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He did it again, at the end of Richard Donner's Superman II, to make Lois forget him. Dick move, even if that was the original planned use for the power and sequence.

I... don’t wash my face five times a day. Or eat five times a day. Or wash my face after I eat. I didn’t really know any of those things were things, tbh. I wash my face in the morning shower, and shampoo my beard then, when I shampoo my hair. Actually I don’t shampoo my hair every day, so I don’t...I just realized I

Tom Selleck looks very handsome without one, or used to, but weird-handsome.

If mine hits a certain length, it suddenly becomes physically uncomfortable - it feels dirty, and itches.

Um, you have to shampoo your beard too. You can’t just wash your “face”, which I take to mean the exposed skin parts of your face. Wash that beard right now, fella!

I’ve had a short, full beard off and on since high school, which was a very long time ago, and liked the appearance either way. Now that I’m over fifty, though, I must have one because if I don’t, I look - ah - old and weird. 

When the fad first hit, it drove me nuts - the gigantic bushy beards, just growing wild and slobby. Gross. But now they’ve been around awhile, and they’re much more likely to be well-groomed and shaped, and paired with stylish haircuts and tight pants, I don’t care quite so much as I did. Not that it was every my

That was a GOOD story!

Also Nutty Buddys. Choco-Taco?

John Glover is one of those actors - he’s memorable whatever he does. And over the years, he’s done a LOT of tv and film, but he’s huge in live theatre - I saw him in the nineties on Broadway in “Love! Valor! Compassion!”. 

Mm...okay.

Withnail & I is one of those fantastic movies that I don’t think any of my friends has ever seen.

Wait, John Glover was in Shazam!? I don’t remember that. Oh, now I do - how funny lol. I guess I don’t think of him as Lionel Luthor first, since I was aware of him long before.

Albums "Bedtime Stories" and "Like A Prayer". A lot of people really like - uh -that William Orbit one.

I loved it - everything about it. About the music in particular: Greenwood’s score was flawless, but I will be forever indebted to the movie for introducing me to Nelson Riddle’s and Oscar Peterson’s “My Foolish Heart”. I was somewhat vaguely aware of the song itself, but became instantly obsessed with the recording

To be fair, not the first time she and Jackson were confused - the resemblance was remarkable. For a little while, in the Eighties.

She...didn’t? 

!! That, I did not know. It was definitely more its own beast than Psycho II was, not to disparage Psycho II. Roger Ebert wrote a positive review, admiring that for the first time it’s being told from Norman's POV, and he's terrified all the time because his dead mother keeps coming back and talking to him.

And this is why it’s a complete failure as the satire I’ve heard it described as being (yes, the movie). Weirdly, the people who are passionate about loving or defending it usually don’t say why, exactly. They just say something about how it’s not meant to be “taken seriously” because it’s satirical/innocent, and

PSYCHO II was pretty darn good, on its own terms and as a sequel. Of course it’s no PSYCHO but, if that’s the worst thing you can say about a movie, eh. PSYCHO III is pretty interesting too.