And then later Tom Cruise joined it, and they showed them both as BP was drilling…
And then later Tom Cruise joined it, and they showed them both as BP was drilling…
Oh, he's still the guy who'd get a psychologist's wife to shoot herself.
Nothing like practicing on actual queries.
It is pretty inconvenient to lose all those products with one drop in the toilet.
You mean things Radio Shack used to sell?
I'm sorry, but did you even watch last season? There was plenty of leftist hypocrisy mined in their spoof of gentrification.
And still more are pussies.
Even last season's serialized arc left a number of episodes that could stand up by themselves.
Ah, but what about concerts and interviews?
140 years later is still "after".
"We'll be very, very angry. We may even write a letter!"
Summers: "They're moving on to [obstacle] now, I'm going to have another cookie!"
Harvey, at show's end: "We'll be back next time for more…*bites cookie*…terrible, terrible food here on Double Dare."
It was arguably more ADD back in the day, with the stuff between host segments—a story broken into 5 parts—pretty much completely random. It's easier to see how all the bits on a given episode now relate to each other into a somewhat cohesive set of lessons.
No, no, he was the giant douche.
Everyone else's hands are YUUUUUUGE.
Anyone else think that the military-trained Dylan should not have been so easily incapacitated by the Polk guy, and that we should have been allowed to see Dylan rapidly smack him down and kill him with his own weapon?
American Horror History?
It looked more out of desperation than force.
"I'll take your silence as tacit approval."
As I recall, Keifer Sutherland agreed.