Hollywood has no shortage of hot people. Joss even pointed out once that Nicholas Brendon was way too good-looking to play a dork like Xander.
Hollywood has no shortage of hot people. Joss even pointed out once that Nicholas Brendon was way too good-looking to play a dork like Xander.
I wonder what the reasons were for why the network wanted to cast her but Joss didn’t.
I didn’t know Don Draper was played by Hugh Jackman.
One thing this makes me wonder is how he’s managed to get so many people to work with him repeatedly. Is he sincerely good to them or is it conscious manipulation?
“C-I-L-L my landlord!”
Thanks, I love sports trivia. I have a nitpick to make about something you’ve said, though: I think Hideo Nomo made a bigger impact than Masanori Murakami as far as Asian players in the majors go. I’d say Murakami was more like the Moses Fleetwood Walker to Nomo’s Jackie Robinson.
I thought Jeff was pretty underrated; I liked his impressions and thought Drunk Girl was a funny character.
One funny thing about the Cleveland Indians finally changing their name is that was the first their last World Series winning team(1948) was the first to have black players(Larry Doby and Satchel Paige). In fact, since the next 5 titles were won by the Yankees, who didn’t have black players until Elston Howard in…
I don’t think he’s the go-to movie star for dog-related crimes.
The percentage of black MLB players was a lot higher in the ‘70s and ‘80s than it is now, although the percentage of minorities is higher now because of the increase in Hispanic and Asian players.
Only two people have been on the cast of both shows: Jeff Richards and Taran Killam, neither of whom were on MADtv for very long.
How does the number of great TV shows made in the last two decades fit it with this idea?
I wonder if CBS All Access changing its name is why the QAnon people are making such a big deal about March 4.
If they’d called it Woody V. Mia, would the “woody” jokes be worse, as bad, or not as bad as the “Alien V. Farrow” jokes?
Since that year’s World Series was canceled four days before it premiered, I’d say it was pretty dated before it even aired.
Kenyans certainly were Born to Run.
I think the popularity of Anthony Fauci indicates otherwise.
I never considered myself a real cinephile, so to me the only major advantage of watching in the theater as opposed to at home is you get to do it earlier. Otherwise it’s basically just more expensive video that you can’t pause.
I’ve only been to a movie theater maybe 20 or 25 times in my life, so I never associated watching movies with going to movie theaters as much as a lot of people do.
I first watched it 20 years ago; my dad recorded the whole thing when it first aired.