Also, it’s about, not around.
Batman must have had one shitty memory. Weren’t there signs all over the Bat-cave?
They were there for Robin and Alfred if Batman were kidnapped.
I stand corrected, Robin and Alfred had the shitty memories.
Yeah, well, Robin never was the sharpest tool in the Bat-box, if you ask me.
It’s been known to happen. There was an episode of NBC’s The Office, “Viewing Party”, that didn’t merely mention the FOX series Glee but was about the characters gathering to watch the season premier. Some brief clips from Glee are even seen.
From The Making of Star Trek (Whitfield and Roddenberry, 1968):
Ship’s laundry bears little resemblance to its 20th century ancestor. Primarily because garments are reconvertible. It is simply easier to put a garment into the processing machine, reduce it to its original chemical fibers, take out the dirt, and then recreate a “new” garment back into its original form. Aboard the Enterprise*, since it is a self-contained unit, out of sheer practicality nothing is ever lost.
*
(Maybe this explains why the uniforms were constantly being altered in the first two seasons. )
Is Assberg where The Assman lives? :dubious:
Has DC Comics ever addressed the fact that Superman would have thousands of groupies in Metropolis alone, women tossing him their panties every time he put in a public appearance?
Hey, that’s a pretty good theory! Maybe the original plan was for Frank to use human DNA to create an unstoppable clone army, but he got sidetracked making Rocky for his personal use and blew through the entire project budget.
The gold-plated briefs and high-tops alone would have cost a bundle.
There was a 1960s story where Clark Kent was presumed to have been killed in an explosion, and Superman decided that he was tired of the whole “secret identity” thing and would just be Superman from then on. A daily commute from the Fortress of Solitude was too much of a hassle, so he moved in with Jimmy Olsen. This worked out about as well as you’d expect; he was hounded nonstop by adoring fans and the media, and never got a moment’s peace. Supes finally got fed up with that shit and came up with a pretext for resurrecting Clark.
If Laura Holt is such a hot shot detective, why can’t she figure out who Remington Steele really is? Fingerprints, DNA, something?
Like I’m going to hire her to do detective work.
She’s respecting his privacy. And I don’t think they had DNA identification when the show was on air.
She was ahead of her time- she did collect quite a bit of saliva samples from him over the course of the show.
Stupid question: Why didn’t Bluto eat spinach and beat the hell out of Popeye?
Same reason I can’t become an MMA champion by eating spinach.
Popeye was a super being, a genetic anomaly, (or an alien) whose body was uniquely able to process spinach into super powers. He thought he was a normal human, but that’s only because there was no testing at the time that could have found out the truth.
In the Doctor Who episode “Remembrance of the Daleks,” set on the day the show originally premiered, the TV shows an announcement: " “This is BBC television, the time is quarter past five and Saturday viewing continues with an adventure in the new science fiction series Doc—” It cuts off mid-word, but it’s clear what the show is.
Larry Niven exists and is writing in the DC universe, too. The first time a bunch of groupies tossed Superman their panties, he tossed them back full of holes. They got the hint pretty quickly.
I thought the premier was interrupted by the announcement of Kennedy’s assassination (on a Friday). Or was it postponed until the next day?