It also spawned one of the best We Hate Movies episodes.
It also spawned one of the best We Hate Movies episodes.
Brock Hammersley and Slam Hardapple got me.
No mention of the final episode of Walking The Room? I know it had fallen out of fashion with Podmass, but the last ep was brilliant, especially Wyatt Cenac's Bill Cosby.
- Ken Branagh on Kermode & Mayo was a joy.
I liked Quentyn. He was so utterly hopeless, and his demise was the funniest thing in DWD.
Absolutely. James Richardson gives an almost Zaltzman-esque masterclass in puns and wordplay. Yesterday's monk gag was brilliant.
The Megaman/Tom Waits impressions were the absolute highlight of the episode.
God, American TV really does copy everything the BBC does…
The Cartoon All-Star episode is amazing.
Great Dollop and Smollop this week. The Stomach Men is an extraordinary listen.
A superb 50th episode RHLSTP this week, with Richard interviewing Steve Coogan. Both men on top form, and the man-penis/penis-man question really brings out the best in the guests.
The new character models is the biggie for me. Not going to have a lot of time with the new expansion, but having them change the look of characters I've spent over 7 years with is huge.
PC. Sorry.
Back on Diablo 3. Having lots of fun with the new patch - Greater Rifts give a far better idea of the difficulty level you can handle, and there's the lure of pushing the Grift level up *just* one more…
'Thank you.'
Battleground is an amazing movie. They Were Expendable is probably one of my favourite John Wayne films.
It's a bugbear of anyone who watches football in the UK, since Sky introduced Jamie Redknapp as a pundit. "He's literally turned him inside-out", and "The ball is literally glued to Messi's foot." are a couple of examples of his work.
Milton Bradley must have had a deal with Atari, as at the same time as Pac-Man, there was a board game based on Defender. I had it, it wasn't very good. Though the pieces were excellent for making your own "spaceships v aliens" pew-pew-pew fun.
Another good depiction of the British Army in the 90s, was the TV movie Warriors, which showed UN peacekeepers in Bosnia, and their lives after.
Yeah. The Young Ones never knowingly turned down stupid contrived puns (cf. the tomato's song from this episode).