donboy2
DonBoy2
donboy2

I'm imagining a very long argument over whether that "Suffering" should be "Sufferin'".

Weirdly, it just occurred to me that it is possible that I've never used restaurant table salt in my life. I just don't think of it. I've probably eaten food that I think could use some salt and never looked at the table to see if there's a fix.

I imagine her publicly-available workplace email is the correct one for that kind of thing, so don't be down on yourself for it.

I now want a season of DW where the "companion" is just an inanimate object that he delivers the exposition to.

Well, they've been replaced by the people here who are quite knowledgeable as to why it was renewed, for about three different reasons.

I had that a couple of days ago and had to fall back to my generic Disqus account.

This is also my feeling about Superstore; Jonah and Amy work perfectly fine as friends who are the two most normal/realistic people in the place.

We need to know if she can rent a car!

Completely unrelated fact: her husband was a top-level Palin advisor, which fact was not disclosed on her show.

There's an "actually", here, sorry…

I got an "insecure website" rejection from my AV login a couple of days ago, if that's any help. (That is, my browser refused to go to the address for the login.)

"Good Luck Charlie" had a well-publicized end, which is a triumph of PR for me to know since I never watched it once.

My long-time prediction: when Julie Andrews goes, a lot of people in more than generation will be upset to a degree that will surprise them.

Death is coming closer and closer to our generation (Gen X, etc.) We're on the same conveyor belt.

I love the implication that in Pasadena, moderate rain counts as something that could hurt the opening day of a Star Wars film.

The fact that this movie has a subplot about middle-upper management issues is, on its own, pretty funny.

I've read the following theory on rivalries, which makes Brady/Manning into a classic one: plenty of teams are another team's nemesis, but it's not a first-class rivalry until the down team beats the up team in a big way. So Yankees/Red Sox really takes off in 2004. Similarly, Brady had Peyton's number for quite a

Wendy Malik as Lovie.

I'm sure there are people who confuse Leslie Nielsen and Connie Nielsen.

Back in the day, those calibration guys would mess with the service menu, and adjust your color temperature and the various balances in a super-magic way.