infoed1972
infoed
infoed1972

When I heard "love letter to New York done right" I was hopeful until I saw all the white faces. That's not done right.

Well, there was a guy who once formed a wire clothes hanger into an ancient Egyptian symbol and pointed it at the stones- suddenly, a bolt of energy came and knocked him out.

I watched "fast Times" for the first time only a few years ago and the Penn scenes seemed tacked on, as though they needed some wackier comedy.

I saw the original in theaters and while, I now think it's pretty lame when compared to the fun raunchiness of the original stage play (which the film gutted and ripped out some of the best songs to have them on the soundtrack on the side we never listened to as kids because it was songs that weren't prominent in the

Month-to-Month? Try one issue here, wait 14 months, two more issues, twelve months elapse, another issue…

I cannot stand sexual violence onscreen - overt or intimated. It kept me away from a lot of the French Extreme movement, a lot of which I thought was overpraised for "breaking boundaries" anyhow. As for "Wolf Creek," the only thing that it had going for it were the little connections to "Picnic at Hanging Rock" via

Are we gonna have to go to war, Balakay? My dad was from North Carolina and I grew up with that vinegar/chopped pork mess whenever we visited from our Yankee roost in Massachusetts and that stuff is amazing.

Girls Trip … on LSD

You can't create a hashtag with punctuation!

I'd say he does considering the ad campaign for the film throws in Tobe Hooper's name as an afterthought and all but sells it as a Spielberg film. And when you watch the opening credits for the film, it's almost a a joke: Steven Spielberg presents … Screen play by Steven Spielberg , Story by Steven Spielberg,

Zelda Rubinstein fell into the Spielberg camp. Why, she even implied that Hooper was a pothead!

"I know feeding kids is a challenge, and yet, I’ve raised a kid who, so
far, snacks on Castelvetrano olives and chomps raw kale leaves the way
other kids (and her dad) mow down potato chips."

Will Mrs. Beasley be the new Companion?

I was kinda hoping that, with the references made by Frank Truman to brother Harry's physical state, Michael Ontkean would make one of those silent, Lynch long shot phantom appearances and just stare at Dougie and his death would finally clear the fog. But Ontkean is a firm no.

It was 17 years since that class so I've no idea what's big now. I think there have been repeated attempts to bring "Fear Steet" back. I wouldn't discourage anybody from reading them. From an adult standpoint, the writing could be bad but occasionally I'd hit one that I loved.

Reagan was an actor who became a politician. I am no fan but he was President of the Screen Actor's Guild and Governor of CA. Franken started with a Senate run after having dabbled with politics in his own unique way for years and Bono started as a Mayor. Those who jump into gubernatorial (or Presidential)

I took a "Materials for Young Adults" class in Library School and one section was on series fiction so I read a bunch of the Fear Street books. I think the "R.L. Stine" name was used as a brand such as "Franklin Dixon" and "Carolyn Keene" as the writing style of each book veered wildly between somewhat decent to

Anybody old enough to remember when he was "Jovial" Bob Stine in "Dynamite" magazine, offered directly through Scholastic?

My nephew's Crocs got stuck in an escalator and mangled (yes, he was wearing them at the time) so it was frightening.