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Uncle Al

‘Today’ Al Roker Has Choice Words For Co-Hosts’ Singing
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Al Roker is known for his co-hosting duties with Today. Naturally, this has led to a variety of memorable scenes with his co-hosts. Recently, Roker gave an interesting reaction to two of his co-stars as they started singing on the show.

Two Of Al Roker’s Co-Hosts Sang A Hit From Dolly Parton & Kenny Rogers

Over the years, Roker is probably best known for serving as a weather anchor. However, he has also served as a co-host for Today‘s third hour.

Occasionally, this has seen Roker involved with a variety of memorable moments with his co-stars. A recent Pop Start segment, for example, saw Jenna Bush Hager and Savannah Guthrie sing “Islands in the Stream” by Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers.

Al Roker – YouTube

However, as noted by Closer Weekly, Roker seemed less than impressed with the performance. He could be seen taking off his glasses and rubbing his...
See full article at TV Shows Ace
  • 2/2/2025
  • by John Witiw
  • TV Shows Ace
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Ministry Kick Off 2024 Tour in San Francisco with Gary Numan and Front Line Assembly: Photos + Video
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Ministry kicked off their 2024 North American tour with Gary Numan and Front Line Assembly at the historic Warfield Theater in San Francisco on Tuesday evening (February 27th), just three days before the release of their 16th studio album, Hopiumforthemasses. As it had been a few months since Ministry were on the road, they were definitely refreshed and re-energized, delivering a set of both new and classic songs to a near sold-out venue.

Ministry wasted no time playing the new stuff, as they kicked off their set with five songs from Hopiumforthemasses, beginning with the singles “B.D.E.” (Big Dick Energy) and “Just Stop Oil.” Frontman and ring leader Al Jourgensen was his usual frantic self, belting out the lyrics while engaging with the fans up against the barricade. After a blistering version of “Goddam White Trash,” he and the band were joined by Jello Biafra for “Aryan Embarrassment” (a...
See full article at Consequence - Music
  • 2/28/2024
  • by Raymond Ahner
  • Consequence - Music
‘Welcome to Camp Nightmare’ – Revisiting the 9th ‘Goosebumps’ Book and Its TV Adaptation
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Welcome to Camp Nightmare was originally published in July 1993 (Spine #9). The series adaptation aired on Friday, November 17, 1995 (runtime: 22 minutes x 2).

One of the many reasons why Goosebumps so effortlessly endures is that the series has always concerned itself with the universal truths and experiences of childhood. From Halloween masks to amusement parks to the untold terrors of piano lessons, R.L. Stine embraced those experiences and preoccupations which so surround the world of his youthful readership.

Given such proclivities, it only made sense that approximately one year after the first Goosebumps book Welcome to Dead House hit the shelves, like so many kid-friendly franchises often do, Goosebumps went to camp. And while this summertime adolescent escape traded in all of the staples familiar to its ilk, like canoe excursions, woodsy hikes, campfire songs and crabby counselors one generation removed, this particular camp was appropriately twisted by shady intentions and ever darkening goings-on.
See full article at bloody-disgusting.com
  • 5/31/2023
  • by Paul Farrell
  • bloody-disgusting.com
Step Up: High Water Season 3 Episode 4 Review: Cell Therapy
Nothing stays the same. At some point, bubbles burst.

Step Up: High Water Season 3 Episode 4 was a testament to this. From Sage landing in prison to Tal's safe space at High Water and Marquise and Rigo's co-dependent relationship, their illusion of normalcy was shattered.

While this show is primarily narrative-driven, at its core, the characters are the heart and soul of it. This episode leaned deeply into relationships between characters.

Sage's stunt after the Bmt fiasco landed him directly in prison. Honestly, I've accepted that Sage is not a bad man. He is innocent in this. All the accusations against him are not true.

His biggest shortcoming is his superiority complex. But there is no law against complexes.

This hardship he is going through should be a huge learning opportunity for him, and I'm starting to see him begin to realize that. He realizes that outside the millions of adoring fans,...
See full article at TVfanatic
  • 11/7/2022
  • by Denis Kimathi
  • TVfanatic
‘Old Henry’ Venice Film Festival Review: Tim Blake Nelson Kills In Scrappy Homage To Classic Movie Westerns
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Character actor Tim Blake Nelson may have found his niche in memorable turns recalling the heyday when Westerns ruled the roost in Hollywood. Or at least in Venice, where this film festival once again has shown a fondness for the star in a genre that rarely gets much of a closeup anymore. A couple of years ago, Nelson was unforgettable singing “When a Cowboy Trades His Spurs for Wings” in one of the vignettes of the Coen brothers’ anthology The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, which had its world premiere in Venice before going on to get an Oscar nomination for that very song. Now Nelson is back in his inimitable scruffy style as a live-off-the-land-looking guy bringing up a straight-arrow teenage son in the waning days of the old west as Old Henry, which debuted in an out of competition slot at Venice earlier today.

Set in 1906, Old Henry is...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 9/8/2021
  • by Pete Hammond
  • Deadline Film + TV
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