pedanticeditortype
PedanticEditorType
pedanticeditortype

Ugh, what a second man to walk on the moon type sentiment.

“I didn’t read the article so it’s not my fault my comment was completely misinformed” isn’t a defense.

Thank you, thank you, thank you for sticking it to the harassers and recognizing The Last Jedi.

I’ve responded to the apparent Turkey apocalypse between Thanksgiving and Christmas. (I honestly didn’t think Christmas was a Turkey holiday.) But as for Christmas Story awesomeness, I also love the little fantasy that Ralphie is struck blind by the “Lifebouy” soap that mom stuck in his mouth. Who, as a kid, didn’t

His voice is great and I could definitely hear a lot of his Mickey Mouse characterization in his singing which added a little more enjoyment for me.

Ha! That was totally his Mickey Mouse voice when the bowling ball dropped on his crotch then.

Die Hard/Working Girl: Work Hard or Die Trying Girl the Musical or go home.

I was on his IMDB page yesterday, and yeah he does have a lot of cool credits. I just couldn’t find a lot that I could say to my mom, “he’s that guy from this thing,” which isn’t the only determining factor of success. I recognized him right away from Arrested Development and his amazing turn on Silicon Valley, and he

The broken lamp scene is by far my favorite in the movie. Any time something breaks in the house and we find we’re out of super glue, that line and “nadafinga!” are always brought up.

The Wonder Years’ use of narration was directly inspired by A Christmas Story and I feel like we probably have it to thank for Ron Howard on Arrested Development as well.

Chris Diamantopoulos was in such an unenviable position. Darren McGavin’s delightfully, unapologetically hammy performance as the Old Man is the best part of the movie. It would be hard to replicate that performance without feeling like he’s just doing an impression. I think he did a really great job playing the Old

I definitely agree. The original is a playfully cynical look at the world through the eyes of a child during Christmas. There’s a definite impishness to it that the musical replaced with a lot of wholesomeness. It was okay overall, but I think it definitely lost the tone of the original and the tone is what makes it

“Maya Rudolph messing up her line about turkey was maybe the most endearing part of the entire broadcast.”

The “she knew” moment was very sweet to me and a nice addition and one moment where having the narrator added something besides the narration.

Even though the movie was made in 1983 about a family in 1939, it really captures the countless moments that define childhood for many/most of us. Things like...

Also some additional story.

To be fair, I’m guessing the stage musical of A Christmas Story is at least two and a half hours long. Most musicals are.

Might watch this later on, because I love A Christmas Story. I firmly believe it’s the most American film ever made. If you wanted to show someone from another country, or aliens what it’s like to be an American, you’d show them A Christmas Story.

This is gonna sound dumb, but I have to vent for a second.

“Size matters not...”

Here’s how something qualifies as a taqueria to me. If they serve Mexican food and offer at least 7 different meats, they are a taqueria. I know that going there is going to get me some authentic Mexican food with plenty of onions, cilantro and deliciousness.