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Kevin Caffrey
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I saw him live about 9 years on the Bat III tour and he could hardly stand up right while he performed. I'm surprised he's even still touring. Hope he is OK.

Great points. Love also the fact that Anthony Lapaglia is cracking up during the "Heed!" scene — clearly it seems like he just couldn't keep it together and they just kept it in the movie. Overall, it's really uneven in spots, but honestly — the first image of his father's face on screen while listening and singing

Absolutely. I laughed out loud at Norman taking the ring off that Romero had just put on, as well as Norma falling out of the car — very much in the vein of not only Psycho, but also Psycho II & III (both of which are very good, and also campy black comedies in their own way).

If they stick to the show playing out the events of the movie, then Norman has to at some point kill Romero. I know they've indicated things aren't happening *exactly* as the movie/mythology, but so far it's hitting all of the main things.

Best moment is when Denis Leary says Perry has a great voice, but is "dead from the neck up." Garafalo was funny too, exclaiming, "Remember when bands used to look like this? Before they went to gyms?"

boy did your comment make me laugh out loud. thank you.

If you only watch the first couple of minutes, yes, but if you stick with it, at the halfway mark clearly it is meant to be humorous with an advertisement for BND "miracle detergent." Agreed re: Desert Rose.

It's clearly tongue in cheek. Sting as the false prophet, walking on water and then at the end falling in and getting angry.

the album version intro is probably just about a minute long…and at the end of "Brand New Day," the music from the intro of the lead off track of the album, "A Thousand Years" comes back. That was always interesting to me, b/c "A Thousand Years" kicks off the album very hauntingly with an undeniable yearning from the

The Police were the first band I ever got into at the age of around 11 in 1987. While all my peers were listening to Poison, Motley Crue, and Bon Jovi, I was trying to get them into "We'll Be Together." It didn't go well. But, anyway, yes, Sting's solo stuff from '85-'91, imo, is better than The Police's output.

It felt a little over-the-top, but at the same time, leading up to this Gus is feeling really good about "selling" his script, having two attractive girls interested in him, and now moving up the chain of what he himself calls (and by all accounts truly is) a "toxic" environment — to me it came across as him almost

Good points. Looks aside, Gus is clearly confident and comfortable in who he is and that is what is making him attractive to Mickey as the series moves on ( still have the final two episodes to watch). Think of the scene where Gus is playing "Jet" at the party and Mickey asks him to go out for a smoke. Many other

Huge fan of the book. It took many months for the movie to make its way to a local theater, and when I finally got to see it on my own one weekday night it was in a very small theater and I was the only one there until about 2 minutes before it started. At that point, a couple in their mid 20s came in and sat down

To anyone not familiar with Wain, Showalter and The State, it starts out kinda as a ho-hum retread of early 80s camp movies, but then slowly goes off the rails. I think of the scene maybe about a half hour into the movie where all of a sudden the camera pans to the unplugged equipment that the camp radio dj has been

Nearly everything about this series is terrible, but I'm not going to miss a single episode.

Such a great 'Dad' performance in "License to Drive." Shame it didn't come up here.

"Live Forever," "Wonderwall," "Don't Look Back in Anger," "Champagne Supernova," "Don't Go Away"…all received huge airplay on rock radio in the mid/late 90s. I mean, "Wonderwall" then received MORE fame when Ryan Adams covered it in the early 00s. That song is arguably one of the most recognizable anthems of the

Oasis were huge in the US from around '95 until around 97/98. And when they "came back" with their 2005 album and went on tour, I seem to remember them playing Madison Square Garden, so the Wilson Phillips comparison is off the mark. Like @superfandral:disqus mentioning Blur or Travis — those were bands that kind of

This was being hyped as the next Star Wars. Clearly, it was not the next Star Wars. I don't think I've seen it since seeing it in the movie theater when I was 12, but even then, I don't remember being too impressed and I was someone who was still going solemnly to local toy stores seeing if they had any Star Wars

Was sure worst job question would be answered with "Bye Bye Love." "Time flies when you're selling fries!"