Simpsons did it!
Simpsons did it!
At the time, a lot of people would have cared. When the show was airing, there were people paying attention to every minor detail, and analyzing what they might mean. Often on this very site! So it's likely that people were theorizing about the missing watch as soon as that scene aired.
Weird Al, as usual, ahead of his time in 1989
The better ending would’ve been Walt, in his Y-fronts, cammed- and oiled-up like Arnie in Commando, hosing down Meth Damon’s gang and tossing off one-liners.
Ironic given that it’s called Variety.
Of course these all depend upon the age of the child and the parent-child relationship, but some of the suggestions need improvement.
Honestly I feel like the studios should start to look for other options for Kimmel, Fallon, and Meyers. For me they seem to be running their course. Get some fresh blood, take risks. Those 3 are getting old and the talk show format has changed. The older guys could afford to be slower because without the internet the…
Glad these shows are back so that the people working got their jobs back but honestly Meyers is the only one who’s appeal I never got. Kimmel, Fallon, Corden, Oliver, and Colbert, I got their appeals to an audience. Meyers just never clicked for me and I just felt out of the others he relied on Trump stuff the most…
It somehow reminds me of the Carousel scene from Logan’s Run.
Too many fingers is what you’re going to get.
I remember hearing about Thirtysomething and thinking “oh, a show about old people.”
Wait Hanks was the precursor of COVID. This means the AI attempt at world takeover is only a few weeks away.
No, it would be ironic if they were complaining about posting spoilers.
Tom Hanks would never play a creepy looking character with dead eyes.
“Hi, I’m Tom Hanks. This dental insurance company has lost all credibility, so they’re borrowing some of mine!”
I’m sure it was a lovely show, but I’m fairly sure we didn’t miss anything.
Strange game...the only winning movie is to not direct a Star War.
Yeah, I guess I would call Spaced a GenX series, focusing on how we were the first generation that in a sense “didn’t grow up” as in it was common, as the characters did, for us to still be into Star Wars, comic books, and video games as adults.
early 2000s GenXer: Oh, here comes that show about people like us in their 30s. That’s cool.
They shot some of that show in my hometown. I still have a photo of my family in front of a Stuckyville sign they put up.