A couple nights before his SNL hosting duties, Will Ferrell stopped by Late Night with Jimmy Fallon to engage in some typically silly banter with his old castmate and promote his new movie, The Campaign (treating fans to the exclusive premiere of the film's trailer in the process). But what really stole the show was Ferrell's absurdist, retro '60s dance number touting his tight pants. Grooving to a jaunty, carnivalesque tune in a striped sweater, tight white jeans, white boots, and a Buster Brown mushroom cut, Ferrell sang, "Everybody's talkin' 'bout my tight pants, I got my tight pants — I got my tight pants on." And then, out of nowhere, Ferrell found his tight-pants hegemony threatened by the emergence on stage of Jimmy Fallon in a similar pair of leg-hugging slacks. And that's when things got serious. Making it abundantly clear that his [...]...
- 5/11/2012
- Nerve
We are living in a different world, man! Less than 24 hours after becoming aware of Rob Lowe’s homeless chic look on Californication, we learned that Willie Nelson has chopped off his signature long locks. He’s smart; long hair is a bitch in the heat. This is a travesty, but at least now we know how Buster Brown would look if he got really high all the time. Nelson, or whoever writes headlines on his website, describes the new coif as “the haircut heard around the world.”
More Lunchtime polls:
Should Sandra have torched Russell’s gross little hat?...
More Lunchtime polls:
Should Sandra have torched Russell’s gross little hat?...
- 5/27/2010
- by Annie Barrett
- EW.com - PopWatch
In the golden age of classic film and television, few comedians could match the success and popularity of legendary comic duo Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The pair was successful in almost every medium, including stage, radio, film, cartoon, and television. Toward the end of their career, the duo had already hosted the Colgate Comedy Hour and decided to do a TV series that would utilize their classic gags while still reaching a newer, younger audience. The result was The Abbott and Costello Show.
Premiering in 1951, The Abbott and Costello Show was a short-lived success. Although it ran only two seasons, it showcased the pair’s reliable repertoire of routines which they had originally done in vaudeville and reintroduced to new generations of film and TV fans. You don’t have to be an Abbott and Costello fan to have heard of their routines, which were usually based on Costello...
Premiering in 1951, The Abbott and Costello Show was a short-lived success. Although it ran only two seasons, it showcased the pair’s reliable repertoire of routines which they had originally done in vaudeville and reintroduced to new generations of film and TV fans. You don’t have to be an Abbott and Costello fan to have heard of their routines, which were usually based on Costello...
- 4/3/2010
- by Rob Young
- JustPressPlay.net
In the golden age of classic film and television, few comedians could match the success and popularity of legendary comic duo Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The pair was successful in almost every medium, including stage, radio, film, cartoon, and television. Toward the end of their career, the duo had already hosted the Colgate Comedy Hour and decided to do a TV series that would utilize their classic gags while still reaching a newer, younger audience. The result was The Abbott and Costello Show.
Premiering in 1951, The Abbott and Costello Show was a short-lived success. Although it ran only two seasons, it showcased the pair’s reliable repertoire of routines which they had originally done in vaudeville and reintroduced to new generations of film and TV fans. You don’t have to be an Abbott and Costello fan to have heard of their routines, which were usually based on Costello...
Premiering in 1951, The Abbott and Costello Show was a short-lived success. Although it ran only two seasons, it showcased the pair’s reliable repertoire of routines which they had originally done in vaudeville and reintroduced to new generations of film and TV fans. You don’t have to be an Abbott and Costello fan to have heard of their routines, which were usually based on Costello...
- 4/3/2010
- by Rob Young
- JustPressPlay.net
Arrested Development's Baby Buster Bluth (Tony Hale) guest-starred as Pottery Teacher in the March 18 Community, and tonight he's on Law & Order (NBC, 10 p.m. Et) playing an estranged father whose ex-wife flees to Brazil with his kid. "They took my daughter!" Tony Hale is yelling in the pictured moment from the episode preview, even though it would make more sense if he were beating on Buster's Native American drum set for extra emphasis, possibly until his hand fell off. Kate Ward and I are having trouble conceiving of "Serious Buster," even though we know that Tony Hale is a...
- 3/29/2010
- by Annie Barrett
- EW.com - PopWatch
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