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RustbeltRick
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Kim Possible was so great.

I'm curious how Dylan will go over. He plays small venues and sticks to his recent songs — Sinatra covers and slow ballads — for a core audience that lets Bob be Bob. Whereas this festival crowd is going to be wondering why Dylan isn't breaking out the electric guitar to play All Along the Watchtower.

I agree. I wonder if the criticism of him was simply due to the prosthetics and makeup they used, which made him look odd but I think it made him resemble Shapiro more.

OJ mini-series:
Courtney Vance as Johnny Cochran
Sarah Paulsen as Marcia Clark
David Schwimmer as Papa Kardashian
Sterling K. Brown as Chris Darden
There were some others who were also great, along with a few misses. Who knew this show would be that good?

Daniel Webber in 11/22/63 was a better Lee Harvey Oswald than anyone will ever be.

Hugh Jackman has always been an odd choice to play Woverine, who was 5'3" or so in the comics. But now that he's been Logan in so many films, I wonder how jarring it's going to be when another actor eventually takes the role.

His impersonations are amazing. The Trump campaign brought Hammond back to the show since no one can come close to him, and if Hillary becomes president, I think they'll need Hammond to be Bill Clinton for another 8 years. His Chris Matthews is awesome, and his Jesse Jackson is a work of art. The fact that all this

Cliff. Hanger! I'm dying to see what becomes of Chuck. And now Jimmy is stuck in a no-win situation, standing there watching it all.

I loved MadTV.

Is it that record, or is it the song "Night Moves" from later that year, that made him a national star? Or do both work together? I remember the song being all over the place at the time, not only on album rock stations but also on Top 40.

To the question itself, I don't think Hollywood will ever totally move past it. The medium is visual, and thus people with amazing cheekbones and teeth and haircuts and waistlines will have an advantage over those who are less blessed. And really, isn't that also true outside of Hollywood? The thin body will give you

Let me guess: the women in the Polish family were stunning.

Baseball has a million quirks, and when you put them all together you have a sport that seems more intent on preservation than innovation. One league has a DH, the other doesn't, for 42 years now. No salary cap means your hometown team is probably never going to the World Series. Throwing the baseball at a guy's face

I'm going to suggest Under the Dome even though it probably has few similarities to this one, except that both novels are lengthy. It's much better than the bad TV show they made from it.

I agree with Caitlin Rosberg: "DKR is just deeply, cripplingly cynical about everything." And fortunately for Miller, much of the comic readership, both then and now, mistakes cynicism for insight. So you have a couple generations of fans high-fiving each other over fascist Batman and ensuring that DKR remains atop a

I've only seen a couple of SG episodes and no Flash episodes but this one drew me in because Flash/Superman Family races are always a huge deal. This is a very fun show and a refreshingly light tone. The actress playing Supergirl is off the charts cute.

She insisted she heard gunshots and Mike is pretty certain she's making it up. It's obvious she wants to move into a better neighborhood and she knows Mike is pretty much an ATM and will help facilitate it.

I'm one of those evangelicals who can't bear to watch any of these films, although I did watch "Soul Surfer" with AnnaSofia Robb and Helen Hunt which was somewhere on the level of a better-than-average Hallmark movie. For the most part, evangelicals choose cinema like they choose their news sources — they're looking

So, Jimmy is very close to assuming the Saul persona, and Kim has now decided to start her own practice, and I get the bad feeling that things don't work out for Kim since she's never seen or mentioned in Breaking Bad. It's like she caught a whiff of Jimmy's enthusiasm and jumped on a self-employment bandwagon but

I bought this album halfway through college in the mid-80s and listened to it relentlessly. I was living in northern Ohio at the time so "My City Was Gone" had extra resonance. And lately I've been listening to it at work and recalling how great it is. One excellent song after another. She can turn a phrase like few