And Charlie is married to the waitress; Dennis is married to Caylee the cute pharmacist from "The D.E.N.N.I.S. System". And of course, Danny DeVito is married to the lovely and talented Rhea Perlman.Shellfish is an abomination unto the lord according to leviticus, but when was the last time you saw anyone having a protest outside red lobster holding a sign that says "God hates crabs!"Many Protestant denominations would argue that they follow the doctrine of the New Testament. Not trying to get into this argument. Just letting you know.She's never been on the show, but I'm insanely envious - Rickety Cricket is married to Emily Deschanel (Bones) in real life.
That's true, but Mac is quoting from Leviticus. And passages from Leviticus and sometimes other Old Testament books are the ones I've personally seen used as an argument against homosexuality most frequently. Hence why they likely used that one in the show.It's not about force, bro. If they got downvoted, obviously, I'd take the hint and not post. But nobody's gonna downvote it.Except no one actually gets aids, they all just freak out from different scenarios where they ignorantly think they contracted it. Lots of innuendo about Mac, duh.
Maybe Frank somehow leads the pride parade or something. Dennis insanely pissed because not every gay guy wants to bang him. Dee tries to turn hot gay dudes straight and fails.Isn't there a subreddit where reddit writes Seinfeld plots? We need one for always sunny cause that was gold, Jerry!I'm sure she'd go no matter what, but I'd say she's especially there because she's actually married to Charlie in real life. Mac is also married to Dee in real life. Both couples even have kids!And Danny is married to Gladys, the piano player in 'The Nightman Cometh' play. (Not really, but Rhea Perlman played her in their live production.)
I got to meet Danny Devito when he stayed at a hotel I worked at. Extremely nice guy. His handlers had called before he checked in to give us his list of "rules." No eye contact, don't say his name, and basically don't speak to him. He comes in, basically pushes the handler out of the way, and just talks with us, took a few pictures. Amazing day.When I was growing up his cousin lived across the street with her husband and daughter. He visited her once or twice. It's hard to remember after so many years. He couldn't have been nicer to me. Especially given I was a little boy who "loved him in Twins". I'll never forget that he was the first adult I met who was almost my height. But super nice guy. Even now decades later I remember how nice he was to a random kid on a bike saying hello. He was one of the first adults to talk to me like a person and not just a kid. I'll always remember that.
No comments:
Post a Comment