It's repetitive for sure. Maybe it was a little less boring for me because I was unfamiliar with so many of the songs, so I learned a bit about crappy music five seconds at a time.
It's repetitive for sure. Maybe it was a little less boring for me because I was unfamiliar with so many of the songs, so I learned a bit about crappy music five seconds at a time.
Colbert has to commit to the character in order for it to really work, which is why occasional drop-ins by "Colbert" don't cut it.
Hey, if you want quality programming like "Still the Beaver", you expect to pay extra.
Matt, I absolutely respect your taste and especially your honesty!
Just what Great News needed: a time slot change and a bunch of other sitcoms to choose from.
Sure, which is why a spinoff is usually scheduled in a spot where the audience for the parent show can easily find it, not on another channel in the cable hinterlands.
They were given topic areas, possible bluffs and some were given joke responses. So while the questions might be discerned, the panel wasn't given the questions and answers outright.
And the fact that there are a billion shows out there now has got to make the syndication market more competitive than ever.
Compared to what's happening in real life now, the activities of the lead characters seem almost adorably quaint.
Or AMC.
Hmmm….I guess that'll do, but sure doesn't sound like they were expecting to get the axe.
I can't think of a circumstance that would result in a cheap-to-produce show like MST3K being dropped, after the monumental effort to bring it back.
Hmmm…this Elementary plot kinda sounds like that Sledge Hammer! episode with Peter Marshall, in which, as you said…what about the host???
The book "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" divides activities into four quadrants:
Let's just say that for once, Alec Baldwin might be severely challenged for the title of "biggest asshole on the stage".
Be it Jackie, Billy or Artie, the Stern show desperately needs a comedic voice other than Stern's. Once Artie left, hoo boy, did the show start circling the drain.
Also, it doesn't seem fair to the movie - for better or worse, that's the ending they chose, they ought to have shown it.
No. Between that and Neil Patrick Harris, NBC has learned its lesson about trying to bring back variety in prime time.
Look, this is the entertainment business. Morality has nothing to do with it.
I did not, but I am jealous of those who did, because I love that trax.