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    Popular films I haven't watched and I'm sorry for
    • RDJ Sherlock Holmes 1 & 2

    I’m sorry, I kept falling asleep during 1 and we’ve only just brought 2 home on DVD.

    • Ep 2 & 3 of BBC Sherlock Series 1

    I didn’t know what tumbr or emotions were. I disliked the first episode because I thought Benedict was scary as Sherlock…

    • Basically every individual avengers films except Iron Man 1 and Thor

    I have no excuse other than we are poor.

    • Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and War Horse

    Also poor.

    Got any others?

     
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    draw something meets eurovision. michael jackson ate my hamster.

     
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    KEEP CALM AND CARRY ON - History

     
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    Blogcritics.org Politics

    Blogcritics.org Politics
    A sinister cabal of over 1000 superior bloggers on music, book, film, TV, popular culture, tech and politics. Kindle blogs are fully downloaded onto your Kindle so you can read them even when you’re not wirelessly connected. And unlike RSS readers which often only provide headlines, blogs on Kindle give you full text content and images, and are updated wirelessly throughout the day.
    Blogcritics.org Politics

     
  5. block 2
    • Ka D'Argo: As John once said, 'I would rather go down on a swing.'
    • John Crichton: Swinging. You wanna go down swinging.
    • Ka D'Argo: Swinging.
     
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    Top 5 Skydiving Safety Myths

    Top 5 Skydiving Safety Myths
    People are afraid of skydiving mainly because there are a lot of myths related to it in the popular culture. These several inaccuracies that have been propagated are the biggest reason for skydiving fear. Here are four of these myths along with the real explanation.
    Top 5 Skydiving Safety Myths

     
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    Irons (Household History)

    Irons (Household History)
    Discusses the history and development of irons, including a brief description of how the electric steam iron works, and surveys the role of irons in popular culture.

     
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    Camera BlackBerry 8520

    Poetry left the salons and went down to the street, so she can take a walk…

     
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    Witches (Blazers--Monsters)

    Witches (Blazers—Monsters)
    Describes the history and myths of witches, their features, and the use of witches in popular culture.

     
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    One of my vices is old time radio, generally pre-1950s radio before commercial radio stations learned it was cheaper to play the same dozen pop songs over and over again all day long than it was to offer genuinely entertaining and informative programming.

    I’m a semi-serious collector of British, U.S. and Canadian radio shows from the late 1920s up to more modern stuff, but generally I am fascinated with material from radio’s “golden age”, the period from the early 1930s through about 1950, but also includes modern podcasts, mostly of CBC, BBC, NPR programs.

    Alas, the vast majority of this material was lost long ago, but a surprisingly large amount of the stuff remained around long enough for collectors to track it down. There are shows by major talent you’ve probably heard of, like Jack Benny (I have a recording of his very first appearance on radio back in 1932), Bob Hope, and shows you might have heard of, like The Shadow, and, of course, Orson Wells’ production company responsible for the infamous “War of the Worlds” scare.

    Some made the transition to television, like Hope, Benny, and some shows, like Guildersleeve. Even Duffy’s Tavern tried to make the leap, but like so many, it failed in the visual medium.

    I’m fascinated by shows which were wildly popular in their day, but which have completely vanished from public consciousness. Shows like Vic and Sade, which was enormously popular on NBC for many years, is almost entirely unknown today except outside of fans of old time radio.

    And then there was Lum and Abner. The show was a 15 minute program, running three times a week, I believe. It was a comedy soap opera about the inhabitants of a small, Arkansas town called Pine Ridge. The main characters were Lum and Abner, played by Chester Lauck and Norris Goff, and who also played all of the other numerous characters in the show (until the 1950s when the show was expanded for a time to half an hour and outsiders were brought in).

    The show was on the air almost continuously from the early 1930s up to 1954. It was so popular that they often made guest appearances on other shows such as Bob Hope, and well known stars like Hope, Jack Benny and others had cameo appearances on Lum and Abner. So popular that it generated not one or two, but seven Hollywood movies. The Arkansas legislature declared a Lum and Abner day, and even changed the name of their home town legally to Pine Ridge.

    Despite this popularity, almost no one outside of collector circles remembers it. The fickleness of fame…

    if you’re interested in old time radio, want to hear Lum and Abner or one of many other old time radio shows, check out http://www.otr.net/ 

    BTW: The reason the poster on the right has the word HORRIBLE stamped on it in red is because the 1/2 hour version of the show was, well, horrible. They started to bring in outside characters, including Andy Devine, changed the whole feel of the show, added music and, well, it just didn’t work.