notteddanson--disqus
not ted danson
notteddanson--disqus

He was good on Seinfeld, too.

Well, a children *is* pretty easy to amaze.

My very first NPR listening experience was Nicolas Cage on Fresh Air talking about eating a cockroach for Vampires Kiss.  I was instantly a HUGE NPR/Fresh Air fan.

I'd never heard of this, and those robots are fucking hilarious.

SCTV, "das boobs": "the boobs".

He actually looks quite a lot like my dad in that pic.

It surprises, and cracks me up, every time i see the final category— celibacy.  What a great, great show.

In the days before i had an ipod, i had a little radio tuner (i actually still have it) that also picked up tv signals (this was before the switch to digital, obviously).  If i was out and about and got tired of NPR, and the local indie music station was playing ska or something, i would listen to reruns of Rosanne or

I've never really understood what Mr. Burns meant when he said "like a bunch of little Rory Calhouns", but it made me laugh then, and i it makes me laugh now.

I'm thinking that the whole thing might have been discussed/explained in a scene that was cut.  It just seems like a pretty drastic thing to include for them not to explaine it or for it to not affect the story at all.  Not to mention the added production costs and time in the make-up chair.  Or am i just missing

Maybe i have it wrong, but i thought the joke was going the other way.  I thought Walter was saying that people don't use the word beaver in reference to a woman's hooha now like they did in the seventies.  To me, calling a vagina "beaver" is a very seventies thing.

I found it odd that he was out in public and no one seemed to even
notice his unusual appearance.  Not one strange look, which to me seems
highly unlikely.

Well @avclub-7e83722522e8aeb7512b7075311316b7:disqus , i agree 100% that Daisey betrayed everyone at This American Life and was completely wrong in everything he did involving the show (i just wasn't that surprised).  And he did the same thing in interviews with other news outlets, and he was wrong there too.  But i'm

i guess i fall in the dvr+7 crowd (or whatever it's called) since i work friday nights (i watch as soon as i get home of course).  so if they can count that, shouldn't they be able to count *everyone* who watches live using a dvr or cable box?  i've also read on the internets that they can tell whether you skip the

yeah, that's true, though it takes a lot of patience to only have one or two discs of a show at a time (i'm a tv marathoner), and a lot of effort to manage all the discs/shows with the movies i need to see in my queue.  i've done that with a few things (john adams, the bbc life on mars) and it's kind of a pain to be

well, i really hope not.  no matter how great the characters are (and these are some of the greatest tv characters ever created), it's the interactions of the characters that makes the show great.  it would be a huge mistake (sorry) to only have one or two of them per episode.

i kind of hate hbo.  sure, the shows are great, but if you don't pay the premium (i have a roommate who's not interested), there's literally no way to watch their stuff.  i can afford only so many series dvd sets.  i had hbo years ago, so i've seen most of the sopranos, and saw the first season of the life and times

i have almost the same story (just replace year/forest with night fringe was on/restaraunt).  i started at the very beginning and am just finishing up season 2.  didn't realize that many of fringe's very best episodes were in that 2nd season.  the episode 'peter' is some of the best t.v. i've seen since LOST.  man, i

while each episode will focus on a certain character, i hardly think they'd have *only* that character.

help stop b.s.!