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David Johnson
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It has to be Richard Dreyfuss.

Dancing with the Woman at the Bar may be one of my favorite songs ever. I remember buying that album after hearing it being played in a record shop in Minneapolis. It had just come out…I bought it, went home and played it for like 7 hours straight.

Last recorded words on the Challenger were "Uh oh," which I find chilling.

Wasn't that the one where the people on board were able to watch a live video feed from a camera in the nose (or cockpit) of the flight, and so could see the whole thing unfolding on their TV screens?

I was 5 years old at the time, living about 1.5 miles from the crash site in San Diego. To this day I remember hearing the impact of the PSA hitting the ground. It felt like a big THUD. My mom was nursing my brother at the time, and said "oh that was probably a sonic boom." Our friends' house was completely destroyed

Yeah, I was going to ask the same thing. I know that there is some trickery afoot, but what are we, the audience, supposed to *think* is going on? Typically in order to spring some sort of Ah ha! twist moment on the audience, or some grand revelation, you have to have written the episodes well enough so that the

P.S. Even though I'm clearly articulating my concern, in this letter, about having been so very daft as to have neglected to write out a proper will, and thus hope, in some way, that this letter should serve as evidence of my intentions, I shall nonetheless hide it in a book where it will probably be overlooked for a

There is no question that the next TV live musical should be "Paint Your Wagon." Taking advice on the leads….

The "roll 3 dice to see how many dice you roll" line had me on the floor. As well as Leslie's reaction to Ben's line about playing the game in reverse.

"Buckle your seatbelts. We're in for a little TURBULENCE." [crashes plane]

But #s 23-26 were ironic.

It was Mona. IT'S ALWAYS BEEN MONA.

For me it seems like a really transparent attempt to gin up one last "OMG are they actually going to break up???" moment before the wedding. I don't know how many times the writers can go to the "they might break up because they are so different, except ultimately they realize that they are non-traditional, and that

Can someone please explain what Darryl was saying to Jim about how they were bought out? I truly did not understand that—who bought them out? At first I thought he meant that the other partners had bought out his and Jim's interest in the company, but, no, I think he means another company is buying Athlead? But