The 4400 was the show where I thought "Gee, this really needs some Mark Valley." And then he showed up. Maybe this season I can get Rhind-Tutt, or something.
All this food talk is making me wish I had an appetite. But I do have leftover Zankou's, so I'll have that instead of wasting a delivery.
Huh. Peter Coyote is in
Moonlight & Valentino.
Want! Or some unagi.
You have to come visit, or we have to find a place in Seattle that has it for July 3rd.
Brenda, I think it might be years of alcohol abuse. He lived in Halifax for a few years, got banned from almost every bar in town, and shortly after, moved to Vancouver. I think things got worse for him there before he got better, and I don't know even then if he stayed sober.
The 4400 was the show where I thought "Gee, this really needs some Mark Valley." And then he showed up. Maybe this season I can get Rhind-Tutt, or something.
OMG, I was thinking the exact same thing during the pilot today. Freaky.
Wow, that's a shame. He was really at the top of his game during the L&O years, and I wondered why he popped up so rarely after that.
Wow.
4400:
do NOT piss off the baby
.
And, aww
poor Riv...Tess
.
You have to come visit, or we have to find a place in Seattle that has it for July 3rd.
It's totally possible that Seattle has a place with it. We're big on the Japanese food here. (Also Thai and Vietnamese. We fall down when it comes to Chinese, though. And when I say fall down, I mean hard on our asses. Chinese in this town sucks.)
Of course he speaks English!
t /Moonlight & Valentino interjection
I was thinking the exact same thing during the pilot today
Aren'tya glad I used my powers for good?
Apparently, Michael Moriarty is also planning to run for president in 2008, on a seemingly anti-Communist platform: [link]
I'm building a third, hopefully mainstream political party: The Realists. A third point of view is an absolute necessity to deal with America's gradual absorption into socialism's hegemony. The only recent and healthy presidential debate was when independent candidate Ross Perot and his Reform Party were there to ask a few hard questions and make edifying observations, back in the 1992 and 1996 U.S. presidential campaigns.