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Last Saturday, Wyoming lost a conference game to Air Force by a score of 28-27. It was a tough loss for the Cowboys, as they squandered a 10-point halftime lead. After the game, Wyoming's head coach, Dave Christensen, was very angry, and he unleashed an expletive-filled rant on his counterpart, Troy Calhoun. Christensen seems to be under the impression that one of the Air Force players faked an injury to buy his team some extra time. As far as coach meltdowns go, this ranks pretty high. Bonus points are awarded for the fact that Christensen's daughter comes rushing in to try and calm him right before he yells, "Go give your fuckin' press conference, fly boy!" (We think this is an Air-Force-themed dis.) Other highlights include:No you fuckin' fake the fuckin' injury. You have no fuckin' ethics, Troy!Double bonus points are awarded for the fact that this occurred on Military Appreciation Night.Los Angeles Times, July 5, 1957, Judy Tyler and her husband are killed in a car accident.

There have been a lot of careers cut short just as they were starting: from Clarine Seymour to James Dean to the recent demise of Anton Yelchin. But I can’t think of a more frustrating example than Judy Tyler, who died in a car accident in 1957, aged only 24. Oh, and her husband, puppy and kitten were killed, too! And someone stole the cash, furs and jewels from her wrecked car—depressed yet? Judy not only had beauty and talent, but she had an almost frightening drive and ambition, so if there is an afterlife, she is really pissed-off. She started her career as a Copa Girl (“to call it dancing was entirely ridiculous. It was hardly walking,” she recalled). She branched out to nightclub singing and developed one of the best, clearest belt voices—kind of like Ethel Merman filtered down through velvet. In 1952 she was, bizarrely, cast as Princess Summerfall Winterspring on The Howdy Doody Show, a role she played for three years, while freelancing on variety shows and in clubs.

Is it my imagination, or is her mile-wide smile just a little strained, as if she is about to snap and beat Buffalo Bob to death with Howdy Doody? Judy’s big break seemed to come with a starring role in the 1955-56 Broadway musical Pipe Dream, but it failed to take off or make her a star (I saw the 2012 revival, with Laura Osnes in Judy’s role, and . . . well, it just was not a very good show).
green jls hoodie But then she got two starring roles in movies!
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krink hoodieIn the smash-hit Jailhouse Rock, Judy played a record producer who encourages ex-con Elvis in his singing career—Elvis got to rock out six numbers, but Judy sang not one note.
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Now, she had to have been cast because she was a singer, so what happened? Did the studio decide her Broadway belt did not mesh with Elvis’ rockabilly style? Or was not one musical moment to be given to anyone but the star?
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diamond hoodies zumiez But then she starred, and sang, in another film!
rottweiler hoodie eatingUnfortunately, it was the low-budget and cringingly awful Bop Girl Goes Calypso. I don’t think I will be spoiling the plot for you when I tell you that Judy played a Bop Girl who Goes Calypso. Here is a compilation of her four numbers in the film, and I beg you to fast-forward through the second and fourth ones, as they might very well actually kill you. But get a load of Judy just shining with numbers one and three, “Roving Gal” and “Shady Lady.”

Of course Judy’s career might still have fizzled if she’d lived, but it would not be for lack of steely confidence. She told reporter Earl Wilson, “If anybody’s responsible for me, it’s me! I’ve broken down more doors in New York City than anybody in this room, I’m here to bet. I have the distinction in my agency of getting any job I auditioned for.”Now here's a parody of Howdy we hope you'll REALLY like!] - Here Kovacs spoofs the grand daddy of all children's programming, "The Howdy Doody Show". Instead of Buffalo Bob Smit... Howdy Doody was a puppet show that starred him, Howdy Doody, best friend Buffalo Bob and Clarabell the Clown. It was a long-running variety show for children that was very loved. See full summary » See full cast & crew » Do you have any images for this title? 2 news articles » See full cast »It came along just in time for all the Baby Boomers and became one of their fondest childhood memories. Add content advisory for parents »

Release Date: 15 November 1954 (Canada) See full technical specs » James Doohan was originally cast as Timber Tom but wanted more money than the CBC was prepared to pay and so was replaced by Mews, who couldn't appear for the first week of the show and was temporarily replaced as host by William Shatner as Ranger Bob. Referenced in Battle of the Blades: Rock (2013) This FAQ is empty. Add the first question. DVD's that are available? William Shatner as Ranger Bob i have the 40th aniversity on video The goodbye song lyrics Discuss Howdy Doody (1954) on the IMDb message boards » Contribute to This Page Princess Pan of the Forest“Better Late Than Never” has begun its TV journey with solid ratings, joining “Golden Girls,” “Murder She Wrote,” “Matlock” and others in shooting down the supposition that audiences won’t support fare with older folks in the lead. Chances are, everyone who watched the Asian travelogue starring Henry Winkler, William Shatner, George Foreman and Terry Bradshaw fall into one of two categories: Those who consider the four men national treasures, and those who have no idea who they are but simply find it amusing to watch a bunch of old guys drinking in a robot bar.

RELATED: Captain Kirk, meet Quentin Coldwater — William Shatner gets smitten with ‘The Magicians’ For both camps, we thought it would be fun to dust off some long-forgotten facts about four men who’ve led incredibly diverse careers. So sit back, read up — and if a robot bartender happens to be nearby, feel free to order another round. In 1954, the future Captain Kirk got his start playing a ranger on “The Canadian Howdy Doody Show”; coincidentally enough, his future “Star Trek” co-star James Doohan also spent his early days on the Great White North spin-off of the popular American kids’ show. Since video of that is impossible to find, even on the vast wasteland known as YouTube, instead we’ll include a clip of Shatner acting opposite a giant penguin. While it’s no secret that Shatner has pitched many products over the years — Priceline, Wendy’s and Blockbuster Video, to name a few — this little-seen ad has the sci-fi legend schilling for Loblaws, a Canadian supermarket chain that apparently has large, flightless birds roaming the frozen foods aisle.

You probably know that Big George is a two-time heavyweight champion who famously lost to Muhammad Ali in the “Rumble in the Jungle.” You might also know that he has five sons named George, and has plenty of money to provide for them and their seven sisters because his George Foreman Grill reportedly earned him over $200 million during its infomercial peak. What you might not know is that after Foreman lost to Ali, in an attempt to resurrect his career, the boxer came up with an off-the-wall idea: Fighting five men in one night. With Howard Cosell calling the match(es), and Muhammad Ali himself providing color commentary by screaming at Foreman the entire time, Foreman battled multiple boxers, corner men who ran into the ring — and baited Ali every chance he got. “This is the weirdest thing you will ever see,” said Cosell, and he had a point. Of course, everyone remembers Winkler as Arthur Fonzarelli, the “Happy Days” character who turned the word “cool” into a pop culture touchstone.

But even back when he was playing a greasy-haired hood, Winkler had more artistic ambitions — and one of them put an Oscar on his shelf. In 1977, Winkler narrated and executive produced “Who Are the DeBolts? And Where Did They Get Nineteen Kids?” Decades before the Gosselins or the Duggars, the uplifting documentary shined a spotlight on a big-hearted American family who had adopted 14 children, some of whom were severely disabled war orphans. Winkler’s movie won multiple awards, including the Best Documentary Oscar in 1978. A former NFL quarterback turned lovable broadcaster and supporting star in Matthew McConaughey rom-coms, the 67-year-old Bradshaw has led an interesting life, both on and off the gridiron. Perhaps his most out-of-left-field moments, however, have been preserved on vinyl. The quarterback has recorded six albums of country/western and gospel music, with his cover of “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” reaching the Top 20 on Billboard’s country chart in 1976.