tonywatchestv
Bart, That's A Bran Muffin
tonywatchestv

That's the name of the guy from @midnight and "I Love You, Honeybear".

Huh, it actually does mean that. I didn't read it that way, and my guess is that it wasn't written with that meaning in mind. I would have taken it to mean 'with notable personal conviction' or some such.

I think he represents a slow-burn anti-establishment husband who feels increasingly isolated and alienated from his wife. He enters the Royal Family and its protocols with a degree of skepticism that gets understandably exacerbated from there. I think his best moment was casually complimenting the King of Kenya on his

I wouldn't say that. It's a period piece showing the ubiquity of cigarette smoking in the face of the health issues it caused, which was not yet known or observed in the 1950s. King George was shown smoking cigarettes even after being diagnosed with lung cancer. It's really just an 'everybody smoked back then' sort of

I know by "stop asking me" you don't mean me personally, as I haven't done that. But there's more than one take to this. Mine hews along the line that nobody including the cast of SNL thought Trump had a snowball's chance in hell of actually becoming president, and having him host the show, while in bad taste, was not

Is it fair to say that asking her *not* to go on is just as demanding of her? At the end of the day, she's a performer with a job and she can do what she wants.

Why would comedic performers specifically not be capable of anything resembling regret or shame?

There's never been anything close to a lemon in it!

It was bad, but "Celebrate good Obama, come on! … … .. .. " was pretty funny.

Circa 10 years ago, I'd disagree. But I agree.

Albuquerque. Got it right on my third try.

To stipend that, Donatello and Michelangelo were the only two who actually got to use their weapons.

As a kid, I was more than partial to Donatello. I agree with you, but loyalties are loyalties.

In regards to Batman Forever, "Kiss From A Rose" joins "Gangsta's Paradise" as THE pre-internet songs for us kids born in the 80's.

I don't know that Philip was especially smarmy. He was a doting-at-first husband who begrudgingly accepted the blows of losing his stature as husband, family name and preferred home that he had worked on, and eventually found a fratertinity of sorts in her absence. He treats the Kenyan royalty with a posh-but-cheerful

As an adult, my guess is you would find it metaphorically laboured. On a scale of Christian metaphor, It's not only less Tolkien but less C.S. Lewis as well, though I could be wrong. I don't see the point in looking up the author just now, but it was written in prison as basically a conversion tale. I might seek it

It almost certainly is. It was an episode focused largely on Cartman's bigotry and shifting loyalties - not even going for a larger point, just your typical 'Cartman is the worst' ep. Unfortunately for South Park, throughout its long run of either cutting satire or dumb humour (intentional or not) it's always retained

More so the Raptors and Blue Jays, with the Leafs on an exciting uptick. A Toronto sports team has made the semi-final three times in the last two years. Being a winning sports city is not something we're used to.

It may have been that I remember watching it when I was 13 years old, lying in bed with a pounding headache when I was treated to that infamous 'pressure tank' scene. That, and what hadn't crystallized itself to me yet as the trope of guys in Hawaiian shirts being sadistically violent on boats in the 1980s. (Though I