nevillearthurross--disqus
Dusty Ayres
nevillearthurross--disqus

The word's spelt Voyager.

That's all I ever see on YouTube (and a few times, I've had to tell the young person that there's great new music out there that isn't pop-I also give them info on where to find this new music as well.) I managed to convince a young Argentinian to seek out what's new in soundsville this way, although I wish I'd told

I still use those boards, a lot. They're not that hard to use.

But what you can do with said comments is to right click on them and report them.

What we need is for reality shows to die off completely in North America, Europe, Scandinavia, Asia, and elsewhere, and also for networks in the North America to be forced to serve the public like they used to and make documentaries like they used to (the only network still doing this is the CBC here in Canada.) ABC,

Most of them are like that because of neocon media and little else; we have the same problem here in Canada too, with most people being knee-jerk anti-public sector union and anti-private sector union too.

More like T.J. Hooker wasn't that great, I'll bet.

Everybody loved that cool car.

There's also the environmental aspect (for some people) of polystyrene kits as well.

Steve McGarrett (the original) was okay, but his actor (Jack Lord), was an asshole, doing prima donna shit on the show, making sure nobody got billing over him ('I am Jack, said the Lord, and there shall be no other actors before me-only featured players') pulling 'labor problems' if he didn't get his way, and so on.

Tragically, she had a harder and nastier life after Mannix, than Connors did.

Model kit shopping is still around, it's just online (also, LEGO has take over as what people do for modeling.) Sadly, the kind of kit I was talking about (a licensed piece of merchandise based on a vehicle seen in a movie or TV show) is not that popular anymore.

Just sayin'.

So does DVD, and WITHOUT commercials; also you see the full credits without their being put into a corner, or whatever it is they do on TV these days.

Thanks for the info. He also had a phone in his car, just like Batman did.

And it had kid's merchandise from it too-a model kit of Mannix's car.

Dang, I could've sworn I saw current-style infrared remote controls for TV sets, particularly in the 1968 movie Skidoo (Jackie Gleason and Carol Channing each have one, and they play duelling remote with each one, changing channels with each other.)

Not really the first-there were a lot of imitation Bond movies out there, like the Flint series (Our Man Flint and In Like Flint) and several other movies known as the Eurospy genre (or if you prefer, the Amerspy genre.)

Or Jamie Lee Curtis on Buck Rogers.

@disqus_oNE1dWDQEw:disqus, @Fancyarcher:disqus: you both do know that Mannix is on DVD, right?