Ok, this is kind of pathetic.
I'm reading the book Supreme Justice by Philip Margolin. In it, there's talk of hiring a private eye (private detective). The private eye states that she turns down matrimonial work. As soon as I read that, I thought of South of Sunset, and the episode where Glenn (Cody) says "I hate this matrimonial work".
-Kim-
People don't run out of dreams, People just run out of time
Yeah AG - I had a lame one too the other day when someone at work mentioned driving down a two-way street. I so wanted to asked if they were driving down the center, but I'm pretty sure they wouldn't have gotten it.
"People don't run out of dreams: People just run out of time ..."
Glenn Frey 11/06/1948 - 01/18/2016
I doubt that they would have, Dreamer.
This is a direct reminder.
I'm watching Ghostbusters 2, and I just got to the part where all of the ghosts take over NYC, and the Titanic arrives. Guess what song plays throughout the scenes? Flip City! (Co-written and sung by Glenn). I've watched the movie at least a dozen times, and I always liked the music played during those scenes. Tonight's viewing was the first time I've watched it since I became a hardcore Glenn Frey fan.(I knew that Glenn had a song on the soundtrack, but I didn't know where it was in the movie) My love for this movie has grown even more. (Yes, I like the song alot)
-Kim-
People don't run out of dreams, People just run out of time
The title of the sermon for tomorrow's church service - Life in the Fast Lane or Right Path?
That's too funny, GL. Tell 'em some of your Border friends believe it's possible to do both - after all, they can be one in the same, can't they?
"People don't run out of dreams: People just run out of time ..."
Glenn Frey 11/06/1948 - 01/18/2016
That's true, Dreamer! Our minister saw HotE a few months ago. He knew I was a big Eagles fan & started telling me the LITFL story & he sounded as if he was amused by it (which actually surprised me). Of course I told him that I had the HotE video so I knew the story well.
I was watching an episode of "Mysteries at the Museum" last night on... I believe it was the Travel Channel. They covered the story of the Dalton gang's demise in Coffeyville. On that fateful day in 1892, the outlaws decided to rob two banks at the same time. Apparently it wasn't law enforcement who gunned the baddies down, it was enraged townspeople - after all, that was *their* money in the banks. The citizen militia killed all but one of the Dalton gang. The fella who survived, Emmett Dalton, got life in prison.