Indeed. My quick take on this movie is come for the music and stay because there's a water bug on your channel changer.
Indeed. My quick take on this movie is come for the music and stay because there's a water bug on your channel changer.
That reminds me of the president eating at a fundraiser dinner in San Francisco in April. According to an article in the San Francisco Chronicle, Obama has chefs that travel with him, but he has the option to eat what the local chef prepared.
Thanks for the information. It must've been something that I missed.
Do you have an example? I watched his bowling Web series and he's also apparently a golfer.
Hahaha! POINTS!
Hey, we get a legitimate hockey doubleheader on NBC with Saturday’s Islanders-Tampa Bay and Penguins-Capitols broadcasts. The late game starts at 8 p.m. ET.
Thanks for the clarification. Your point, while accurate, doesn’t change the fact that CSN Chicago is operated as a Comcast channel and is affiliated with NBC Sports.
I personally didn’t mind when Comcast/Versus simulcast the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.’s playoff coverage, but those days are over.
Well, they’re all one big happy family when you consider that Comcast owns both NBC and CSN Chicago.
"The high-pressure front will fade by this evening, leading to some Loki-ized showers overnight."
Sure, but he's no longer confined to one spot. He could either try to find a release to the handcuffs aboard Mick's ship or go to the Waverider and seek help there.
This scene bugged me a little bit. I would've used my feet to draw the weapon to my hands. Once I did that, I would back up to shoot the railing or the joint which was proven to be weak. That would've been easier and safer than trying to shoot with my feet.
No, no, no, it's Emery
Not this year. The Final Four and the championship games are airing on TBS.
Well, aside from Bear McCreary's work on "Agents of SHIELD" (and "The Walking Dead," if we're being generous).
To compound the nerdiness, the complaint is 47 pages long (based on page numbers). It's a bit of cheat to not count the title page, but I think it underscores the geek cred of the people putting together this response.
To be fair, Doohan was doing his best Welshie impersonation.
Sure, but with the exchange rate the way it is, it's probably only $5 American.
This is how I imagine every recipe in that new cookbook:
As Ars Technica wrote last year, the NFL is dramatically overstating its rights with its standard disclaimer. Ars also noted that commercial entities could be OK using "Super Bowl," but they avoid doing so to be cautious.
http://arstechnica.com/tech…