More of Emily at the beach, or a pool, or some other place where she can wear minimal clothing
Creepiest acting ever
Donald Trump in Ghosts Can’t Do It
To be fair, I’m not sure the creepiness is primarily Trump’s fault. He was working with John Derek’s screenplay and direction, and it is not unreasonable to argue that Derek was the worst writer/director in history among those who made three or more films in those capacities. He made Ed Wood look like a combination of James Cameron and Scorsese. Trump had to deliver and react to absolutely preposterous dialogue, all while the cameraman was filming everyone in turn with too-close close-ups.
In these circumstances, Daniel Day-Lewis and Tom Hanks would have seemed creepy.
But not AS creepy.
Paradise is gone
The town of Paradise, California – home to 26,000 people- has been completely leveled by fire. “In the residential areas, 80 to 90 percent of the people lost their homes.”
Stan Lee, co-creator of Marvel Comics, dies
The beloved Stan Lee has passed on at 95
He was the last man standing among the team that created Marvel’s iconic heroes. Steve Ditko died a few months ago. Jack Kirby, who was the oldest of the trio, passed away in 1994.
Other people will write about Stan’s accomplishments, so I want to discuss the astounding community and environment that shaped him. He was in the class of 1939 at DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx, which was then a public all-boys institution. In his year alone, he shared classes with Paddy Chayefsky, the famous playwright and screenwriter, and Lawrence Tisch, who would become president of CBS. One year ahead of them at Clinton were Marty Balsam, Robert Q Lewis, Sugar Ray Robinson, A.M. Rosenthal of the NY Times, and David Begelman, who would become the head of Columbia Pictures. When Stan was a senior, some of the underclassmen included Richard Avedon, James Baldwin and two popular comic actors, Don Adams (Get Smart) and Larry Storch (F Troop). I could list many others from those classes who would be approximately as accomplished in their own fields, but you wouldn’t know their names because they made their marks outside of the entertainment fields. The list of famous and accomplished graduates from that one public high school is mind-boggling.
And of all of them, Stan may have made the greatest impact on pop culture. He was kind of a late bloomer compared to some of the men mentioned above, who were household names in the 50s and 60s, but when Stan hit, he hit big. He started to become known to comic book fans when he was 40ish, and his fame just kept escalating as his characters emerged in movie after movie. It was still ascending when he was in his 80s and 90s! As Stan himself would say, “Excelsior.”
The characters he created or co-created are now known throughout the world: Spider-Man, the Hulk, Thor, Iron Man, Dr. Strange, X-Men, Guardians of the Galaxy, Daredevil … the list goes on and on.
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UPDATE from the comment section: “Pretty amazing that the school also had alums that included Bill Finger and Bob Kane (class of ’33) the team that created Batman. That one place is responsible for the majority of great superheroes.”
Matthew Whitaker and Michael Chiklis

Whitaker also resembles the Marvel character, Kingpin.
Cobie Smulders Sex Scene in Friends from College, episode 7
Cobie Smulders manages to have vigorous sex for about a full minute of running time without showing a single bit of flesh
