disqusfy7ssjvuwv--disqus
Jeremy
disqusfy7ssjvuwv--disqus

I was shocked when I read in an old magazine the names of many of the celebs who called in on "Frasier". I had no idea about this until reading it, but I think the difficult part of that is being able to recognize all of them by their voices. Some celebs don't have instantly recognizable voices.

"Sorry, I thought that was my leg". I loved her as Noreen in "The Brady Bunch Movie".

I don't like the comment that the songs aren't as memorable as the ones from the show. I treasure the DVD option that allows you to play only the songs from the film. They are still so catchy and memorable to this day. In fact, I remember singing 'Ain't No Road Too Long' for (or to?) one of my mom's friends one time.

This was a fun interview. I loved the stories she told. I always thought she was a gorgeous lady who was so great on Newsradio and then in her slew of hit 90s films. I haven't really caught her stints on ER, Parenthood or The Good Wife, but I still admire her as an actress. I'm glad she is in better health these days.

Dan Lauria is so underrated as a character actor. He's always so serious with that stone-cold look on his face in many of his roles, but he's such a great actor and one of the best things about The Wonder Years.

Yep, he and old girlfriend Joanna Kerns both were. He's actually in a lot of ripped from the headlines TV movies, including ones about the David Koresh siege in Waco and the Howard Beach racial incident between a group of blacks in an all-white neighborhood.

I'm surprised they didn't let him talk about those sideburns he sported in "Bobby" and the fact that he was planning on marrying Lindsay Lohan, the human trainwreck, in that film.

I remembered seeing Judd Hirsch as Dracula in the 1979 TV movie "The Halloween That Almost Wasn't" when I was a kid. I saw it rerun on TV and then finally saw it again a couple of years ago. It was kind of campy and funny.

How interesting to see In Search of Dr. Seuss mentioned in this article. I just watched this movie for the first time in 20 years on youtube the other night. I loved it as a kid. And Another Stakeout is another movie my mom, brother and I all loved when I was a kid. I also loved the dessert scene. I tried to watch

I remember watching Toys as a child with my family and we ended up stopping the movie because we weren't getting into it. I think I must've eventually seen the whole thing. Aladdin we saw in theaters and loved and of course, Robin owned the movie with his performance as the Genie. We also saw Jumanji and Jack in

I beg to differ. Some of his episodes were of uneven quality, but "The Hunt" was a very good episode that came from Hamner.

Ring-a-Ding-Girl while an odd episode and not one of TZ's best has always been a personal favorite. I was hoping under stray observations, it would've been mentioned that Betty Lou Gerson, who played the assistant, is better known as the voice of Cruella De Vil from "101 Dalmatians" and Bing Russell, as the newsman,

When I saw the movie with my mom and brother as a kid and that scene came up where he said 'she wants to kill you, Dick', my mom asked if that was his name and I said yes. If you didn't know that, you'd wonder.

Dunn and Dunn or in the case of "Snake Eyes", Dunn and Dunne.

I have always preferred 'classic television' to current shows and there are probably less than five current shows that I watch in any given TV season. I was a big fan of Nick at Nite growing up and I still love shows like The Twilight Zone, Dragnet, I Love Lucy, The Brady Bunch and Love, American Style. TV just isn't

I know. I probably shouldn't admit I still haven't seen it. ;)

Kevin Spacey has always been a favorite of mine and I think his mid-90s movies are the best. I have yet to see "The Usual Suspects", but "Swimming with Sharks" and "Seven" are classics. I also loved his role as the yuppie mama's boy with marital problems in the dark comedy Christmas film "The Ref". It's always been a

Yes, that was the one.

I haven't seen Kurtwood Smith in very much, I'll admit, and I'm no fan of That 70s Show, but I do remember Smith locking lips briefly with another character actor extraordinaire Stephen Tobolowsky (of all people!!) on a Valentines Day episode of "Picket Fences".

In Sid's memory, I watched one of his Love, American Style episodes tonight which was called "Love and Who?". I'm glad that 50 some years after his heyday, when the name Sid Caesar is mentioned, people aren't saying 'comedy and who?' He was a legend. May he rest in peace.