damn, I hate that caveman ad series.
DH loves them. I'm neutral. I don't notice most commercials. A series. Would depend on the writing and charm of the cast I suppose. It doesn't seem likely to be must see tv for me.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
damn, I hate that caveman ad series.
DH loves them. I'm neutral. I don't notice most commercials. A series. Would depend on the writing and charm of the cast I suppose. It doesn't seem likely to be must see tv for me.
The famous Boston microclimates!
MY office mates are being weird about the big lottery drawing tonight, we've been pitching in and buying tickets, but they're going on like we have a reasonable shot of winning.
Wintery mix is the weather equivalent of getting both strep throat and a stomach virus, while you're pregnant.
I hear the voice of experience here, on both counts perhaps.
MY office mates are being weird about the big lottery drawing tonight, we've been pitching in and buying tickets, but they're going on like we have a reasonable shot of winning.
There's a great TAL piece about that, about the cast and crew of Riverdance. Check it out!
Has a television commercial (or series of commercials) ever been turned into a TV show before?
Maybe the California Raisins?
Would depend on the writing and charm of the cast I suppose. It doesn't seem likely to be must see tv for me.
I think the show should have wacky downstairs neighbors. Like there's an apartment with Jesus, Elvis and Hitler as roommates.
Here's that TAL show: [link]
Oh! And I'm glad you liked the Porter. It's one of my favorites, along with the Rye IPA we've just started drinking.
I hate the caveman ads too.
Oopsie.
Michael Duplessis loves Chicago so much that he wanted its nickname tattooed on his chest.
But the idea went terribly awry in a North Side tattoo parlor: He left with the word "CHI-TONW" inked into his skin where "CHI-TOWN" should have been.
Now Duplessis is suing the business and the tattoo artist for monetary damages in the 2005 mess after suffering what he says in his lawsuit was "emotional distress from public ridicule."
"It was so embarrassing," Duplessis, 40, said Thursday from his home on the Northwest Side. "It was on my chest, and it was spelled wrong. I had to deal with all the people teasing me about it."
Haven't seen the ads, but a friend works for geico and sent this link to Caveman's Crib. It cracked me up...and she says the entire project was produced by geico employees on their off time. Impressive.