#earl
Earl Holliman, Rugged, and Familiar, Screen Presence, Dies at 96
Earl Holliman, Rugged, and Familiar, Screen Presence, Dies at 96 While never a big star, he was a recognizable one, with roles in “The Twilight Zone,” “Giant,” “Forbidden Planet” and the 1970s series “Police Woman.”
My name is Earl is criminally underrated.
My name is Earl is criminally underrated. My name is Earl is my 2nd favorite comedy series of all time behind arrested development. Although I’d say it means more to me than any other comedy show. Yes it was a product of its time (early 2000s) and some of it might not hold up. But the messages do. A dead beat good for nothing man who wants to better his life after realizing he’s done …
My Name is Earl
My Name is Earl In my quest to finally catch up on some older shows I missed the first time around, I’ve been binge-watching My Name is Earl. I had only seen a few random episodes when it originally aired and it seemed funny enough to revisit. Now I’m about halfway through the final season. Besides the main characters, I can’t believe how many guest stars they …
Interview: Derek Earl Baron, AKA Wandering Earl
Interview: Derek Earl Baron, AKA Wandering Earl On digital nomading, building a blog audience, travel gear, visiting Iraq, and a special travel offer for my readers
My Name is Earl is the perfect sitcom.
My Name is Earl is the perfect sitcom. Only 4 seasons so it didn’t overstay its run, awesome cast, funny premise, no laugh track and lots of great cameos. I just watched the S2ep20 where Norm Mcdonald plays a deceased strip club owner’s son (Burt Reynolds). I cant stop laughing. They dont make shows like this anymore. submitted by /u/Derpinator_420
Earl Sweatshirt – Solace [hiphop]
Earl Sweatshirt – Solace submitted by /u/greenbikinibottom
Waltons creator Earl Hamner honored with life-size statue
Waltons creator Earl Hamner honored with life-size statue submitted by /u/ASGfan
Short Conversations with Poets: Michael Earl Craig
Short Conversations with Poets: Michael Earl Craig Across his first five—and now six—collections of poetry, Michael Earl Craig has developed a poetry as whimsical as it is serious, diffusing the gravitas not by leaving it out, but by building out a surface—a texture in language—that feels disarming, direct, omnivorous in its references, and impishly playful. Parataxis is Craig’s friend, but more…