Oh, the H men are difficult. I'd have to toss Harry Belafonte with extreme reluctance, but in the end I'd just want to be friends. Good friends--I could probably listen to him talk forever. But I think I'd be hard torn to pick between the other two guys. HJ is such a dish and comes off as an excellent husband and father. And I've met Harold Perrineau and he's a total doll and a sweet father too. Okay, ick, I toss him then, because it's now creepy. M Belafonte, F Jackman.
C Hayden because she's 12, F Lamarr because she's not Mirren, M Mirren because she is.
The Hedley Lamarr joke from
Blazing Saddles?
Why is there a $3+ charge to buy Amex giftcards. fuckers. I need to get a giftcard for the second babysitter. I know he listens to music, but am unsure of the device he uses, so am wary of an iTunes card. maybe just cash? I mean cash is never bad, right?
I bought $10 worth of holiday candy and cookies for the stupid required secret santa thing for mac's afterschool. Ha, now they'll have a doubly hopped up kid.
I haven't seen that.
Hie thee to Netflix!
I haven't rewatched it in forever. I'm assuming it lives up to the hysterics of my first viewings, but Gene and Mel have been pretty reliable.
I haven't seen that.
Harvey Korman's character's name is Headley Lamarr, and throughout the film, everyone keeps calling him Hedy. As Mel Brooks's governor says at one point, "Hey, what do you care? When the time comes, you can sue her!" (It's set in the Old West.)
ETA: It definitely holds up today! I think it's hilarious.
"He ro-o-ode a blazing saddle!"
I think it's terrific that they hired Richard Pryor to write for Bart, the black sheriff, but he preferred writing for Alex Karras's Mongo instead.
"Mongo only pawn in game of life."