Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#721
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
"MiNE 109" wrote in message ... In article , Langis wrote: "Sockpuppet Yustabe" wrote: and Bill Hicks is who??????? http://www.billhicks.com/ http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A609563 That's a better link. Sounds like my kinda guy. But there wasn't a sample of his act. I've got to find a video. ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#722
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
Greg said:
I have to admit that I have a soft spot for "Young Frankenstein." BTW, this list is **** without Bill Hicks, Richard Pryor, and Buster Keaton, Americans one and all. I'd also put Chris Rock, George Carlin, and Rodney Dangerfield on the list. Andrew Dice Clay is also a personal favorite, but I doubt there'd be enough consensus for him. I think Carlin was on the list, wasn't he? I'd definitely include him. Rodney would definitely be on a list of the most influential comedians, especially considering all the breaks he's given to young comedians over the years who went on to bigger and better things. I think you're not giving him enough credit. I saw him on "The Tonight Show" a couple of years ago, and it was the funniest performance I have *ever* seen by a comedian on that show. Oh, I give him plenty of credit. It's just that people tend to remember him more for his schtick than what he did for comedy community. As far as the Diceman is concerned, I like him, but he'd have to take a back seat to Sam Kinison. Sam consistently came up with new material, while Dice kept telling the same old jokes over and over. His career took a dive when people caught on and he tried to come up with new stuff, which wasn't as good. It works in Vegas, apparently. I couldn't stand Kinison. Even a little. He should of teamed up with Gallagher and they could've taked turns smashing watermelons--Kinison would just have to use his voice. I heard Sam guest-DJ once here in LA, and he was improvising and riffing for a good four hours, and it was exhilirating. I remember there was a commercial for the industrial cleaner Didi-7 (remember those commercials?), and Sam starting saying, in a perfect pitchman's voice, "We took the Shroud of Turin and put in this vat of Didi-7, and look at that white! Didi-7, the cleaner more powerful than the image of Christ!" I almost crashed my car. Boon |
#723
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
Mr. Phillips wrote:
Greg said: Marc Phillips wrote: Mr. Middius said: Sockpuppet Yustabe said: The best comedy in the world comes not from the United States. Buddy Hackett was 100% American. Top 10 all time comedians 10 Mel Brooks You actually admit you like Mel Brooks? I assume you're talking about his ancient routines with Carl Reiner and not his sophomoric movies. I have to admit that I have a soft spot for "Young Frankenstein." BTW, this list is **** without Bill Hicks, Richard Pryor, and Buster Keaton, Americans one and all. I'd also put Chris Rock, George Carlin, and Rodney Dangerfield on the list. Andrew Dice Clay is also a personal favorite, but I doubt there'd be enough consensus for him. I think Carlin was on the list, wasn't he? I'd definitely include him. Rodney would definitely be on a list of the most influential comedians, especially considering all the breaks he's given to young comedians over the years who went on to bigger and better things. As far as the Diceman is concerned, I like him, but he'd have to take a back seat to Sam Kinison. Sam consistently came up with new material, while Dice kept telling the same old jokes over and over. His career took a dive when people caught on and he tried to come up with new stuff, which wasn't as good. It works in Vegas, apparently. Boon I gotta admit that George Carlin and Rodney Dangerfield are among my favorites. (I've got plenty of vinyl of both). I still remember seeing the bitts on TV where Carlin used to do the "hippy-dippy weatherman", and of course, his infamous "7 words you can't say on TV". And Rodney?s many appearances on the old Carson show (with the same red tie and tales of woe) were classic. One of his record albums I have is a perfect "Rodney-type" picture - it shows him reading the newspaper at a bus stop........while a dog is peeing on his shoes. Naturally, the album is called "No Respect". I share you appreciation of San Kinnison - in fact, I was listening to his recording of "Wild Thing" the other day. And even though I've heard them a million times, I still laugh when the Diceman starts going with the Mother Goose rhymes. My LP/CD collection includes a number of comedy albums by the above and others from times gone by (e.g. Allan Sherman - of Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah frame as well as more modern stuff . BTW, I don't think anybody's mentioned them yet, but I would put in a vote for the old Second City TV group - John Candy, Eugene L:evy, Martin Short (Eddie Grimley) and Joe Thomas (Count Floyd , Guy Caballero, etc.) - a great comedic ensemble. Among the esoterica in my collection is an LP featuring "Count Floyd" doing his "realllly sceeeery" stufff , and also one of "Bob & Doug McKenzie" doing their Great White North routine. Bruce J. Richman |
#724
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 02:40:20 GMT, trotsky wrote:
I couldn't stand Kinison. Even a little. He should of teamed up with Gallagher and they could've taked turns smashing watermelons--Kinison would just have to use his voice. What? You don't find short, fat, obnoxious assholes funny? Do you think Kinison had it coming when he died? Who did he remind you of? Your father? BTW, did you ever tell George where you buried him? Does wavegirl know? If so, you might not want to leave her walking around, either. She may talk, and besides, she's probably somebody else's sockpuppet by now, anyway. |
#725
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
Bruce J. Richman wrote: BTW, I don't think anybody's mentioned them yet, but I would put in a vote for the old Second City TV group - John Candy, Eugene L:evy, Martin Short (Eddie Grimley) and Joe Thomas (Count Floyd , Guy Caballero, etc.) - a great comedic ensemble. Among the esoterica in my collection is an LP featuring "Count Floyd" doing his "realllly sceeeery" stufff , and also one of "Bob & Doug McKenzie" doing their Great White North routine. Do you have the Count Floyd EP where he sings "Reggae Christmas Eve in Transylvania?" As an ensemble cast, SCTV was the funniest of all time by a comfortable margin. I can't believe that stuff isn't available on DVD. What would Gerry Todd say? |
#726
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
In article ,
Langis wrote: (Marc Phillips) wrote: Bill Hicks, unfortunately, died a few years ago from cancer at the age of 33. Actually, he was only 32. And it was in February of 1994. Lung cancer? Pancreatic cancer. Stephen |
#727
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 04:32:26 +0100, Langis wrote:
Okaaaay..... so he is someone who liked wild animals, has been dead for eight years and has a website in his honor, such website consisting of broken links to videos, audio recordings and other material. He was a very funny stand up comedian who cut it close to the bone. There's tons of stuff on the net! I remember when he died. Channel 4 showed one of his gigs in his honour. It was very, very funny--and also very close to the bone. Satan's black semen, indeed. -- td |
#728
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 04:04:13 +0100, Langis wrote:
I was mostly trying to get a rise with my comment about US comedy. Nevertheless, humour does not seem to travel particularly well across the pond in either direction. I think Americans are mostly to blame for that - they prefer our dross, because the more complex stuff flies right over their heads, then they produce and send back similar quality material assuming we will be into the same crap. Extremely arrogant behaviour, if you ask me. [Hoho.. Joking of course.] I'm struggling to think of US comedians I like : Groucho Marx, Laurel and Hardy, Steven Wright, Woody Allen, Jim Carey, Mike Myers (or is he a Brit?), Steve Martin (Planes and Trains is *fantastic*), Leslie Nielsen. Oh yeah, David Lynch deserves a mention - Eraserhead is a riot, particularly the dinner sketch. On the Brit side, obviously Peter Cook was the funniest man to ever live, closely followed by John Cleese (who in the context of comedy is dead already), and off the top of my head - Rowan Atkinson, Ricky Gervais, Stephen Fry, Chris Morris, Steve Coogan, Adrian Edmonson, Rik Mayall, Graham Chapman, Eric Idle, Spike Milligan, Dawn French, Jennifer Saunders, Jo Brand, Eddie Izzard, Les Dawson, Peter Sellers, Tony Hancock, Roy Brown, Hugh Laurie, Paul Merton, Eric Morecambe, Simon Pegg, Leonard Rossiter, Mark Thomas, Phil Kay, Michael Palin, Harry Hill, Dylan Moran, Sean Hughes, Arnold Brown, Ronnie Barker, Mark Gatiss, Dermot Morgan, Chris Langham, Peter Kay. Agreed on all of those, but you forgot a few of my favourites: Les Dawson, Tommy Cooper and Bill Bailey. Speaking of Kay and Gervais, do you have the second series of Phoenix Nights and The Office yet? I watched all of second series of The Office yesterday. ****ing wonderful. I had seen only one full programme (and various bits from other episodes) of the second series, so it was a very special dirty pleasure. The second series is better than the first, I think. I'm looking forward to the second series of Phoenix Nights later today. I wish C4 would hurry up and get the second series of Black Books out on DVD. -- td |
#729
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 11:32:03 GMT, trotsky wrote:
That's cute--now do you, you anonymous piece of dog's mess. Whatever happened to white dog ****, Gerg? -- td |
#730
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 11:33:08 GMT, trotsky wrote:
Keep you mind on the feces, Dev Trying to, but I can't spend all day kicking you about. -- td |
#731
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote:
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 11:32:03 GMT, trotsky wrote: That's cute--now do you, you anonymous piece of dog's mess. Whatever happened to white dog ****, Gerg? I don't really follow what's going on with your family anymore. |
#732
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 15:19:53 GMT, trotsky wrote:
That's cute--now do you, you anonymous piece of dog's mess. Whatever happened to white dog ****, Gerg? I don't really follow what's going on with your family anymore. I'm not joking, but before I posted that I had jotted your anticipated reply. It was: Let's not talk about you're family, Dev. It's amazing how dull and unoriginal you are. -- td |
#733
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote:
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 11:33:08 GMT, trotsky wrote: Keep you mind on the feces, Dev Trying to, but I can't spend all day kicking you about. No, not when then's a bottle with our name on it, that's fer sure! |
#734
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote:
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 15:19:53 GMT, trotsky wrote: That's cute--now do you, you anonymous piece of dog's mess. Whatever happened to white dog ****, Gerg? I don't really follow what's going on with your family anymore. I'm not joking, but before I posted that I had jotted your anticipated reply. It was: Let's not talk about you're family, Dev. It's amazing how dull and unoriginal you are. Actually, it's amazing how stupid you a you fed me a straight line. People that understand comedy know what that means. |
#735
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 15:44:33 GMT, trotsky wrote:
No, not when then's a bottle with our name on it, that's fer sure! I wouldn't drink with you if you had the biggest tits in England. Oh, wait. -- td |
#736
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 15:46:47 GMT, trotsky wrote:
It's amazing how dull and unoriginal you are. Actually, it's amazing how stupid you a you fed me a straight line. People that understand comedy know what that means. As usual, you've missed the point. I fed you the straight line knowing exactly how you would respond. You remind me of David Brent. -- td |
#737
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote:
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 15:44:33 GMT, trotsky wrote: No, not when there's a bottle with our name on it, that's fer sure! I wouldn't drink with you if you had the biggest tits in England. Oh, wait. Yes, "Oh, wait, Greg never offered to drink with me." Learn to read--some "professional" you turned out to be. |
#738
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote:
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 15:46:47 GMT, trotsky wrote: It's amazing how dull and unoriginal you are. Actually, it's amazing how stupid you a you fed me a straight line. People that understand comedy know what that means. As usual, you've missed the point. I fed you the straight line knowing exactly how you would respond. Oh, wait, in comedy acts that's how it works to. Do you even understand what's being discussed, drinky? |
#739
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 17:06:59 GMT, trotsky wrote:
No, not when there's a bottle with our name on it, that's fer sure! I wouldn't drink with you if you had the biggest tits in England. Oh, wait. Yes, "Oh, wait, Greg never offered to drink with me." Learn to read--some "professional" you turned out to be. '. . . with our name on it . . .' Dickhead. -- td |
#740
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 17:07:55 GMT, trotsky wrote:
Oh, wait, in comedy acts that's how it works to. Do you even understand what's being discussed, drinky? Not really. Try writing in English. -- td |
#741
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote:
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 17:06:59 GMT, trotsky wrote: No, not when there's a bottle with our name on it, that's fer sure! I wouldn't drink with you if you had the biggest tits in England. Oh, wait. Yes, "Oh, wait, Greg never offered to drink with me." Learn to read--some "professional" you turned out to be. '. . . with our name on it . . .' Dickhead. A typographical error isn't an offer, drinky. |
#742
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote:
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 17:07:55 GMT, trotsky wrote: Oh, wait, in comedy acts that's how it works to. Do you even understand what's being discussed, drinky? Not really. Try writing in English. Intellectual bankruptcy, as expected. I even wrote a note to myself. ;-) |
#743
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
Gregipus orthographizes loosely. No, not when there's a bottle with our name on it, that's fer sure! I wouldn't drink with you if you had the biggest tits in England. Yes, "Oh, wait, Greg never offered to drink with me." Learn to read--some "professional" you turned out to be. '. . . with our name on it . . .' Dickhead. A typographical error isn't an offer, drinky. How does making it "our names" change the offer, Droopy? |
#744
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 17:25:09 GMT, trotsky wrote:
The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote: On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 17:07:55 GMT, trotsky wrote: Oh, wait, in comedy acts that's how it works to. Do you even understand what's being discussed, drinky? Not really. Try writing in English. Intellectual bankruptcy, as expected. I even wrote a note to myself. ;-) Don't try to cash it. -- td |
#745
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
trotsky wrote in message ...
ScottW wrote: Greg said on RAO, "For people reading this who aren't strokes, credit card companies do a lot to protect the individual against such things." That's just a clever way of me calling you a stroke. Sorry. So you were lying about the credit cards offering protection against your impending bankruptcy. ScottW |
#746
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 19:33:43 +0100, Langis wrote:
MiNE 109 wrote: Bill Hicks, unfortunately, died a few years ago from cancer at the age of 33. Actually, he was only 32. And it was in February of 1994. Lung cancer? Pancreatic cancer. So it could be the cigarettes, booze OR diet that got him. It could have been the wrath of an angry god as well. |
#747
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
"dave weil" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 19:33:43 +0100, Langis wrote: MiNE 109 wrote: Bill Hicks, unfortunately, died a few years ago from cancer at the age of 33. Actually, he was only 32. And it was in February of 1994. Lung cancer? Pancreatic cancer. So it could be the cigarettes, booze OR diet that got him. It could have been the wrath of an angry god as well. Or Middius. |
#748
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
ScottW wrote: trotsky wrote in message ... ScottW wrote: Greg said on RAO, "For people reading this who aren't strokes, credit card companies do a lot to protect the individual against such things." That's just a clever way of me calling you a stroke. Sorry. So you were lying about the credit cards offering protection against your impending bankruptcy. Scott, there's still something about your personality that reminds me of a Viagra commercial. |
#749
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
trotsky wrote:
Bruce J. Richman wrote: BTW, I don't think anybody's mentioned them yet, but I would put in a vote for the old Second City TV group - John Candy, Eugene L:evy, Martin Short (Eddie Grimley) and Joe Thomas (Count Floyd , Guy Caballero, etc.) - a great comedic ensemble. Among the esoterica in my collection is an LP featuring "Count Floyd" doing his "realllly sceeeery" stufff , and also one of "Bob & Doug McKenzie" doing their Great White North routine. Do you have the Count Floyd EP where he sings "Reggae Christmas Eve in Transylvania?" As an ensemble cast, SCTV was the funniest of all time by a comfortable margin. I can't believe that stuff isn't available on DVD. What would Gerry Todd say? Yes, I have the Count Floyd EP you're describing. I was browsing on eBay one day and just happened to see a "SCTV LP lot", including that, a Great White North album, and the soundtrack from Strange Brew (also with the McKenzie brothers) - I couldn't resist and gobbled it up for a few bucks. Although I don't own them , I *have* seen videotapes of the SCTV episodes for sale on eBay, so at least they are available in that format. Agreed that the SCTV ensemble was often hysterically funny. Another bit of favorite stuff re. SCTV I have is on a couple of CDs of Comic Relief concert material. One contains Eugene Levy & John Candy doing the Shmenge Brothers (Cabbage Rolls & Coffee Polka) - one of their classic TV bits with both wearing liederhosen. And I also have a "job interview" in which Martin Short as Ed Grimley ("I must say!") tries to compete with a Harvard MBA for an executive position - and wins! Funny stuff. Bruce J. Richman |
#750
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 19:27:22 +0100, Langis wrote:
Agreed on all of those, but you forgot a few of my favourites: Les Dawson, Tommy Cooper and Bill Bailey. Dawson was on the list, but you're right about the other two - marvelous. So he was! I must have been too high on coke to see that. Speaking of Kay and Gervais, do you have the second series of Phoenix Nights and The Office yet? I watched all of second series of The Office yesterday. ****ing wonderful. I had seen only one full programme (and various bits from other episodes) of the second series, so it was a very special dirty pleasure. The second series is better than the first, I think. It's all good!! ;-) It is, but the birthday dildo scene and the pub scene (where he yanks the girl in the wheelchair out of the way to get to the table, then shoves her back in when he's comfortable) put it on a magical plane comedy rarely reaches, IMO. I've seen Brent's 'dance' far too many times, but it's still wretchedly, horribly, scrotum-witheringly funny. I'm looking forward to the second series of Phoenix Nights later today. I wish C4 would hurry up and get the second series of Black Books out on DVD. Yeah, like how much work can it take? It's not like the first one was crammed full of extra's. The second season of Black Books rode that magical wave *all the time*, IMO. Extraordinary. I so wish it would get a release. NOW! Have you seen People Like Us? I *highly* recommend it, I think it could be right up your street.. http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/...933202-5521218 Thank you. Did you ever see Human Remains? It's out on DVD soon. I *cried* with laughter at some of those scenes. You'll recognise his wife from the Morris stuff. -- td |
#751
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
Bruce J. Richman wrote: Agreed that the SCTV ensemble was often hysterically funny. Another bit of favorite stuff re. SCTV I have is on a couple of CDs of Comic Relief concert material. One contains Eugene Levy & John Candy doing the Shmenge Brothers (Cabbage Rolls & Coffee Polka) - one of their classic TV bits with both wearing liederhosen. And I also have a "job interview" in which Martin Short as Ed Grimley ("I must say!") tries to compete with a Harvard MBA for an executive position - and wins! Funny stuff. I don't if you've already got it, but I just picked a book by Dave Thomas about SCTV from Amazon. Tremendous behind the scenes stuff, and about a million trivia questions that might just knock you on your ass. |
#752
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
Schizoid Man said: It could have been the wrath of an angry god as well. Or Middius. Krooger klaims I control people's minds. What are you claiming? |
#753
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
Langis wrote: The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote: Dawson was on the list, but you're right about the other two - marvelous. So he was! I must have been too high on coke to see that. I prefer Pepsi. Pepsi, laced with a cocktail of Class A drugs. Are you making fun of dave's reviewing process? |
#754
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 21:51:58 +0100, Langis wrote:
It is, but the birthday dildo scene and the pub scene (where he yanks the girl in the wheelchair out of the way to get to the table, then shoves her back in when he's comfortable) put it on a magical plane comedy rarely reaches, IMO. I've seen Brent's 'dance' far too many times, but it's still wretchedly, horribly, scrotum-witheringly funny. Agreed, agreed and agreed! There are many fine moments, and I wish it would just run and run - but I think they were right to axe it at it's peak before it could be spoiled. I felt no underpinning waning of the Merchant/Gervais enthusiasm for the programme, but I must wistfully agree. Unless there were major new avenues to explore with another, um, 'script', it's fair to say that it had walked its particular wire. When the wire's *that* high up, maybe it's good not to wear it too thin. :-) There's a christmas special coming up though, that's the final outing in the UK. [The American remake will be crap of course ;-)] Two-parter, I think. Looking forward to it. Thank you. Did you ever see Human Remains? It's out on DVD soon. I *cried* with laughter at some of those scenes. You'll recognise his wife from the Morris stuff. Nope, missed that in it's entirety. If you're recommending it I'll give it a look. Oh, I recommend it very, very highly. It seems that it's already out. http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/...858401-9238858 Here a bit about what it's, um, about: http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/guide/ar...66601830.shtml [Only joking about the drugs of course, folks. "Drugs is bad".] Drugs are wonderful, folks. Give them to your children. -- td |
#755
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
Langis said:
(Marc Phillips) wrote: Bill Hicks, unfortunately, died a few years ago from cancer at the age of 33. Actually, he was only 32. And it was in February of 1994. Lung cancer? Pancreatic cancer, the same that claimed my mother-in-law two weeks ago. It's very aggressive and fast and devastating. Hicks performed almost until the end, however. Boon |
#756
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
"trotsky" wrote in message ... ScottW wrote: trotsky wrote in message ... ScottW wrote: Greg said on RAO, "For people reading this who aren't strokes, credit card companies do a lot to protect the individual against such things." That's just a clever way of me calling you a stroke. Sorry. So you were lying about the credit cards offering protection against your impending bankruptcy. Scott, there's still something about your personality that reminds me of a Viagra commercial. Failure to refute the point is noted. But why are you watching Viagra commercials? Is there hope for your sex life? ScottW |
#757
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 21:13:43 GMT, trotsky wrote:
Langis wrote: The Stainless Steel Boob Orchestra wrote: Dawson was on the list, but you're right about the other two - marvelous. So he was! I must have been too high on coke to see that. I prefer Pepsi. Pepsi, laced with a cocktail of Class A drugs. Are you making fun of dave's reviewing process? Probably not. |
#758
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
ScottW wrote:
"trotsky" wrote in message ... ScottW wrote: trotsky wrote in message ... ScottW wrote: Greg said on RAO, "For people reading this who aren't strokes, credit card companies do a lot to protect the individual against such things." That's just a clever way of me calling you a stroke. Sorry. So you were lying about the credit cards offering protection against your impending bankruptcy. Scott, there's still something about your personality that reminds me of a Viagra commercial. Failure to refute the point is noted. But why are you watching Viagra commercials? Is there hope for your sex life? I'm single--I watch TV a lot. You're married--you probably watch TV even more than me. |
#759
|
|||
|
|||
Question about Jupiter
"trotsky" wrote in message link.net... ScottW wrote: I'm single--I watch TV a lot. You're married--you probably watch TV even more than me. You would be wrong. I only watch the news while eating and some sports. My TV watching is probably less than 2-3 hours a week. Now I do waste some time on the internet and playing MoHAA but we all need our distractions. ScottW |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
RCA out and Speaker Question in 2004 Ranger Edge Question | Car Audio | |||
question on Pioneer DEH-P4600MP | Car Audio | |||
Subwoofer box question | Car Audio | |||
question about cd player brands | Audio Opinions | |||
Subwoofer position question | Audio Opinions |