- This TV character frequently “orders” Earl Grey, hot.
No one answered this one yet and my original did not have enough info.
- A group of TV and Comic Book heros who enjoy pizza
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles?
And the winner is… Der Trihs:D:cool:
Jean Luc Picard
That is correct!
Schlock, Mercenary.
Also,
That would be General Jack Ripper.
Alright, I will add one, but it is not quite the thing because he only order this when he could not get what he wanted:
- A glass of warm gin with a human hair in it.
No one’s done fava beans and a nice chianti yet?
(that’s the only one I know, along with “shaken, not stirred”).
Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael, and Michelangelo?
I had described the Winchesters already but I don’t recall Sam ever eating a chicken salad.
Whoever mentioned Fox Mulder a while ago was right.
Ditto on the Beavis and Butthead answer.
Doctor Hannibal “The Cannibal” Lecter, of “Silence of the Lambs, &c”
(Bond, James Bond.)
Why should I suffer alone?
Correct!
That would be me, thank you very much.
- He’d sell his soul for Turkish Delight.
Walter Cunningham is one of the answers, at least.
57 - Edmund Pevensie.
58 - boiling tea, and eggs, shells and all.
Regards,
Shodan
I’m terrible at guessing but thought I’d throw one in:
- Orange juice w/ “*SOME *pulp”
Tony Soprano?
Got it!
- This TV inspector prefers Glenfiddich
Mine was in post 15 while yours was post 25, so if you want to get technical…
I know we’ve seen Sam eat and order salads a few times (in The Monster at the End of This Book, I think he orders a cobb salad). I suppose they weren’t necessarily chicken, though.
- A manhattan, shaken to foxtrot time.
Much better.
If I remember correctly, the Thin Man was like the Pink Panther; everybody thinks it’s a reference to the main character, but originally it was something else.
49. Grain alcohol and rainwater.
Correct.
- Chocolate donuts and grape soda.
The thin man in the title of the novel and film refers to the prime suspect. The next couple film titles were cleverly ambiguous (“After the Thin Man,” “Another Thin Man”), but by “The Thin Man Goes Home” the name had clearly stuck to Nick Charles (although no one ever called him that within the films).
Correct. From the Chronicles of Narnia, of course.
We have two 60s but no 35.
35. Roasts of beef and mutton, and whole flocks of geese and turkeys and fowls disappear into his mouth. A roast of beef of which he had to make more than two mouthfuls was seldom seen, and he ate them bones and all. A goose or a turkey was but one bite.