Isn’t almost anything by Post and/or Carpenter under 2 minutes of perfection?
Isn’t almost anything by Post and/or Carpenter under 2 minutes of perfection?
It was for me. Niles was always my favorite character on the show.
I think you’ve accidentally come up with a great pitch for a TV show. It’s about an entertainment website that hires someone significantly older than most of the other writers. Just because “The Great Outdoors” failed doesn’t mean that this show will fail. At least in this show, there will be a common…
Than you for confirming what I thought; the Fairness Doctrine applied to news, not entertainment.
During the primaries, I was sure this was just a publicity stunt for “The Apprentice.” He’d do the campaign during the summer, then he’d drop out and go back to the show. I don’t think we ever expected to get elected. I think it’s like “The Producers,” it wasn’t supposed to be a hit.
At this point equal time only apply during elections. Also, I think the Fairness Doctrine applied only to news programming, not entertainment programming.
Thank you for sort of answering a question I was going to ask. I thought that equal time was only in effect during the campaign, and only applied to giving the candidate free airtime. My understanding was once a late night (or any show) show booked one candidate, they have to give equal time to other, and if the other…
In a fistfight Logan Echols wins. As for any anything else, it would depend on the type of fight.
I respect her reason for turning it down. She wanted to be able to pursue other projects like movies and podcasts and knew if she was host she would not be able to do that. She had a long term career plan/path and being host of “The Daily Show” didn’t fit into it. That being said, she would have been an amazing host.
As soon as I heard the first one was set in New York in the 1920s, all I wanted to see was a wizard speakeasy, and we got to see one. I also thought the niffler was adorable and practically stole the show.
I think Ma Olson did want Peggy to get married instead of having a career, which is similar to what Joan’s mother taught her. I think Ma Olson and Mrs. Halloway each pictured a very different type of man for their daughter, but there was little question that the end game was marriage and a family of their own.
Both Joan and Peggy were raised to find a husband, settle down, raise children and that they would find happiness through that. Peggy figured out that wasn’t for her after a year or two of working at Sterling Cooper. It took Joan close to if not more than a decade to figure out the same thing. (Both found happiness…
If I’m getting notifications on Kinja as the Disqus comments migrate over, does that mean I have successfully linked the accounts?
I agree. It’s just a good solid 40 minutes of TV. It’s not all about relationship drama. To answer the stray observation, I always thought that Paris, Maddie and Louise were sort of friends. They went through school together, they probably went to many of the same birthday parties. When you don’t have a lot of people…
I think they’re both equally iconic and strongly associated with Kermit
Carter as Elliot Gould works. At first I wasn’t sure how I felt about Clinton as the mastermind, but I think it works. I’m not sure about Bush 43 as Matt Damon. I don’t think he’s smooth enough to pull off a lift or smart enough to be the inside man/the observer.
Actually they were given instructions twice but lost them both times. They were given instructions in the first episode and in a later episode.
Writing any script is a form of wishful thinking. Hypothetically, if the studio really likes the script, couldn’t they acquire the rights to whatever the show/property is?
Except when costuming had someone wearing 1980s earrings in a scene that was set in the 1960s or the 1950s.
I once impressed people by knowing all of the lyrics to the song, not just the chorus. The way TV is today you don’t have to worry about them remaking the theme song. Most shows now don’t even have proper theme songs; it’s a few notes/bars and a title card.