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lihtox--disqus

Except Niles was just as often a voice of reason to Frasier's craziness.

This makes me think of the current "Captain America is a member of Hydra" storyline: the timing really, really sucks.

Even Dubya had his likable qualities. Look up his work in Africa sometime. And even when he was in office and I hated his guts the most, I still thought it was cute when he would start dancing. He had a certain charm that I never saw in any of the Republican candidates for President in 2016. I could imagine

Specifically, clones of Miss Piggy.

That's what I was thinking too; they don't really LOOK alike, but I can easily imagine Tambor speaking Schiavelli's lines from Ghost.

They don't look alike at all, but isn't there something similar about their voices?

Without laziness, English would still have gendered nouns and ablative cases, so hooray for laziness I say.

It's still possible to stumble across things by chance, though, if it never even occurs to you to look for them.

I can see how a thing might lose magic due to its *ubiquity*; if I'm forced to watch the same movie over and over again it's bound to lose some of its charm. And it can be nice to be part of a small group of people who have seen a thing. But I don't think widespread *access* to a thing spoils the magic. For one,

Not everyone knows that it's okay to lie to a computer.

In fact, there should be a PUBLIC campaign to load the survey with fake emails, so that everyone knows about it.

Remaking a movie does not change the original movie.

I know, I thought "politically correct" meant "easily offended by jokes".

Wasn't Hot in Cleveland basically a "remake" of Golden Girls, with Betty White in the Sophia role?

Not necessarily; VII was modelled on New Hope specifically to bring people back into the franchise. Now we're back, they won't have to try so hard.

Luke's rubbing off on her, maybe?

Hunchback is a powerful movie.

If we really want to punish Trump, we should all immediately stop talking about him on November 9th.

I always thought it amusing to compare Scrubs with House: their tones were so completely opposite each other, and yet House almost always had a happy ending (for the patient at least), while Scrubs had patients dying so often.

Does Tim Taylor count as a blue-collar worker, though? Mind you, I don't remember a lot about the show, but it's hard for me to imagine him working as a plumber or carpenter or electrician or anything like that. He was a TV star who pretended to be a blue-collar worker. (cf Larry the Cable Guy?) Not that he didn't