Was that a big-ass Voltron standing on the dresser next to the doorway to Adam's room?
Was that a big-ass Voltron standing on the dresser next to the doorway to Adam's room?
I still have ALL my CD's. It's tough to throw something out you spent 10 to 20 bucks a pop on, but I didn't get into the CD business until 1993 when it was more mainstream and much more affordable. I'd have to say it was either Weird Al's Jurassic Park or Beck's Mellow Gold.
What's up with the sponsorship of Pringles this week on "The Middle"? It wasn't just a throwaway gag with pulling it out of the tennis bag, but also at the end where they usually snack on generic chips, they had a different flavor of Pringles Sue & Axl were munching on (Mike subtly brushes away the offer from Sue).
Shaq 20yrs later is a lot different than Pippin 20yrs later. Shaq was still tall, but a lot thinner. Now, he's like this monstrous 7'3" guy who dominates any place he walks into.
The first time was funny… the second time was ok, especially with Mitch's disgust with it, but after that it was just irritating & annoying, especially when she was doing it at the most inappropriate times. It just turned it into territory bordering on slapstick.
I like Randall Park. I never knew he was in so many more roles before this show, and he's the total Yang to Wu's Yin.
When Eddie's at school interacting with his peers, there's also a lot of great moments going on. When he's just one-on-one with someone or with his brothers, he's the least funniest.
If this takes place in 1995, then season-2 will take place in 1996 which means a whole episode needs to be dedicated to the movie Kazaam, starring Eddie's hero.
Maybe not the photo, per sa… but the clothes… ahh, what the hell, yea that photo's not quite normal.
A dress shirt & short shorts doesn't quite cut it. Maybe the SEARS photographer was only supposed to shoot from the chest up.
Oh… my… God, what was up with Bev's sweatshirt or monstrosity? It had these 2 fur patches and some kind of 2 halves of a sweatshirt sewn together to form one mega-ugly shirt. Were the set designers high at the time?
From 1980 to 1989, all pop-culture is fair game. That means the top selling Rubik's Cube from 1980 could be in the same episode as a plot to see Tim Burton's Batman which could also be in the same episode as that group song "We are The World" from 1985. It's all in play.
…and here I thought I was experiencing deja vu.
Those were the 80's man… pretty normal, actually. Short shorts, extremely high socks, and nobody questioned it. Now? Uhh, no.
I'm wondering what's up with that giant watch hanging in Adam's room.
I wish I was clever like that with my older brothers, but I think I was a stupid lad in my own little world. Sibling rivalry taken to the next level with practical jokes sounds a lot more fun than just straight out insults.
I was more like… wait, this isn't the same as "Breakfast at Tiffany's", is it?
Troy Gentile making a guest appearance as a college-age student (closer to his real-life age) was a nice touch rather than his 16 or 17ish age he plays on Goldbergs. Glad I didn't watch the promos, as it caught me a little off-guard.
Maybe this is kind of a promo to the movie "Pixels".
It's fun… but the controls really leave something to be desired, especially those streets near a 45 degree angle. Not to mention, it would have benefited more with Ms. Pac-Man and maybe some color changes on the next level. It's the same old 'intermission' after every level.
Good job, Google, but I hope it gets…
Great effort, but still some objects & textures could really have benefited from a true HD remake (sharp angled hills?, grass blades, for example).
Why was this finale so "awesome"? It was a disappointing ending. There was no blow-out like the prison war. There were no surprise deaths, no heartbreaks… Pete & Reg? Reg we hardly got to know him. He was just probably the nicest person in Alexander, but that's about it. Pete deserved to die. Everybody else in Rick's…