Nombran a mi hijo también Bort.
Thank you MTV. This is exactly what we need right now.
“Ore wa Jaku Bawa!”
“That’s a potato…that’s a pot.”
Surprise! You both need better agents.
It’s quite bizarre I know but I think it’s great.
After 33 seconds it becomes even funnier.
Any regular readers of Fine Filter have probably realized by now that I like nothing more than to find the rarest of the rare when it comes to anything entertainment related. The Japanese high school drama entitled Stand Up!! is certainly the epitome of this. Despite first airing in 2003, it’s plot of four teenage boys trying to lose their virginity is timeless. Furthermore, everything about the show from the clothing, slang, and surrounding events is so unfamiliar to foreign viewers that it feels like it could have been made last week.
It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia is by far one of the most original and funny shows that I’ve seen in a long time. According to IMDB, the show’s slogan is “It’s Seinfeld on crack” which I think is a fairly accurate description. Much like Seinfeld, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia’s characters are obliviously terrible and self-centered people, but the premises for the shows are far darker than anything Seinfeld and Larry David could ever dream up.
After completing your education, be it High School or College, you have a choice, if not a responsibility, to keep learning, even if it’s only ever so slightly from time to time. One of my favorite and most thought-provoking ways that I’ve found to accomplish this is the Cosmos series by astronomer, scientist, and thinker, Carl Sagan. First airing in 1980, this 14-part series on the inner workings of the cosmos and life itself was the BBC’s Planet Earth of it’s day, if not even more popular.