Yeah what a silly answer. Everyone knows he was The Six Million Dollar Man. Duh.
Yeah what a silly answer. Everyone knows he was The Six Million Dollar Man. Duh.
Fun fact: Supreme Court comes from the term “Le Supreme Court” which means a court that included sour cream
That one lady who actually thought Steve Austin was The Crusher, even Whoopi was like “Stone Cold, girl.”
Supreme Court’s the Supreme Court, but they call it Le Supreme Court.
He’s no Paul Lynde...
*giant cartoon foot stomps on Terry Gilliam*
Ha ha! Royale with Appeals! What do they call the Supreme Court?
Simpsons did it
BS. In France, they call the Court of Appeals a Royale with Appeals. Because of the metric system.
Mmm-hmm. And what about this “France” place? Never heard of it.
As someone who would have put money in to this film, but had no money, and as such technically did not fund this film, I also demand the rights to The Man Who Killed Don Quixote!
Wow, that’s amazing. It fits into the “unmakeable film” narrative perfectly. It makes me wonder if this is just a publicity stunt. Who is this “Paris Court of Appeals” anyway? Sounds fishy.
Some days you tilt at the windmill and some days, well, the windmill falls on you.
It sounds like you have a drawer of labeled VHS tapes of Hollywood Squares
The only thing better than seeing Gilbert Gottfried on Hollywood Squares, was when Bob Goldthwait was on the show, in which he was not only not called upon, according to him, contestants intentionally avoided calling on him, even when it would have benefited them to do so, In a bit he did about it, he pretty much…
Now imagine that, but with twenty minutes of check-cashing indifference, and you have a complete episode of Hollywood Squares.
Almost 20 years later I still remember that. It was so hilarious because they were so PAINFULLY dumb. The celebrities are all given the answers before hand and simply choose to answer correctly or make up a silly joke/story to fill in time (veil lifted, mind blown, amirite?!?!). Gottfried got obvious with them…
But, he didn’t ruin the game. The two contestants kept agreeing to his obviously wrong answers, forcing the game to go on for the entire episode (they can usually do 3 or 4 rounds an episode).
My favorite part of that episode was when it returned from commercial break to Tom Bergeron announcing, “Welcome back to the Gilbert Gottfried Show!”
Japan builds a nuclear power plant next to the ocean.