walnutr113
Jonathan Frakes Fanboy
walnutr113

Those AC Crispin books were favorites of mine as a young man! Especially the second one which was Game of Treks.

The Tholian Web is good.

Sorry I should have read before I posted! I agree wholeheartedly.

The opening of Watchmen. Synder undeniably has his moments.

If you grew up in the 80's that is one of the finest movie moments of the decade.

The Sophia show is pretty high quality

The Historian was very boring to me. I couldn't finish it.

One of my favorite ten to one skits is mark wahlberg playing a new Jersey palooka selling unicorns. They used adorable real horses but wahlberg insults them and is contemptuous of them. "Look at this dumb dumb!"

Good analysis. Forte is probably the cast member with the most bizarre sensibility in the shows history. Another good example is the Falconer skits. "MY LIFE HANGS IN THE BALANCE"

Him and Mike are probably the closest to decent human beings. And Richard!

Sir, Andy Williams is no hack! You will wake up with a stake of holly through your heart.

Well depends how you look at it. Reagan was a New Deal Democrat. It may not be true that you move right as you get older but there were many who voted for FDR who also voted for Nixon and Reagan.

Cul De Sac is over?

It would be my guess that "Let 'em go! I've done my hitch" would mean more to Schultz's generation, when military service was much more common.

Perfect 7 SNL lineup: Murphy ackroyd Hartman Ferrell Amy pohleur carvey and bill hader. Its almost too strong. It's like you need a competent journeyman like Tim meadows or sudekis to balance it out

To me Akroyd is someone who is perfectly suited for SNL but maybe that was his first, best destiny. Guys like Carvey and even Ferrell are the same. They may excel in other arenas but they will never TOP their SNL days.
Eric Idle said that Akroyd was the only SNL cast member who could have been a Python. High praise.

Any arguememt is going appear lopsided when Captain America takes a side. I mean come on!

Reminds me of William F Buckleys mission statement for the National Review:to stand athwart history, yelling stop.

In the mid 90s I think there was a great one shot written by James Robinson about Cap and Shellhead. I think it was called tales of suspense. In the book there was some great charecterization of the two characters. Cap saw himself as a man incomfortable in modern times and Stark and a man in tune with his time and

I'd like to think he's getting fitted for Silver Wings right now.