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#lee goodman
georgeromeros · 3 months
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The Addams Family - Season 1 Episode 12 (1964) Morticia, The Matchmaker
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kwebtv · 7 months
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Kingdom of the Sea - Syndicated - January 1, 1957 - 1958
Documentary (at least 16 episodes)
Running Time: 30 minutes
Hosted by:
Bob Stevenson
John D. Craig
Lee Goodman
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i have to say i do not like The Implications
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honeyspawn · 4 months
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Black Friday characters according to my friend who has never seen Black Friday (but has seen tgwdlm)
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inspired by this post
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spaceotter42 · 2 months
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“Cyrus' Bash-Mitzvah!” first aired six years ago on Feb. 23, 2018. A great episode of Andi Mack!
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infectedpaul · 6 months
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she peipin on my john til im mcnamara
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In chapter one, Robbie Daymond had me quietly freaking out in select moments.
In chapter two, Brennan Lee Mulligan had me so feral, I would need to grab my pillow so I could scream without disturbing my family.
And now, in chapter three, Noshir Dalal has me pausing and silently processing the smallest tiniest thing that he says that almost gets lost in the shuffle of the rest of the show but fucking hits me in the chest with how goddamn hot he is, I just can’t.
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glitter50000 · 6 months
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Black Friday (2019)
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thehappyspaceman · 1 year
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Ranking All the Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer Specials
So, I’m in the process of finishing the script for a review of all the Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer specials. However, I don’t know if I will realistically be able to complete my video before Christmas, so here is my ranking of every Rudolph special, from best to worst.
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Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1964): Despite all the memes (“Deviation from the norm will be punished unless it is exploitable!”), the original Rankin/Bass Rudolph special holds up much better than most of the internet gives it credit for. It has memorable characters and songs, it is well-paced and does not try to cram too many subplots into its runtime, its stop-motion animation was quite good for the time (and has a unique charm nowadays), and it actually fixes most of the issues with the original song and story. It’s a classic. 9.5/10
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Rudolph’s Shiny New Year (1976): The follow-up to the Rankin/Bass special is not as good as the first one, and the lesson of “If people laugh at you, it’s because you bring them joy and that’s a good thing!” is kind of reprehensible, but it’s still pretty alright. It certainly has some nice songs and creative ideas, and Red Skelton is charming as Father Time, although I can see why it didn’t become a holiday staple like the first one. For one thing, it’s less well-paced, and doubling it as a New Year’s special and as a celebration of America’s Bicentennial felt stranger. Still pretty good. 7/10
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Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1948): This Max Fleischer short aired a year before the song’s release and thus is more closely based on the original Rudolph story. The animation is kind of janky (as a lot of Max Fleischer’s shorts are in hindsight, even though he was an animation pioneer) and the story is a bit standard, but it’s still a decent short film and a noble enough screen debut for the character. 6/10
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Rudolph and Frosty’s Christmas in July (1979): Rankin/Bass pulled out all of the stops for this big epic crossover film between Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Frosty the Snowman, and Santa Claus Is Coming to Town, their own Avengers: Endgame that also doubled as a sendoff for Rudolph and Frosty, who would never star in a Rankin/Bass project after this. However, despite some creative ideas, the plot felt all over the place, with far too many subplots and too much lore to keep track of, plus we did not need a explanation for Rudolph’s nose powers. We could have accepted it as simply being “magic,” and making him a chosen one poses more questions than it answers. Still, at least it was imaginative, which is more than I can say for the post-Rankin/Bass specials. 5.5/10
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Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie (1998): GoodTimes Entertainment’s attempt at rebooting the franchise has diminishing returns, and reeks of the usual GoodTimes stench. The plot beats and characters felt very derivative of the original Rankin/Bass special, as a lot of GoodTimes movies feel derivative of other films, but this one felt even more obvious since even the songs themselves felt derivative of songs from the first Rankin/Bass one. And the $10 million budget clearly didn’t go to the writing or animation, so I have to wonder where it went. Presumably to the voice cast, and while it does bring in some well-known voice actors (including John Goodman, Whoopi Goldberg, Debbie Reynolds, and Monty Python’s Eric Idle), they cannot save this special from mediocrity. 4/10
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Rudolph’s Lessons for Life (1996): There’s a reason this special has been forgotten and isn’t even mentioned on Wikipedia. I only found out about it thanks to TV Tropes. Rudolph’s Lessons for Life feels like a remake of Max Fleischer’s Rudolph short, but a lot worse. At least the Fleischer short was good for the time. This special’s framerate feels like a PowerPoint presentation at points. The only copies that exist of this special are 240p VHS rips, so don’t bother watching unless you are a serious Rudolph completionist. 2/10
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Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and the Island of Misfit Toys (2001): GoodTimes Entertainment’s second attempt at a Rudolph movie, this one continues from the original Rankin/Bass special and ignores the two sequels. This movie easily has the worst animation of all of them, summoning memories of Foodfight! to mind, and even if you look past the animation, it’s seriously uninspired. The plot lifts beats from the original Rankin/Bass special, and the villain is ripped from Toy Story 2. Perhaps the only decent plot element is a subplot about an island where toys can get plastic surgery? But even then, it’s wasted because they do nothing with it. And the celebrity voice cast--including Richard Dreyfuss, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Rick Moranis--do nothing to help. This is bad. Awful. Burn it. Purge it with fire. 1/10
And that’s my ranking! What do you guys think? Leave your own rankings in the comments below, feel free to discuss if you have any questions, and look out for my review sometime next month!
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kstearb · 9 months
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Continuously obsessed with media made 80 years ago
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xofeno · 1 year
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Jesse Lee Soffer as Dennis Loomis MATINEE (1993)
bonus:
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BHOC: MARVEL COLLECTORS' ITEM CLASSICS #1
Every year, the Smith Haven Mall near to where I lived held a week-long crafts fair. For seven days, assorted artists and craftspeople would set up little booths throughout the Mall and hock their wares. And every year, there wound up being two or three guys selling back issue comic books out of cardboard boxes. In fact, it was at one of these yearly events that I got to see my very first genuine…
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View On WordPress
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reppyy · 5 months
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amazingmsme · 4 months
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Had a very silly idea rewatching Black Friday: Macnamara knowing what a rough ler both Wilbur Cross and Wiggly can be to unsuspecting people, and doing “endurance training” with pres. Howard Goodman (by tickling him until he’s helpless with laughter)
MDGSMAHSKD I AM BOUNCING OFF THE WALLS THIS IS SO CUTE OMGGGGG! Ok but imagine: it’s not even MacNamara who comes up with it! Xander’s the one to voice his concerns about the issue to the general & he’s like “hmm you have a point” & he’s got a sly lil mischievous smirk as he thinks it over
Thing is: he doesn’t really know how to go about suggesting such a thing to the fucking president, so he pulls him aside & tells him how it’s highly advised he go through some “unconventional endurance training” & Howard’s all like “mhm yeah, anything for my country!” But MacNamara’s like “ok… but just a fair warning, you might think it’s a little silly & stupid, but I promise you there’s reasoning behind it” & Howard’s just like geez I get it, just get on with it man
So MacNamara decides to stop beating around the bush & starts tickling him & at first Howard thinks he’s just goofing around & is like “oh okay you haha your fun, I’m ready for my trahahaining nohow!” But MacNamara just smirks at him like “this is your training, Mr. President” & he can just tell he’s about to argue with him so he cuts him off like “I did warn you it would be a little silly, but we need you to be prepared for anything!”
Howard is flustered beyond belief because he’s the fucking president, & this is a respected commander, this is the last thing they should be doing right now, & this really isn’t helping with his crush on the hot general
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Window shopping at Bergdorf Goodman, 1938.
Photo: Russell Lee via Design You Trust
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spaceotter42 · 2 months
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Cyrus comes out to Andi in “Cyrus’ Bash-Mitzvah,” first airing six years ago on Feb. 23, 2018.
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