dwc1964
JerkassWoobie
dwc1964

Sounds like a product of Prescott Pharmaceuticals.

Since HBO doesn't have commercials (other than for itself), and FX has lots & lots, the actual showtime is about the same.

BMW also makes motorcycles - been making them longer than they've been making cars. I've ridden nothing but beemers since my 2nd bike (around 1991). They're about as expensive as Harleys. But they're not loud & obnoxious. They don't try to look/sound/act badass, they just get the job done.

Especially since Bobby came back.

"And that's why you're a freak."

Someone should post on YouTube a compilation of all her appearances in the show. I can't remember all that stuff.

I stand by my previous statement: Tara officially crossed the Moral Event Horizon with this. Charlie Utter said it perfectly.

I stopped for lunch in Forks while riding the Hwy. 101 Olympic Loop a year or two ago. Somehow I missed that though.

I thought Renée Zellweger bore a stronger resemblance.
Also Pia Zadora.
Past tense. Long past…

On another thread he posted a reply to me, challenging me as to who was the most Jerk-Ass.
I tried to reply that I'd concede the Jerk-Ass title as long as we all agree that I'm the most Woobie. And also note that I'm an actual TVTrope, not sure where he got his handle from.
But I couldn't reply, because his post is

There has never been a more honest depiction of the relationship between porn and its audience.
Or maybe just me.

I was about to ask if you'd considered the Tesla Roadster - all-electric, so instant torque and very few moving parts to maintain - but its body is based on the Lotus Elise so your last post answers that question.
There's one that parks in my apartment building's garage, in the space I thought was my own before my

They're still trying to cast the male lead after Hunnam dropped out.

I'm still dreaming of a version of Fast Times at Ridgemont High with Cameron Crowe's original soundtrack ideas (as he described in his DVD commentary track). I always found the Jackson Browne songs to be oddly discordant, and when I listened to the commentary I was like, "Oh, that makes much more sense!"

I don't remember any of the specifics, but I have a very strong recollection of watching Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood at my babysitter's house, and suddenly getting a very strong feeling that he was talking down to me. I believe I was 4 years old.
As you say, as an adult, I've learned to appreciate him and his show much

One of the things that makes the theatrical release > the director's cut.

The Director's Cut explained way too much, in a way that made the bullshit "philosophy of time travel" dominate. The theatrical cut worked much better.

I'm depressingly looking forward to this.