"I'll take the 701 lb man, Bob."
"I'll take the 701 lb man, Bob."
It didn't help that they dyed her eyebrows the same shade of yellow in the first season of P&R
Benthamite maybe?
Yeah, once you get through the first third or so of ADWD, which is just leftover AFFC, it's a great book.
One of the locations looks like it will probably be for a Tower of Joy flashback.
There are a bunch of rail-thin, meth-y looking guys that wear them around here (oklahoma), usually in way too large of a size.
Basically, Hans Zimmer did the score for The Rock, realized that loud, low brass WHAAAAAMPs can pretty much work for any movie, and that's how all of his stuff sounds now.
Same. I'd love a half-stuff. Also, the golden oreos are the best oreos.
I still haven't watched this movie, but I just watched the clip. I'm completely floored. I found myself not breathing and tearing up. That was wonderful.
Bingo. My facebook rule is "Would I hesitate calling or saying hi to this person in the real world?"
ESTOTTA WITHA WHISPAAAAAAAAAAAAAH
I consumed these books like candy as a child, but I remember even at the time I was bothered by how often every character, especially Benny, "cried" their dialogue. It was like GCW went through and for any dialogue with an exclamation point, changed "said" to "cried".
A lot of the time, it's like #1 comedy in the 36-50 bracket of African American women, or some specific metric like that.
I commented a joke
That started the whole board laughing
But I couldn't see
That my joke;s not funny
I've always been a complete and shameless sucker for the tight harmonies in the song, as well as the tonic pedal that the bass stays on in the chorus, which give the ending of the chorus more impact because the bass finally starts outlining the chord changes.
It makes me think of the movie Goodburger, where the villain keeps threatening to throw people in the grinder.
Yeah, that movie snuck in right ahead of the "make everything into a franchise" trend. If it were made now, it would definitely be planned as multiple movies.
Who was the first person to do that specific, quarter-note style pop sound? Would it be Mr. Blue Sky by ELO?
What's even weirder is that Michael Buble has a good voice, and sings in tune, and that song has the most egregious amount of auto-tune phase warble ever.
The old "PC folk are the REAL bigots!" line. Sheesh