I see what you did there.
I see what you did there.
They founded the Beatles in the '60s? But the Beatles were invented in the late '50s! They shoulda sued!!
Yeah, I'm going to respectfully call BS on point #1, not only for the stuff other folks have already pointed out, but also because, by all accounts, the recording sessions for "Hey Bulldog" and "Lady Madonna" were the last time the Beatles really worked together, collectively, on two tunes. After this, they went to…
I watched this around the same time I saw "Happiness" for the first time. Besides being completely different movies, these were the movies that made me realize just how much depth Hoffman had as an actor. It still amazes me, all the way up to Capote, it seemed like he was playing a completely different character, with…
Gee, who could possibly be downvoting so indiscriminately right now?
Oh, he was thrilled!
Heh heh, Leno, huge head.
Well, she was until somewhere around '95 or so.
I find it cosmically weird that the Full House Reviewed guy just finished the entire series, right as these awkward reunions are happening.
Bruce Johnston begs to differ.
I actually agree on Fresh Prince, it's still pretty stupidly funny. I caught an episode last week, where Will goes back to Philly to settle things once and for all with the dude who was "spinning me around during the opening credits." Can't lie, I laughed out loud at that.
"We didn't start the fire. . ."
So wrong, but so funny.
That could still work. "Dear sir or madam, I am so sorry you're related to Bob Seger."
Between that and "Whatever Happened To Alternative Nation," that was some of the best stuff the AV Club's ever put out. Man, I miss Steven Hyden.
What would we do without the Big Mick?
Wasn't there something a few years ago where McDonald's tried to copywrite "Mc?" They sued someone because they used "Mc" in their title, I remember that much. And the day it was announced, NPR's Morning Edition kept calling itself "Morning McDition." Ahhh, educated humor.
Werewolf?
Does Rudy know there's a rat in the studio?
I guess the bigger point is, if it's generally accepted that such-and-such a song sucks, and a lot of people have hated on it in the past in some form or other, why do we need to hear what a random aging punk rocker thinks about it? There's nothing inherently wrong with the idea, it's just kinda pointless.