Rosenberg acting like he's some big "heel" on the podcast is the WORST. It's not funny at all. The fact that he's so high on the Bella Twins and doesn't get why fans like AJ Lee is another thing about him that just drives me nuts.
Rosenberg acting like he's some big "heel" on the podcast is the WORST. It's not funny at all. The fact that he's so high on the Bella Twins and doesn't get why fans like AJ Lee is another thing about him that just drives me nuts.
The Cheap Heat episode where they discussed Punk and Vince/Austin's podcast appearances was pretty enjoyable, because they didn't say the word "adjace" until there were 10 minutes left. Rosenberg's insistence on using that fucking "word" is really off-putting, and super hacky. Those guys get comped tickets and big WWE…
My first episode was a relatively tame episode with Jason Mantzoukas and Alison Brie as the guests. I remember thinking "this is pretty funny, but I have a feeling this is not what this podcast is usually like". I believe Time Bobby came out a few months after that, and that's when I got hooked and went back and…
His whole point was, "The casual fan will buy because of these part-timers, and they will see me losing to them." And he was absolutely right. The casual fans were constantly seeing Punk being the fall guy to the returning part-timers - HHH, Brock, Rock, Undertaker - and they kept telling him, "We owe you one" for…
Which SummerSlam are you referring to? 2009? He wasn't even advertised as the main event that year; Orton vs. Cena was the REAL main event if you actually watched any WWE TV in the weeks leading up to that (the only reason Punk vs. Hardy was the main event was because it was going to end with Undertaker's surprise…
I think that's wrong. Andre couldn't work anymore, and Vince gave him a pretty amazing farewell to the fans when he turned on Heenan at Wrestlemania VI. Maybe Andre wanted to stay out there and work, but from all I've heard over the years, it was Vince who realized Andre couldn't keep up with the travel and in-ring…
Hey, hey, hey, what is going on here?!
I remember them hyping up the ads for that episode of Seinfeld pretty big on NBC at the time, but it was really anti-climactic when it actually happened in the episode. I'm sure that was by design.
Really? I always assumed Schmidt WAS his first name, but I didn't know there was an actual mystery surrounding it.
I just can't wait for him to yell about it on the street. When he was yelling at people for not knowing who Amy Poehler was or what Parks and Recreation was, I was dying. "Oh my God! I'm recurring! I'm recurring!"
Nick has a new girlfriend. How is he still invested in Jess? I'd say they both seem to care about each other on the same level these days.
After looking it up further, it seems that Burton didn't pen the entire poem. The first part, "When a man lies, he murders some part of the world. These are the pale
deaths which men miscall their lives.") was written by German poet Paul Gerhardt, and the rest was written by Burton, though it's only credited to Burton…
I'd say Metallica's "To Live Is To Die" counts. It's basically a 9-minute instrumental with 15 seconds of a spoken poem after the guitar solos, but it's awesome, and the poem's lyrics were penned by the late Cliff Burton.
Bennett's character was not a close friend of O'Brien's. It seemed like they were more friends by association, and Bennett was being an asshole bully. It made perfect sense.
Yeah, he nailed that snobby dickhead bully role perfectly.
"Why won't you play with your sister, you bitch?!"
I'm a huge We Watch Wrestling fan after seeing it recommended on a Podmass earlier this year. Last week's episode ending with "The Man Called Sting" was phenomenal.
The whitest guitar solo ever has taken on even more charm for me, though. Roland's self depricating humor was great there, and Curt seems like a really funny guy too. They were both really witty and charming.
Yeah I could listen to Larry Charles tell stories about Larry David all day.
Funny, because I used to indulge in my own self-defeat due to the cute redhead in the music video, and I never picked up on that lyric. I shudder to think at what other music videos I strained to use for "inspiration" back in my pre-internet days.