notteddanson--disqus
not ted danson
notteddanson--disqus

i like how kramer kept his coat in the front display cooler.

i am in love with frank's "hello, woman" to elaine.

i think somebody wrote a book about hollywood deliberately producing these types of movies as a sort of opiate of the masses.  i think i heard about it on npr.  obviously, i'm not real clear on this.

when i read the word, i read it as bi-OP-ic, i can't help it.  when i
say it, i make sure to say it bio-pic, but it takes effort.

i loved this bit because it reminds me of an old steve martin joke where he's talking about how he loves words and language:  "some people have a way with words, and some people… oh… not have way."

you know, as weird as this episode is, and as awkwardly as it handles it's subject matter, henry insisting that monroe go to the police seems pretty progressive for a dumb 80's sitcom.  after i first heard about this episode, but before i saw it (about 2 years ago), i never would have imagined that anyone on the show

yeah, but it might regain some of the 5-6 million viewers it's lost since the first season.

yeah, knew about the who's the boss kid.  guess i was wrong about jeremy miller, though (who was the funniest one on the show, if memory serves).  also, what about the kid what played tommy on alice?

looks like the phantom menace wasn't good for anybody.

didn't growing pains start, or at least continue, the trend of the youngest son of eighties sitcom families turning out to be gay?

and i believe leo had an episode where he was trying to meet a rock star, played by a hugely coiffed brad pitt.

bzzzzzz… zzzzz!

i keep insisting that fox should renew both fringe and alcatraz, and either move alcatraz to friday before fringe or move fringe to monday after alcatraz.  but no one seems to be listening!

yeah, this does seem like they're taking a semi-final lap approach to this season, what with getting into the origins of the observers.  but there's a lot more that i'd like to find out about, like sam weiss and the first people and who exactly is behind that machine.  besides, i love watching fringe when i get home

yes, i hope this bodes well for a fifth season of fringe.

wasn't boner's dad's name sylvester stabone?  that's pretty funny by eighties family-style sit-com standards.

i agree, though i'd probably give it a straight B.  i loved the perd stuff, and the campaign manager stuff was pretty good, i just didn't find the old people stuff funny.  the "people are old" jokes were lame, and i've just never found carl reiner funny (though i do like him, he directed the jerk, afterall).  and the

speaking of ads… anyone else seeing a lot of pink in the sidebars?

agreed.

i could not stand will and grace.  it's truly is an awful, awful show.  but back when it was on, i'd be flipping around and i'd happen upon a scene with just megan mullally's karen, or her and her housekeeper, and i'd be drawn in, and it was pretty funny.  but then the other characters would come in and ruin it all.