bemused and detached
bemused and detached
So i hope there is some sort of context for that that Killing Commendatore quote because that seems pretty rapey.
I'd watch a show about the Janitor just going around being maliciously crazy to people.
Scrubs IS beloved... and nobody cares what happened to the Scrubs gang.
I still love Scrubs, it was a comedy that really focused on its characters (Cox and Jordan were the best) and had a surprising number of moving stories and episodes for the genre.
Listen Bill…
Sure. Let Pabst go BK, and buy the IP for the brands and brew them for yourself. Or stop brewing for Pabst, let their market share diminish, buy them for a fraction of their present value and then re-start the brands and be the real hero for bringing them back. Shit, Miller/Coors should hire me. Or even better,…
We already got a taste of what the show would be like without Gina and I didn’t actually notice her disappearance until five episodes in. This isn’t like Community losing Donald Glover, but it’s not like Community losing Chevy Chase either. She was part of an incredibly talented team.
Love Chelsea Peretti, but you could see how the show occasionally struggled to write for her after season two. So, while I’m sad she’s gone, I don’t think the show will suffer from her absence. If anything, it can only be helped by any guest appearances she has in the future.
She honestly was never my favorite character and they did a lot of great stuff without her while she was on maternity leave, so I won’t be too disappointed.
Don’t Russian men have crazy mortality rates because they don’t “safely” drink heavily?
No matter what the reason, this was a sad situation, but somehow accidentally killing yourself might be the saddest of all.
True, but Allison neglected to mention that aspect and just wrote about distilling to 195 proof.
Next up.... juniper vodka. An awesome vodka that mixes well with tonic.
Not sure if this comment is over- or underrated.
“The House On Garabaldi Street” is really the first and last word on the subject. The book was written by Isser Harel, director of Mossad at the time, and the TV movie, with Topol and Martin Balsam is top notch.
In other words, we should rewatch the Drunk History segment instead - the one with Adolf Eichmann played by “Weird Al” Yankovic.