livingonapear--disqus
livingonapear
livingonapear--disqus

Wait, who's Lynda Stipe?

And how many opinions must one voice psuedonymously before one is labeled an internet scold?

was it 80s or early 90s? Early 90s was a really racist time. The 60s had racism aplenty but it was just kind of clueless and people just assumed stereotypes were accurate.

You think it's serious? I've always considered it an absurd satire. All the violence is punctuated with humor, such as the soldiers thinking they're appearing before a women's group; the robotic way everyone says what a kind loving commanding officer Shaw was; the way they decide on there being 57 Communists in

So that works out to one black comedian per a season. Or a black comedian every 8 episodes. I mean that does contradict what I said, great job. But you're not exactly proving the Seinfeld is an equal opportunity employer.

This is all true, but it also makes me think of Seinfeld's defense of his "Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee" which had mostly white comedians. He basically used the meritocracy defense and said that he chose comedians who were funny, and that he shouldn't have to fill a quota.

Wow, Eugene Mirman cleans up real….ok.

I'm imagining Zucker Brother's Lloyd Bridges as the Giver and loving it.

Ohhhhhhhhhhhhh
Dirty Maggie Mae
They have taken her away
And she never walks down Lime street anymore
Ohhhhhhhhh
The Judge he Guilty found her,
For robbing a homeward Bounder
That dirty no good robbing, Maggie Mae

Theoretically, if you are so locked in the project, it means that you everything flows through you. There are no script questions, no points where the director, actor, and writer aren't on the same page. Since many creative differences can arise as a film proceeds and takes shape, and since those problems constitute

And of course, he's seen everything

Dylan McDermott was pretty damn funny in "The Election." It was similar to Duchovony's role in "Zoolander."

Has Patrick Stewart already crossed the Nielsen rubicon? cause he's definitely too funny to leave out.

I, uh….don't suppose those are practical effects.

What's the matter, Dave? Don't you like my cane?

Though I've never been a fan of Captain America in the past, Evan's Captain America is one of my favorite comic heroes of all time. I love the way he implicitly demands the same honesty and standards in others that he demands in himself. This comes out especially well in his interactions with Black Widow where she

Rednex really isn't a band though. It's more like a production team with interchangeable members for live shows. Like if you went to see Rednex, the people up on stage would probably not be the people who came up with "Cotton Eyed Joe." At least that's kind of what Todd in the Shadows came up with when he tried to

The smark term has evolved over the years as well. Originally it meant people who knew wrestling was fake, but then that became common knowledge so being a smark meant knowing backstage lingo, knowing why someone was getting favorable treatment, knowing how shows were booked/written/predetermined or having access to

Has anyone noticed that every year people say that the commercials weren't as good; were the commercials ever actually that good? I mean, maybe there was a small peak around 1997, but that was before Geico had like 8 "funny" ad campaigns running concurrently, before Youtube, and before ad agencies got into an arms

I still get angry when I think about the lighting class I had where someone brought in the "Manhunter" DVD as an example of bad lighting, specifically the climax of the film.