1. #1
    No coincidences
    Baseball at The Corner
    No coincidences's Avatar Become A Pro!
    Join Date: 01-18-10
    Posts: 76,300
    Betpoints: 16541

    In retrospect, the two worst lines of the day

    UTEP PK at Old Dominion
    Murray State -5.5 at Tennessee State

    Based on both the numbers beforehand, the matchups and how the games went, these two lines made absolutely zero sense.

  2. #2
    aortega521
    aortega521's Avatar Become A Pro!
    Join Date: 10-19-11
    Posts: 987
    Betpoints: 384

    With the way my UTEP Miners are playing this was no surprise to me. I had them winning by 9 points. Won 13 out of last 14 games and 4 straight on the road and finally they are 13-4 ATS. This team has cashed a lot of tickets for those fortunate enough to be aware of the great coaching job Tim Floyd is doing and how well the players are playing. We're accelerating on all cylinder down in El Paso.

  3. #3
    I/O
    I/O's Avatar Become A Pro!
    Join Date: 05-26-11
    Posts: 7,922

    No Coin, maybe you should invest in a large mirror. You know, like a parrot.

    btw...great thread

  4. #4
    I/O
    I/O's Avatar Become A Pro!
    Join Date: 05-26-11
    Posts: 7,922

    Get a Life (TV series)

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    This article is about the American sitcom. For the UK reality show, see Get a Life (UK TV series).
    Get a Life

    Region 1 DVD cover of the complete series
    Genre Comedy, fantasy
    Created by Chris Elliott
    Adam Resnick
    David Mirkin
    Starring Chris Elliott
    Sam Robards
    Robin Riker
    Elinor Donahue
    Bob Elliott
    Taylor Fry
    Brady Bluhm
    Brian Doyle-Murray
    Theme music composer R.E.M.
    Opening theme "Stand"
    Country of origin United States
    Original language(s) English
    No. of seasons 2
    No. of episodes 35 (List of episodes)
    Production
    Executive producer(s) David Mirkin
    Producer(s) David Latt
    Chris Elliott
    Adan Resnick
    Steve Pepoon
    Running time 30 minutes
    Broadcast
    Original channel FOX
    Original run September 23, 1990 – March 8, 1992
    Get a Life is a television sitcom that was broadcast in the United States on the Fox Network from September 23, 1990, to March 8, 1992. The show stars Chris Elliott as a 30-year-old paperboy named Chris Peterson. Peterson lived in an apartment above his parents' garage (Elliot's parents are played by Elinor Donahue and his real life father, comedian Bob Elliott). The opening credits depict Chris Peterson delivering newspapers on his bike to the show's theme song, "Stand" by R.E.M.
    The show was a creation of Elliott, Adam Resnick (like Elliott, a writer for Late Night with David Letterman) and writer/director David Mirkin (former executive producer/showrunner for Newhart and later for The Simpsons). Mirkin was executive producer/showrunner of the series and also directed most of the episodes. Notable writers of the series included Charlie Kaufman, screenwriter of Being John Malkovich; and Bob Odenkirk, co-creator of Mr. Show with Bob and David and Tenacious D.
    The show was unconventional for a prime time sitcom, and many times the storylines of the episodes were surreal. For example, Elliott's character actually dies in twelve episodes. The causes of death included being crushed by a giant boulder, old age, tonsillitis, stab wounds, gunshot wounds, falling from an airplane, strangulation, getting run over by cars, choking on cereal, and simply exploding. For this reason, it was a struggle for Elliott and Mirkin to get the show on the air. Many of the executives at the Fox Network hated the show and thought it was too disturbing and that Elliott's character was too insane.[1]
    After only two VHS/DVD volumes were released, Chris Elliot confirmed that Shout Factory would be releasing the complete series of the show on September 18, 2012 - the first time all of the show's episodes were made commercially available.
    Contents



    Synopsis

    See also: List of Get a Life episodes
    Chris Peterson is a carefree, childlike bachelor who refuses to live the life of an adult. At the age of 30, Chris still lives with his parents and maintains a career delivering newspapers (the St. Paul Pioneer Press), a job that he has held since his youth. He has no driver's license (instead, riding his bicycle wherever he goes). He is depicted as being childish, naïve, gullible, foolish, occasionally irresponsible, and extremely dimwitted. Chris is often the subject of abuse from his friends and family. He is often seen dancing (involving a silly back-and-forth step while swinging his arms) to the piano tune "Alley Cat" by Bent Fabric. His lack of intelligence is exaggerated to absurd levels: at one point, he tries to leave his parents' house but is unable to operate the front door. He also fell out of an airplane after opening the plane's exterior door, believing that it led to the restroom.
    Chris's parents (Fred and Gladys Peterson) are a vapid middle-aged couple who are almost always seen in their pajamas and robes (even when they leave the house). They are often shown doing something abnormal like polishing handguns, or trying to shoot the deer that ate the flower bulbs out of their garden. Gladys (Elinor Donahue) is a smiling, caring mother who doted over Chris, though often makes cynical, passive-aggressive comments about him and his lifestyle. Fred (Bob Elliott) is a much more blunt, wise-cracking old man, who is constantly exasperated by his son (often calling him a "horse's a**"), and seems to have a reckless disregard for Chris's well-being (on one occasion, Chris demonstrated how his father taught him to use a shotgun by placing the barrel in his mouth). However, on rare occasions, Fred did stick up for Chris, such as when unlicensed Chris commandeered Fred's car for a date, leaving Fred to call the police thinking it was stolen, Fred defends Chris by saying he did not realize Chris borrowed it. Fred confided in Chris that he was proud to see him finally go on a date with a girl, and it may be a possibility for him to move out of the house soon.
    In the early episodes, Chris wanted little more than to spend his days reliving his childhood with his father and his best friend, Larry Potter (Sam Robards). Larry was Chris's friend since childhood, but, unlike Chris, Larry has since "grown up," owns a house, works a dead-end job as an accountant, and has a wife, Sharon (Robin Riker) and two children. Chris's decision not to get a license was a rare time he showed foresight: as he tells Larry, unlike him he was not tempted to drive to a makeout spot, implying that Larry was forced into a shotgun wedding by Sharon's family. Sharon is an overbearing housewife who does not want her husband associating with Chris, preferring instead that he make friends with more sophisticated socialites that better befit their image. It is implied that she is a sadistic dominatrix with her husband in private. Sharon despises Chris (and as such is Chris's main antagonist), and Chris takes any opportunity to irritate her. At one point, Chris has a fling with her sister. Larry is envious of Chris's carefree lifestyle and is often coerced by Chris into joining him in his adventures, despite his wife's wishes. To Chris's dismay, Larry eventually heeds his advice and leaves his wife and children at the beginning of the second season. Larry leaves a message for Chris that he is gone for good, and Chris, in his typical, ignorant manner, then wolfs down the message, as he believes paper is something to be eaten. This leaves Sharon traumatized, and she becomes more and more obsessed with killing Chris in revenge.
    In a defiant nod to Fox Network demands that his character "be more independent," Chris Peterson moved out of his parents' house at the beginning of the second season, much to his parents' amazement and joy (although he now lives in a nearby neighborhood and still frequently visits his parents), and into the garage of ex-cop Gus Borden, played by Brian Doyle-Murray, who had been fired from the police force for urinating on his boss. He is a gruff, demeaning sociopath with minimal tolerance for Chris's antics, which Chris seems to be oblivious to, while looking up to Gus as a sort of paternal figure. For that reason, Gus serves as Chris's comic foil throughout the second season. On rare occasions Gus did things to help out Chris, similar to the rare times Fred was a genuine father to Chris.
    Development

    In the DVD commentary for the series by David Mirkin, he discusses the development of the Chris Peterson character and the series in great detail. Mirkin states that the Chris Peterson character was originally somewhat based on Dennis the Menace, i.e. "What would Dennis The Menace have been like when he was 30 years old?" In the pilot, "Terror on the Hell Loop 2000", Chris Peterson was a fully functioning, wisecracking adult who is beating the system. However, as the series went on, he became a darker, more psychotic, character. According to Mirkin, the main character was made more likeable in the pilot to get the network to agree to order the series, and once the series was ordered, the producers took the character in the darker direction that was always intended.
    Mirkin explains that the series itself was both a homage to the sitcoms of the 1960s and 1970s as well as a subversive farce of the genre. Ultimately, Chris Peterson was a modern, borderline psychotic inhabiting a world of standard sitcom characters from a prior era. In particular, his main foil, Sharon, dresses and acts like standard sitcom character from the 1960s. Her house is a standard sitcom set, and she has a standard sitcom family. The town is inhabited by standard sitcom archetypes, often played by well-recognized character actors from that era (e.g. James Hampton from F Troop and Graham Jarvis from Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman). A particular homage to that era of sitcoms is that the same actors would play different minor characters, only episodes apart. Mirkin also noted that the use of the original house from The Munsters as a backdrop at the end of the show's opening credits was another homage to the genre. [2]
    Reruns

    The show was rerun in 2000 on the USA Network, although the series was only partially shown, and the theme song "Stand" by R.E.M. was replaced by generic music to avoid royalties for each playing of the theme. Occasionally, however, episodes aired with the correct theme.
    Home video

    Rhino Home Video released best of videos and DVDs - four videos with two episodes each and two DVDs with four episodes each, as well as one or two bonus features. The eight episodes on the videos are the same as the ones on the DVDs. The DVDs were released in 2000 and 2002 respectively. These have all gone out of print.
    Shout! Factory released the complete series on DVD.[3] It was released on September 18, 2012.[4] Although Chris Elliott stated in 2005 that he had recorded commentary tracks with Adam Resnick,[5] none of Elliott's and Resnik's commentaries were used; they were substituted with commentaries by David Mirkin, and Mirkin is similarly the only creator present in the DVD set's extras.
    It was noted by Mirkin that the reason the full DVD box set took so long to release is that the original producers of the show felt that all of the incidental music was very important to the series. They didn't want to release the series until all the rights to the songs had been secured, and the series could be released with all of the original music intact. [2]
    Legacy

    Hip hop producer Dan "the Automator" Nakamura is a noted fan of the series, stating "it was probably one of the best shows on television".[6] Handsome Boy Modeling School, consisting of Nakamura and "Prince Paul" Huston, is named after the series, and other works by Nakamura have referenced both Get a Life and Cabin Boy.[6] Tom Scharpling and Jon Wurster of The Best Show on WFMU became friends due to their mutual appreciation of Get a Life.[7]

  5. #5
    SEAHAWKHARRY
    Northern Lights
    SEAHAWKHARRY's Avatar SBR PRO
    Join Date: 11-29-07
    Posts: 26,068
    Betpoints: 2385

    ^^^^really

  6. #6
    I/O
    I/O's Avatar Become A Pro!
    Join Date: 05-26-11
    Posts: 7,922

    I think this is the most applicable part Harry...

    Chris Peterson is a carefree, childlike bachelor who refuses to live the life of an adult. At the age of 30, Chris still lives with his parents and maintains a career delivering newspapers (the St. Paul Pioneer Press), a job that he has held since his youth. He has no driver's license (instead, riding his bicycle wherever he goes). He is depicted as being childish, naïve, gullible, foolish, occasionally irresponsible, and extremely dimwitted. Chris is often the subject of abuse from his friends and family. He is often seen dancing (involving a silly back-and-forth step while swinging his arms) to the piano tune "Alley Cat" by Bent Fabric. His lack of intelligence is exaggerated to absurd levels: at one point, he tries to leave his parents' house but is unable to operate the front door. He also fell out of an airplane after opening the plane's exterior door, believing that it led to the restroom.

  7. #7
    doctorlw
    doctorlw's Avatar Become A Pro!
    Join Date: 05-12-10
    Posts: 70
    Betpoints: 78

    Quote Originally Posted by aortega521 View Post
    With the way my UTEP Miners are playing this was no surprise to me. I had them winning by 9 points. Won 13 out of last 14 games and 4 straight on the road and finally they are 13-4 ATS. This team has cashed a lot of tickets for those fortunate enough to be aware of the great coaching job Tim Floyd is doing and how well the players are playing. We're accelerating on all cylinder down in El Paso.
    I bet against UTEP when they played Charlotte, as the news of the 3 suspended players had just broke. But I've hammered them ever since and they haven't let me down.

    I was blown away by that line yesterday, ESPECIALLY since ODU was down their 2nd leading scorer. Would have plunked more cash down if I could have... bankroll is too small right now to take proper advantage.

Top