onthewall2983
onthewall2983
onthewall2983

If he's in California probably not.

I'll admit that I usually don't

I have a chair I got from a Goodwill about 10 years ago. It badly needs to be upholstered (after about a year or so I put sheets and blankets over it) but is strong as an ox. I call it my Martin Crane chair.

Myers also did Ron Wood on the show.

He was good on Maron's podcast.

There was also of course the Weekend Update bit where Mike Myers was Mick, and Mick was Keith.

He's been working on a solo album for years and years apparently

Why?

Had a cancer scare recently.

He was still a teenager when he joined Santana. He also jammed with Derek and The Dominos around that time too.

Quite a bit of it is unwatchable and indefensible now. I felt the same way back then too, and I was their prime demographic. It bothered me more because I had a younger brother lapping it up, with no father-figure to give him some perspective on it all. He does say now that he wished he watched more WCW as I did.

I've been noticing that about other musical guests too.

I've never seen him play someone so desperate and pathetic. He was very convincing too.

More like "ass" and "suck". They seemed to use those two in place of every other curse word, like a less appealing version of Fantastic Mr. Fox.

If that's true, then you have to consider that for a few years previous to this, that the WWF was at least one or two more steps off. The whole steroid/sex scandals of the early 90's, losing top guys to WCW, and Vince not really committing to one guy as the top dog. The last one is what was really detrimental to the

The NWO getting so many members was a double-edged sword. You can tell that it was done to placate a lot of their mid-card guys who might have otherwise been interested in going to WWF, but it was also good as far as keeping heat on Hogan, Hall and Nash.

WCW was a lost cause. From the time Ted Turner bought out the Crocketts, it was mis-handled by people who either didn't know the business, or were out of touch with their audience. Eric Bischoff did a hell of a job making WCW a viable competitor to WWF, but so much that got the company hot boomeranged back on them

For me, 1997 was all about the Monday Night War. WWF and WCW competing for the attention of wrestling fans nation-wide, and this was the year the gauntlet was really thrown down. The product on each show was getting more intense, with the NWO angle reaching fever pitch in WCW, and Steve Austin ascending to becoming

I read that Ford wanted to play Ramius as he felt that character was more the hero of the story.