"is it still free speech when you can lose your job/livelihood?"
"is it still free speech when you can lose your job/livelihood?"
"It's a heart-wrenching scene punctuated by Mel Tormé performing a slow,
sad rendition of Good Time Charlie after Harry unsuccessfully pleads
with Leon to stay."
I hope this is mocking those "white genocide" posters I've seen at several places who copy-and-paste something like the following
He received 14 million votes in the Republican primaries. (Meaning when people who wouldn't vote for a Democratic had a choice of Republicans.) That was a minority, not quite 45% it seems, but still millions.
The I don't know what the issue is. Politics? Because the 1980s and 1990s were a great time for sitcoms. I'd lean toward saying maybe the best time and I don't think that would be an odd opinion.
I remember the big one where he goes to the therapist about some friends death. And one where the younger daughter gets hysterical about the environment. And Soren Kierkegaard was mentioned in one or maybe even made an appearance. (Oh and the one where the Mom develops a gambling problem was a bit like the later "The…
Yes you're young, or favor the young, we get it.
"Wait a minute the actress playing the bailiff was named Warfield? I've been calling her Wallace. Why didn't someone tell me? Oh I've been making an idiot of myself."
Who I believe played Christine's harasser in an episode.
It seems like even as a kid I sometimes wondered why Christine, mostly, tolerated Dan's behavior. She insulted him, but she didn't ever try to report him or something.
It seems like Family Ties is the one where I remember the episodes the least. On WoT they go over that line up on a week to week basis and FT is the one I'm most "I don't remember this" about.
Legs are a perfectly fine thing to find attractive even as an adult. And by coincidence it fits the 1940s vibe of Harry.
I was reading an African writer once and his people had like a heightened/fable-filled ritual language they used sometimes.
I know many are disputing it, but to be honest this is my favorite too. However it might be fairer to say "The Greatest Episode for those who don't necessarily watch much Star Trek." I do like Star Trek, but I think this fits the idea of "for those who don't necessarily watch much Star Trek" because it doesn't really…
I don't know. I thought that "Who can figure out" was a rare case of him basically laughing at himself. That one might be the best thing he's ever done on Twitter.
I don't much care for the politics stuff, but here's a potential pre-Trump reference to covfefe. (Or he put the word in the video just now.)
"He wants more Miles Davis."
The Carmichael Show I guess.
I had never watched any of this series until late November or early December when I started due to the crossover. I ended up liking it better than Supergirl, the show that led me to discover this, but my late start means I'm watching early season 3 episodes now.
Seinfeld's bad influence on sitcoms I think eventually would be overcome, but man did I grow to hate it. (Yet weirdly I really liked it at first, particularly "The Limo.") Still I guess influence is influence.