Sookie is away working as the personal chef to Michelle Tanner as she manages to her fashion empire.
Sookie is away working as the personal chef to Michelle Tanner as she manages to her fashion empire.
Poor Marty.
That bit feels like it could have been written today.
The first season was pretty bad. The second season, where there was a villainous character trying to undo Tru's good deeds, was much better. It also had a pre-Hangover Zach Galifianakis!
I remember that ghost episode! One of the wives (girlfriends?) says something like, "I know this place is haunted. Do you think our oven cleaned ITSELF?" Heh.
Did they not cry during Sylvester Stallone's heart-rending performance of "A Bird in a Gilded Cage" on The Muppet Show?
Nice to meet you, Mr. D.C. Talk!
By the way, Gillian Anderson is 47 years old.
I knew a lot of kids who would insist that they weren't Christian, they were Catholic.
Any particular reason why you believed that? Please note that I would never judge you for it. When I was a young child, I thought Ronald McDonald was Donald Duck's wife.
What about Betty Grable? She certainly did a lot to raise G.I…. morale.
I'm about 80% sure that's from The Dana Carvey Show, from a sketch where Carvey-as-Charles-Grodin introduces clips from a bunch of new political talk shows hosted by celebrities.
You may still decide the visuals are great but the story is boring. But it's worth watching, especially as one of the few original concepts the Henson Company has managed to get made in the last decade-plus.
Have you seen MirrorMask? The Jim Henson Company made that movie in the 00s specifically to expand their fantasy resume alongside Labyrinth and The Dark Crystal, and they got Gaiman to write it.
You're right, it's time to start calling him "Mr. McG."
He still lives in his trash can, but it's been moved to the other side of the stoop. Reportedly he'll also be popping out of recycling bins and compost bins in other locations. He'll probably smell as bad as he ever did.
The HBO-era episodes have a new arrangement of the theme that's more, like, children's song-y. It's a little bit closer in spirit to previous versions.
There's currently a Sesame Workshop-produced show on PBS called The Electric Company, but it bears little resemblance to the classic show. I don't think it even has Fargo North, Decoder.
Correct. You are the first person in history to make a gay-themed joke about Bert and Ernie.