Sorry, dude, but you’re talking out of your hat on this one. There are plenty of modern buildings on the upper west side, as well as buildings that have been fully gutted and renovated. Townhouses may be dominant, but they are hardly the only thing there.
And my brother’s place, W72nd in a pre-war building, has the kitchen and bathroom at opposite ends.
I thought he was great in Normal, Ohio - also, I think, a great portrayal of a gay man as regular guy with regular job(construction contractor), with a little swish now and then, but also goes to the gay bar and has a manly Stein of beer, and doesn’t come home with a twink, just drinks! In fact, the only action I can remember him getting was from the balding FBI guy! Also, he got married and had a kid before coming out. That’s a very realistic situation for a large set of gays, as far as I’m aware.
The rest of the family were a bit OTT, but still, pity it got cancelled (I think - it certainly only ran one season here).
I think more shows like that would go a long way towards lessening the stigma or the view that all gays are urban/successful/young types a-la “Will and Grace”, but that’s a GD topic, really.
I’ve got the cast album for a Roger Miller musical on Huck Finn, Big River. He plays Huck’s Pa and has a fabulous song about the government.
I, uh, did indeed buy a cast album of a Huck Finn musical just because John Goodman sings on it. Why do you ask? (And also Roger Miller is cool.)
I was hurt that he was in O Brother Where Art Thou? where a lot of people sang and he didn’t sing! Not that he didn’t have a wondrously great time in the movie, but I just kind of missed the opportunity.
Ah, yes, Roger Miller. That brings back good memories of listening to R.E.M.'s hideously drunken take on “King of The Road” (at the end of which you can hear one band member inform another band member that, yes, they really ARE recording it). In the liner notes, guitarist Peter Buck admits that, “If there was any justice in the world, Roger Miller should be able to sue for what we did to this song.”
He probably would have gotten a big kick out of it, really. I mean, the man’s most familiar pop culture presence to most Americans is as a cartoon rooster in a poofy shirt. Gotta come with a sense of humor.
I’ve been a big fan since The Big Lebowski. I do wish he got more starring roles, and I don’t think current sitcoms are the place for him to shine. Oh well, I guess the Coens will keep giving him work.
Probably because they were a rural American gay couple. Here in NYC, we have plenty of super-hero buffs who flail their wrists **and ** fixate on Madonna, Liza, Judy and Ethel.
Yeah, but here in NYC, we also have a lot of gay guys who do NOT have super-hero buff bodies, flail their wrists, and fixate on Madonna, Liza, Judy and Ethel…but you never see them on tv show. (Well, okay, neither Will or Jack are superhero buff, but they fit do fit the other categories to a tee.)
I have never heard or seen this technique. Shooting a gun with both hands is bad. The technique I have always used is to put the flashlight in the left hand. The left hand goes under the right(shooting) hand. The left hand rests underneath the right hand and they are touching back to back. This gives you a supported firing stance. The way to keep it from being a bulls-eye is by not keeping the light on all the time. You flash it on from time to time when you need it.
I like keeping an eye out for the later episodes of Roseanne where John Goodman is wearing Walter’s beard and buzzcut. You just want him to bellow at Roseanne "OVER THE LINE!!"
The setup in Jerry’s apartment is probably much more like my former apartment. Kitchen’s would be back-to-back with the neighbor, as would bathrooms. As every construction company would not want to remake the basic apartment every building, the “Bizarro Jerry”, where everything is exactly opposite, makes sense.
I was watching tonight’s episode of “Without A Trace,” which featured a sequence where they needed to blow up a photo in order to get a license plate number. But apparently their Super Duper Zoomatron – the device all cop shows use to extract any photographic detail, no matter how small – was on the fritz, because they didn’t get it!
There was a Halloween episode of Roseanne where she stuck her hand in the toaster, waited until Dan walked into the kitchen, then flailed around as if she were being electrocuted. He didn’t fall for it, and when Roseanne asked him why, he said, “'Cause the lights didn’t flicker. When you electrocute, you complete a circuit, and your body sucks up enough electricity to create a short in the rest of the house.”