My first apartment was a narrow plaster shack behind the park at 39th St. and Powelton Ave. It was 2003, and I lived with my good friend Steve and a squinty film guy I barely knew named Sanchez.
Philly native Garrett Dutton III, also known as G. Love of G. Love and Special Sauce came to Drexel Feb. 14 and spoke to Music Industry students.
Everyone likes a good action flick, so why not one that not only mixes in a little suspense, topped off with dark, perturbing twists, but also concentrates on a unique, and somewhat original, idea. Wayne Kramer's Running Scared is all that and more.
This week's episode comes out of the blocks like a rocket. Five minutes in, two people are already dead — both terrorists, killed by terrorists. Bye bye, Mr. Yellow Tie. Aside from the bad-guy body count, President Logan's inability to accept responsibility is also on the rise.
The second sequel in the Final Destination series finds a predictably familiar scenario to start things off: Young teenager Wendy (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) receives a psychic vision of deathtrap du jour - a roller coaster this time around - and her subsequent screaming manages to keep a few teenagers from attending the ride before it goes haywire.
Everyone of our age is trapped in an everlasting state of nostalgia, because we are the last generation of people to say
You thought you could hold your liquor? Russians will drink you under the table.
Last week we left off with Lynn McGill taking a mashing from his sister's tag-along mugger. Of course the writers of 24, make no reference to the event in this episode. McGill cleans himself up, and heads back to the office, all in a day's work. Back at the president's playpen, Cummings' wife, who might have to go back to loving Raymond, shows up to claim the body.
With video games, movies and whatnot, it's rare to find a board game these days that can be entertaining.
"Appearances aren't what they seem in Gina Gionfriddo's wickedly funny satire." So says the blurb promoting the show.