tonywatchestv
Bart, That's A Bran Muffin
tonywatchestv

There's a theory I've read about Kurt Cobain suffering such an affliction, but exascerbated by a pinched nerve in his right shoulder. He was ambidextrous, and went left-handed by choice, placing the strap on said shoulder. It doesn't speculate as to if it's why he started heroin - and excruciating pain there or not,

Maybe a bit random, but my father went to high school with Dave Foley. He never met him, but also saw him around, and I always found it funny that he literally knew him as one of the kids in the hall.

I remember finding it notable that the 'life flashing before your eyes' scene at the very end was mostly universal, relatable things like television and media, which obviously fill your brain up as much as anything else.

I took an entertainment journalism course around 2005. Among many other anecdotes, we were told that British actors are almost all witty and intelligent. Orlando Bloom was listed as the exception.

My folks have since liberalized a great deal, but as a child, I had two separate years of homeschooling (A Beka Book, Colorado Springs), officially. I literally read in a textbook meant for objective education that Reagan and Bush were good presidents, but then-President Clinton was a bad one. Charles Dobson was known

You can't have one without the other.

When Me and Orson Welles came out, I was still enamoured with the 'Le Chartres' scene in F For Fake, which had become a YouTube staple for me. I had the feeling about Zac Efron that he might be the early-00's Justin Timberlake type who pleasantly surprises after audiences are initially skeptical. Efron wasn't great in

Easy there, Mr. Colbert.

Wasn't Flanders 70? I could be getting that wrong.

NWT. Springfield is in the North Territories, ostensibly just east of there.

It didn't take me out of the episode - a very good one - but it definitely had that old sitcom trope feel of 'colossal misunderstanding that could be solved simply by just one person acknowledging it.' Which wouldn't be a show, I guess.

As much as I loved this episode, I couldn't help but think that he could always just go back to the restaurant where they met. They obviously can't give out the number she used to make the reservation, but asking them to do him a solid and call her for her number back on his behalf seems like something he could have

It was okay. I was more disappointed that he used the same jokes he used for David Letterman's final episode. I'm a big fan of that bit, and watched it the other day, oddly enough. I understand that many people wouldn't have seen it, but when you're a fan of a comedian who hasn't really done that much in the last few

Yeah, that was particularly bad too.

I thought both his famous roast of Bob Saget and his tribute to David Letterman were both brilliant, but differrent strokes, etc.

The first time I had lobster, I couldn't get past the bug eyes and antennae. I still ate it, though, because like you said, delicious.

I made the same mistake. I was wondering why Jessica Rabbit was the unsettling part of that movie.

I think I've only seen one episode of Bones, but there was a sequence where they're showing stages of a skull being battered in, and the nerdy expert guy explains a Three Stooges reference and then can't stop giggling as the progressions go on. At one point, one of his female colleagues is smiling and shaking her

I've never seen it, but I know exactly what happens from a friend describing it start to finish as if recounting a traumatic event. People are treated to that experience with me if the movie The Tournament ever comes up, though that wasn't traumatic, just astonishingly terrible, and I had to watch it with people who

I think there's a gag in an episode where Peter spontaneously rips the skin of his face off. Ditto that.