Well I won't pretend like I haven't enjoyed the show during it's run because I have. Although you're not off the mark when you say the shows often have the "exact same plots" as the show hasn't changed much over the years.
It's sometimes funny, but after 6 shows with exactly the same plot I have seen enough and heard the same jokes enough.
It's sometimes funny, but after 6 shows with exactly the same plot I have seen enough and heard the same jokes enough.
As much as I loved "Frasier" (okay, I had warm fuzzies for Jane Leeves, whaddaya want?), they really suffered from this problem as well. It's virtually a TV series (especially sitcom) trope. I mean, how many times can the Crane brothers team up on something, competitively try to out-snob each other, fail miserably, learn from their mistake and vow never to do it again.... only to do it again five times each season?
Or, stupid I thought. You see, I was less mature then. As dumb as I thought they were, those shows were very popular, and they spoke to their fans in some language that I was not privy to.
To me, when you start calling somebody's show stupid, by default you're insulting the people who do enjoy that show.
You may be what you eat but you are not necessarily what you watch. I watch things that are admittedly crap but that doesn't make me stupid, just easily entertained.![]()
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TyRkkEXwZA[/yt]
WINNING! DUH!
http://omg.yahoo.com/news/sheen-to-take-chicago-stage-after-detroit-failure/59720
Losers who paid to see him?
Losers! Duh!
DETROIT - Charlie Sheen was heckled, booed and eventually abandoned by the crowd at his inaugural stage show, with many of the audience members chanting "refund" and heading for the exits even before the show abruptly ended.
Winning? Not on opening night.
The first stop on Sheen's "My Violent Torpedo of Truth/Defeat is Not an Option" 20-city variety show tour started Saturday night in Detroit with thunderous applause but ended 70 minutes later. In between, Sheen tried to appease his audience with rants, a rapper and a question and answer session, ultimately concluding the first show was "an experiment."
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