, that's where you'll find Pepino.

Ethel Merman, the original Mama Rose, was a supremely talented Broadway singer, but remarkably unsubtle as an actress and an intellectual. When playing the lead in the original "Gypsy," she failed to see that Mama Rose was a manipulative stage mother whose self-aggrandizing pimping of her daughters bordered on

Vegeta is a fairly transparent Zod ripoff, and I only realized it now.

This is why Major Tom went off the grid into space.

We know the ancient Egyptians were people of color, but precisely what modern ethnic group most corresponds is ambiguous. There's a shitstorm going on in the theatre world where I work now about this: Stephen Schwartz is developing a stage version of his movie musical "The Prince of Egypt," and had a free concert to

"Say what you like about Hitler, but at least the Jewish kids got to go to camp for free."

Why be Clarence Thomas when you could be Clarence Clemons and play a soulful sax riff with your streetwise multiracial heartland rock band?

The Obamas and the rest are actual career politicians. Donald Trump is a television personality and pitchman. That says it all, sadly.

Lucy Liu. Devon Aoki. Constance Wu. Kimiko Glenn. Brenda Song. Jenna Ushkowitz (although she's much more theatre than film/TV now). Uh… Tila Tequila Nguyen? Omanite, Slowpoke, Pidgeot, Arbok, that's all, folks!

I can't tell if this is bad news or good news for my long-gestating plan to acquire the stage musical rights to the original film. Honestly, if I don't, Tim Minchin probably will. And he's better than me, but I still want them!

At the risk of sounding glib, I know what to recommend to my "Bojack Horseman" loving friends now… This sounds like the only Hollywood dramedy darker and more biting than that.

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. Big times. Really interesting stuff. There was a king over here, there was this other king over there. Remember Jon Lovitz on Saturday Night Live? Kinda like that. Sad!"

Perhaps you'd like my low-budget, edgier knockoff, THE DAY SANTA SAID NI***R.

True Showbiz Tales #11: I was in a band once with one of the guys composing music for my shows. He was one of those music geniuses who doesn't realize or doesn't care that other people are not music geniuses whose minds work the same way.
We were playing a few John Mayer songs, and Mayer tends to mix jazzier chord

I got to see John Pinette as Edna in "Hairspray" shortly before his death. There's a bit in Act 2 where Edna and her husband pause the show to do a little comedic riffing with each other. Usually this is a scripted bit in the style of old Carol Burnett show comedy, but when a real comedian is playing one or the other,

So is this a follow-up to the Qatsi series? And does it have a nice Philip Glass-esque score?
(Side note: the guy who scored that one scene in "Game of Thrones" finale should do the score to this.)

You have to use your head, and your mind, and your brain.

Czolgosz was electrocuted, and Charles Guiteau was hanged.