I really hope that the Ghostbusters people are paying the AV Club for all of this breathless "coverage" of a remake that I expect to one day find in the $5 bin at Walmart.
I really hope that the Ghostbusters people are paying the AV Club for all of this breathless "coverage" of a remake that I expect to one day find in the $5 bin at Walmart.
I am absolutely gutted by this news.
Graig Nettles already used this title.
Still beats delivering pizza.
Screw this noise—I just found out that The Dissolve has folded.
*shrugs* I want to see movies featuring new characters, new plots, and new ideas.
I am absolutely gutted by this news.
Having grown up in Michigan, were it not for "The Dukes Of Hazzard", I likely would have not become aware of the significance of the Confederate Flag until I was eighteen or so.
Multiple episodes of "South Park" would qualify as well.
Wonder if Pixar's "Inside Out" will prompt renewed interest in the early 90's Fox sitcom "Herman's Head".
TIME once named "The Computer" as "Machine Of The Year".
Clippit: "It looks as though you're trying to troll movie buffs. Would you like help?"
I've really missed not watching him.
I think of them more as being musical idiot savants rather than merely "sloppy".
I like how "The Big Lebowski" closed with a Townes Van Zandt cover of "Dead Flowers".
Well, I don't disagree. Whether one likes the Stones or dislikes them, it remains essentially impossible to conclude that they ever played "authentic" blues any more than they ever played "authentic" country, "authentic" reggae, "authentic" disco or "authentic" Motown. They never did.
To me, part of the charm of the Rolling Stones at the start of their career, nearly a decade before "Sticky Fingers", is the extent to which they were clearly trying to emulate Delta Blues instead of skiffle; Mississippi bluesmen such as Elmore James and Willie Dixon instead of Little Richard and Buddy Holly. The…
Does "KISS Unplugged" qualify? (I don't think it was released until 1996).
It was one of those little bonus episodes—I think it was the one where they discussed "Time After Time"?
Just last night I was listening to Gilbert Gottfried's podcast when out of the blue he suddenly mentioned being a 1980 SNL cast-member the week Malcolm McDowell hosted…Jean Doumanian is far from the most interesting person who witnessed that season first hand.