Anyone else think of The Right Stuff after you hear all the camera clicks when Comey entered and left the room?
Anyone else think of The Right Stuff after you hear all the camera clicks when Comey entered and left the room?
Mayor: Drebin, I don't want anymore trouble like you had last year on the South Side. Understand? That's my policy.
I remember growing up as a kid there was some weird corporate interplay between Roy Rogers and Hardee's where all the Roy Rogers became Hardee's for a few years, and then all the Hardee's became Roy Rogers for a few years, and it basically went back and forth like that for over a decade.
Soul-sucking First Jobs for Teenagers for $1000, Alex.
I think this episode was the most effective in terms of being overall consistently funny from start to finish even though it didn't necessarily deliver the biggest gags of the season.
Ah, shit, you beat me to it.
I think they ought to switch out one of the original characters for one of the old King of Queens characters at the end of the year until the show ultimately ends up as King of Queens (I mean, they recycled almost every KoQ plot in the first season anyway, so why not?)
"What are you wearing? Hart Island Burial Smock?"
I love the UKS theme song though.
I've actually only seen it from start to finish once. But I've only seen all my favorite TV dramas once from start to finish.
I was one of the relatively few who saw The Big Lebowski in theaters back in 1998.
Clearly, Fox News short lived "Half Hour News Hour" proves otherwise. Just see for yourself:
And pushing unsubstantiated conspiracy theories about a murder victim's death against his family's wishes is…..what?
A depressingly sad purveyor of false news attacking an actually intentionally humorous purveyor of false news? You don't say!
I liked Dionne Warwick in the New Jersey Hurricane Relief telethon better than I liked her in flashbacks. Actually the whole thing about New Jersey in general killed.
I have to wonder if the college storyline wasn't an actual satire on the whole PC college culture itself, but rather a satire of the strawman of PC college culture that you hear about on certain media outlets. In other words, a spoof of a spoof. It seemed to be too exaggerated to be actually biting.
The visuals have somewhat redeemed the movie in my mind. The story still remains highly overrated—if it was ever really considered that great in the first place—but credit must be given where it's due…it has some beautiful shots in it.
I took David Bowie for granted until he died. Only afterwards did I really appreciate his talent and what he brought to the world of music.
Forrest ends up being elected President.
I didn't see Pulp Fiction until it came out on video, and actually a few years after it was released in theaters.