Pequod77, et. al. – Actually, it’s better than that: Karloff played Brewster in the stage version of A&OL, then was unavailable for the film (and so they started the Karloff gag), and then (apparently; I hadn’t heard this part) did the TV version (did they keep the Karloff gags in? I’m betting so, Karloff probably adored them). And now does Gruesome here (after the movie, and I think that had a “you look like Boris Karloff” gag in it, too?) with a Lorre-esque sidekick? Too good!
Holly, before you start to pick a topic, I’ve got an old TV show I want you to watch; It’s an old PBS show called “Connections”, and it’s probably one of the least boring shows I’ve ever seen on the topic of technological history. So, sit for a while, and then, when you’ve finished watching, think about your paper topic.
Impulse is one thing. But I would think Evie would have the horse-sense to have brought Arnold around to meet the family first. Yeah, YOLO, but family is family.
Not quite. “Atheism” is the belief that there isn’t any god. “Agnosticism” is the position that one does not know, because one does not have evidence, and thus one suspends both belief and disbelief.
Pequod77, et. al. – Actually, it’s better than that: Karloff played Brewster in the stage version of A&OL, then was unavailable for the film (and so they started the Karloff gag), and then (apparently; I hadn’t heard this part) did the TV version (did they keep the Karloff gags in? I’m betting so, Karloff probably adored them). And now does Gruesome here (after the movie, and I think that had a “you look like Boris Karloff” gag in it, too?) with a Lorre-esque sidekick? Too good!