You try maintaining enthusiasm for representing a client after the first century or so. Drac should really just retain a new agent every generation or so, but he had to go all-in with an undead one.
You try maintaining enthusiasm for representing a client after the first century or so. Drac should really just retain a new agent every generation or so, but he had to go all-in with an undead one.
Drunk posting again. That, or the Alzheimers...
Probably a “whelp”, or possibly a fetus. Anyway, listen to CucumberBandersnatch and watch those films (and the Naked Gun TV series if you can find it), ‘cause it’s all pretty excellent.
Great cast, and something of a shock for those young whippersnappers who don’t realize Leslie Nielsen was doing straight dramatic roles for most of his career.
He was wearing a flatteringly tight-fitting sweater at the time.
I’m personally cynical enough to have at least as a low tolerance for such things as you, but there was a window of time in the late-’60s/early-’70s that saw a number of sci-fi movies (many starring Charlton Heston) that I think managed to pull off a kind of preachy tone on the strength of simplicity and sheer…
It’s probably a stronger connection to Pope — The direct connection is that I used the name for a “fallen angel” type supervillain character in a tabletop RPG (Villains and Vigilantes) I was running in the mid-’80s (the “-el” suffix, literally meaning “of God”, being traditional to angel names, and the “umbri-” making…
“Shut up and listen to what the better educated experts are recommending” has historically not been a common editorial stance for popular musicians.
We’ve seen Teddy try to pull off schemes, though (like recruiting Bob for golf ball diving in “Like Gene for Chocolate”), and he’d just not that good at it.
At least Linda had a festive glow about her.
Um... I’m no psychologist, but I’m thinking that might mean something...
A.
I consider the Jim Steinman-produced songs that bookend the film to be among his best work.
— The [Kinja] A.V.Club
And, of course, Celine Dion.
Donna Summer (whose disco-fied version was No. 1 for three weeks in the U.S.)
Heh Heh. Juggernaut. A pretty good Richard Harris movie.
Golden Earring’s ‘80s follow-up album to Cut (from which “Twilight Zone” comes) had a track called “When the Lady Smiles” which attracted some notoriety for a controversial video that got a fair amount of MTV play after some editing, though I don’t think it ever achieved “hit” status. I rather liked it, though, and…
You get what you pay for.
You Light Up My Life is among those overplayed-most hated songs that ultimately vanishes pretty utterly from the airwaves. I suspect that was long enough before the internet era that the average Wikipedia poster is simply unaware of it.