Ron Swanson
Full Member
Just finished, they wrapped it up very nicely. Great job of ending a show on a high note and not milking the cash cow foreverI’m on the final episode of Ted Lasso and think this season has been very good.
Just finished, they wrapped it up very nicely. Great job of ending a show on a high note and not milking the cash cow foreverI’m on the final episode of Ted Lasso and think this season has been very good.
Too many car chases.Any reviews on Fast X ? Multiple domestic drivel entanglements recently have prevented me from driving to Grapevine to see it in IMAX from the back row middle seat for max sensory overload.
Everyone has known this factoid for decades and it’s been discussed ad nauseum on this board even. Why are you telling us this now as if it’s new information and calling people knuckle draggers?For you Lonesome Dove fans, who have probably only watched the show, and being the knuckle draggers that you are have never read the book, Robert Duvall patterned his mannerisms, voice, and gestures for the part of Gus McCrae in "Lonesome Dove" from Sammy Baugh, the hall-of-fame quarterback from Temple, Texas.
Said Duvall, "About a month before we started filming, I looked up a classmate, a rancher near Rotan, and he took me to see Sammy Baugh. I thought, 'Wow.' My dad had taken me to see him play with the Washington Redskins when I was ten years old. But he must have been seventy when I met him, and he didn’t even know who I was. We talked for hours about football and his life, and he just seemed to me like an old, tall Texas Ranger. So that’s where I got my gestures and voice and everything (for Gus McCrae), watching and listening to Sammy Baugh."
For you Lonesome Dove fans, who have probably only watched the show, and being the knuckle draggers that you are have never read the book, Robert Duvall patterned his mannerisms, voice, and gestures for the part of Gus McCrae in "Lonesome Dove" from Sammy Baugh, the hall-of-fame quarterback from Temple, Texas.
Said Duvall, "About a month before we started filming, I looked up a classmate, a rancher near Rotan, and he took me to see Sammy Baugh. I thought, 'Wow.' My dad had taken me to see him play with the Washington Redskins when I was ten years old. But he must have been seventy when I met him, and he didn’t even know who I was. We talked for hours about football and his life, and he just seemed to me like an old, tall Texas Ranger. So that’s where I got my gestures and voice and everything (for Gus McCrae), watching and listening to Sammy Baugh."
Seems like just a new version of "Fat Man and Little Boy."
I'm watching an Everyone Love Raymond episode from 1998 right now. Frank cracks me up.
Just finished, they wrapped it up very nicely. Great job of ending a show on a high note and not milking the cash cow forever
I wasn’t paying that close attention. Who was it?I had to look up with the bald guy and redhead were at Beard's wedding.
"Lucky Suit" and "Marie's Sculpture" are my favorites.When Allie plays T-Ball and Raymond and Deborah have to bring snacks to a great episode.
Or when Frank takes the school record-setting game-winning field goal from the Hofstra-Northeastern game.
She was the lady who took Beard to her flat in the episode "Beard After Hours". The bald guy was her boyfriend who chased Beard out of the flat.I wasn’t paying that close attention. Who was it?
I didn't realize the Adidas Nazi/Adolf connectiong.Watched Air last night on Netflix with the wife…we both really enjoyed it! Fascinating to see how Nike was able to sign Jordan…and change the athletic shoe market forever. I had forgotten, but the king of basketball shoes in 1984 was Converse, then Adidas…
Edit: sorry, it was on Prime.
I’m on the final episode of Ted Lasso and think this season has been very good.
“The Curious Case of Natalia Grace” on MAX is a pretty wheels off documentary where you don’t know what the heck to believe the whole time you’re watching it.
And this guy is in it:
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I’m on the final episode of Ted Lasso and think this season has been very good.