Look, man, this article is very clear. Sometimes it’s OK to brutally murder your husband.
Look, man, this article is very clear. Sometimes it’s OK to brutally murder your husband.
Wow, we’re doing John Brinkley?
Sure do enjoy all of these 1970s episodes, hope they run more over the summer.
The whole Lance Armstrong saga convinced me that rules against PED use are stupid. And I don’t even like Lance Armstrong and the media reports make him sound like a sociopath. But the story of Lance Armstrong’s comeback from cancer was inspiring, until we found out that he took the Bad Drugs, and because those drugs…
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Be nice if somebody would pony up for David Lynch to make a movie.
Wonder if they’ll talk to Linda Kasabian. Think she’s only spoken about the murders two or three times outside of courtrooms.
Are people getting stir-crazy with coronavirus? Because this must break records on the “who gives a shit?” scale.
Given how soap operas are dying (there are only four left) this is surprising.
See the headline, think “Wonder what she says about Heavenly Creatures, hope they asked her about Shattered Glass as well.” And they ask about neither!
Give us “Stark Raving Dad” back, goddammit.
Elmo is the worst.
The series finale of “Mad Men” is terrific, one of the better finales ever.
Where’s “Cheers” going, I wonder? Been watching with my daughter. Also, the text implies that Cheers will be leaving on June 9 while the list at the bottom says June 30. June 30 seems to be the correct date.
Yup, Sinise was as good as Lowe and Ringwald were bad, seemed like the role of Stu Redman was written for him.
Heather Graham is going to be a major attractiveness upgrade over book Rita Blakemoor, even if she is past 50.
Oh yes, the TV station, the on-air executions—if a scenario like The Stand actually happened then no doubt we’d see some weird shit on TV before the airwaves went dark, but that was cuttable.
I liked it a lot. People got super-pissed about Kermit having a different pig girlfriend. They all appreciated the Muppets on a deeper level than us.
The original series suffered from some poor casting--Sheridan was an ineffective Randall Flagg, Molly Ringwald seemed like she didn’t want to be there, Rob Lowe was horribly miscast.
The rest of the novel is not without value, but yeah, the first 300 pages or so where society collapses and humanity is wiped out—that is such sustained gut-level horror that the rest of the book does come off as an anti-climax.