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GeorgeStGeorge

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Everything posted by GeorgeStGeorge

  1. Well, we do know an approximate timeframe, and the fact that the movie was a BIG winner (top 3 Academy Awards). That's not a bad start for clues, though I suspect we'll need more. Human, is the lead female role a real or fictitious person? George
  2. I was thinking "Mommie Dearest," but Faye Dunaway WAS in that one... George
  3. Wait until it's your grandkid! I once heard, and found it true by experience, that playing with your grandkids for ten minutes makes you feel young. Any more makes you feel old. :lol: George
  4. As if that's ever stopped you before. ;) George
  5. I'll give this to hiway. Perhaps because of the discussion of B&B, you inferred that the two heroes in the cartoon show in question were teamed up. I did not say that. "The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure" contained Superman cartoons, Aquaman cartoons, guest hero cartoons (and, if I recall, Superboy cartoons). It was essentially an expansion of "The New Adventures of Superman" cartoon. S/A H of A ran one season (1967-1968), being replaced by "The Batman/Superman Hour," which had Superman, Batman, and Superboy cartoons but no guest heroes. Guest stars (appearing in their own shorts, not teamed up with the main heroes) in S/A H of A were: the Atom, Hawkman, the Flash, Green Lantern, the Teen Titans, and the Justice League. I still remember the theme song, verbatim. :)/> George
  6. The heroes are DC Comics characters. George
  7. My previous post also indicated that the movie was a comedy. That pretty much rules "Soylent Green" out. :) (Any time I hear the term "human resources," I think "Soylent Green".) George
  8. In the "Jump the Shark" episode of Batman B&B, they go through all of the ways to JTS listed on that website, including having Ted McGinley on! :lol: George
  9. Interesting that you should bring that up. Originally, the comic book "The Brave and the Bold" ("B&B") introduced new characters to the DC lineup, as did "Showcase." Starting with #50, it became a team-up book. (This doesn't count the introduction of teams like the Suicide Squad and the Justice League.) Starting with #74, and through the rest of its run (to #200), all the team-ups featured Batman as one hero. For a time, the last panel of an issue gave a clue to the identity of the next issue's partner. Incidentally, the comic book "World's Finest" changed its format from being a Batman-Superman team-up to a Superman-whoever team-up book, which also, if I recall correctly, had a clue at the end of each nook as to the team-up character in the next. The recent "Batman: The Brave and the Bold" cartoon featured Batman with other heroes, each week; but that is not the show I have in mind. (The last episode, entitled "Jumping the Shark," was a real hoot!) This cartoon came even before "Super-Friends." George
  10. Scooby and Shaggy were not the two. Love your thought process, though! :) George
  11. I guess I'll go. This cartoon show featured two main heroes. It also had a guest hero each week, and a mystery clue for you to guess who next week's guest star would be. This is probably too easy (at least for hiway and WW); but, we'll see. George
  12. FYI, I still haven't gotten Barker's EARLIER show, which is the subject of this. Could it be "Queen for a Day"? George
  13. When the film was first screened for major Warner Bros. executives, almost no one in the audience laughed and the movie looked to be a disaster that the studio would not release. But the producer quickly set up a subsequent screening for the WB studio's employees. When these regular folks laughed uproariously throughout the movie, Warner Bros. finally agreed to take a chance on releasing it. One day in the Warner Bros. studio commissary, the writers were seated at a table opposite John Wayne ("the Duke"). The Duke turned and said he had heard about their Western, the one where people say stuff like "blow it out your a-s-s". The producer handed the Duke a copy of the script and said, "Yes, and we'd like you to be in it." According to the producer, the Duke turned down the offer the next day by saying, "Naw, I can't do a movie like that, but I'll be first in line to see it!" George
  14. Bob Barker is into animals. And "The Price is Right" is probably the current show. I don't remember what Barker did before that. George
  15. The paint can makes me think "Saturday Night Fever" George PS The earliest movie I can REMEMBER Fran Drescher in was "Hollywood Knights."
  16. I have seen it. Sean Young Blade Runner Harrison Ford George
  17. Since this show was rather short-lived, I'll be more specific. It was based on one of the female "Cheers" cast, though she didn't actually appear in the spin-off. George
  18. "I always tell the truth. Even when I lie." "The only thing in this world that gives orders... is balls." George
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