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Damn. You got there first.

No, it just gets mangled beyond recognition. WALES is where it goes to die.

De Havilland's track record with lawsuits is impressive so Murphy should watch out. Just ask Warner Brothers.

People who are happy with how well their side is doing are less likely to contribute money. That's why no matter what the political reality is, the Right has to keep telling its flock the situation is Dunkirk and they're clinging to a tiny sliver of shoreline about to be swamped by the evil forces of the Left.

So, basically, it was a forerunner of "Seinfeld".

No, it's not. However, it is acceptable to publicly criticize and ridicule the sane and sober people who knowingly report these insane delusions as truth and recklessly spread them for purposes of promoting a warped political agenda and getting more clicks for their web sites regardless of the harm it causes.

I'll confess I watch Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives but only because I like to see good unpretentious independent eating joints get their dues and mentally bookmark places to check out if I'm ever in their part of the country. Somehow I've developed the ability to block out Fieri's inane chatter which I guess is a

It'll be even funnier if the owner of Comet Ping Pong and his employees sue the short-dicked crackpots behind spreading Pizzagate for defamation.

It might've worked once audiences got over the shock. It certainly couldn't have been any worse than seeing Henry Fonda later turn up as an evil gunslinger in "Once Upon a Time in the West". That era in filmmaking was all about deconstruction and that included the images of the stars themselves.

One thing that somewhat bothered me about this movie was the casting of Warren Beatty as a nightclub club comic. Guys who look like Beatty generally do not become comics. Comics are usually schlubby-looking and, even though he tried, circa 1965 Beatty was not schlubby enough for the role. I got the impression the

There are also those times when the wind is blowing, it's 20 degrees or less, and you don't want to get out of your warm car. Of course, this does not happen much in Portland.

Democracy does work. It's the Electoral College that doesn't.

At the time, the choice of "in the Heat of the Night" as Best Picture in 1967 was considered a compromise or consensus choice. It was up against "The Graduate" and "Bonnie and Clyde" (which both represented "New Hollywood"), "Guess Whose Coming to Dinner" (which represented "Old Hollywood), and "Doctor Doolittle"

And that mostly applies to only the Bavarians. The other prominent German stereotype, the strict militarist with a monocle and facial scar, applies to the Prussians/East Germans.

"Henry" Ford, right? There was also the filmmaker "John" Ford who was fairly conservative but definitely not a Nazi.

Steal a car? Think big! Assuming you have access, get on the computer and transfer your employer's assets to some privately held account in the Cayman Islands.

Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers' "A Night in Tunisia" album from 1960 is my pick. I thought it would be the oldest item of pop culture here but Joe Blevins' discovery of "What's My Line" probably edges it out. In any case, Blakey's thrashing drum intro on the title cut is an ear worm that's stuck around through

How could anyone think The Creation's "Making Time" Is by the Stones? The Who l could understand (I made that mistake myself) but it doesn't sound anything like an early Stones song.

If it does, it MUST include the time in 1974 when he went on the stadium PA system after yet another Padres loss and ripped the team a new one while apologizing for their performance. He was also interrupted by a streaker invading the field during the middle of his rant causing him to lose what little remained of his