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(11/17/05 5:00am)
This past week Street Film sat down with David Schwimmer at Philadelphia's Sofitel to discuss his college days, life after Friends and his role in the recently released Duane Hopwood. Schwimmer plays the title character in this comedy-drama, an alcoholic father whose life is unraveling before his eyes.
(09/22/05 4:00am)
It's barely 11:35 p.m. when the first freshman of the night starts throwing up in the women's bathroom.
(09/15/05 4:00am)
Michael Showalter doesn't think there's anything funny about Brooklyn.
(02/17/05 5:00am)
It's probably a good idea not to get tanned before you get tanned (and by tanned we mean tanned and also drunk), as was initially the premise of this pre-Spring Break tanning investigation, because the whole thing is a lot more complicated than you might think. Both of us, one experienced, one less so, set out to see how brown we could get sans sun. Tanning is a secretive ritual, and here we are, bringing ultraviolet light to light.
(02/17/05 5:00am)
Never has Jim Carrey's penchant for physical humor been demonstrated more clearly than in 1994's The Mask, when he played Stanley Ipkiss' bedeviled character with unparalleled aplomb. Alas, to ignore Carrey's absence in the sequel, Son of the Mask, would be an unforgivable oversight.
(02/10/05 5:00am)
We were going to go abroad first semester junior year, but we decided to go to the Olive Garden instead. The Garden is a cultural phenomenon of which neither of us had previously partaken. The advertisements are insidious, and honestly, it was sort of daunting to review such an establishment. Neither of us are classist people, but still, the Olive Garden... we just didn't know. Sure, we had heard of endless breadsticks and pasta bowls, and Yona had even attempted to dine at the Garden on another occasion, but to no avail. Both of us were losing our Olive Garden virginity at the same time.
(01/27/05 5:00am)
Too often at good restaurants, pomp and circumstance ruin pleasant meals. Kevin Klause's Farmicia is just the opposite kind of place, in the best possible way. In a city that is quickly becoming overcrowded with frou-frou eateries and theatrical restaurateurs, suddenly there appears a purveyor of high quality food in a superb atmosphere, without pretense.
(11/04/04 5:00am)
Jews are fun to laugh at. From Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint to Seinfeld to Adam Sandler's "The Hanukkah Song (versions ad nauseum)," the rule is tried and true: laugh at a Jew and you will be laughing for a long time.
(10/07/04 4:00am)
Cindy is small and pretty, soft-spoken yet animated. She arrived at Penn to study Education and Linguistics two years ago, and very quickly she met Mark*, a fellow graduate student, through the Penn Graduate Christian Fellowship. Within three weeks the two were dating.
(09/30/04 4:00am)
College is really about being a junior.
(09/23/04 4:00am)
There are times in life when that which you love is also that which you loathe. I am familiar with this feeling -- the queasy nausea of obsessive repulsion. My mother, too many boys to count, chopsticks and "Hey Ya" have all brought this upon me, twisting my emotional insides into a pretzel of confusion. Do I want to hug you or hit you? Kiss you or piss (on) you (in a not-kinky way)? Use you or abuse you? Hum you or remove all traces of you from every single iTunes playlist upon which you appear?
(04/22/04 4:00am)
Randy, a castmember of MTV's Real World: San Diego, an artist, a Sea and Cake fan and currently a spokesperson for STA Travel, chewed the fat about life, liberty and the pursuit of a good vacation. Street learns that the key to Real World success is aggression -- and that really, it's not that different from backpacking in Europe. Yeah. Right.
(04/15/04 4:00am)
My parents have failed me.
(04/01/04 5:00am)
In a freakish turn of events, seven of our best TV shows on DVD begin with the letters S or F. Despite such great odds, Saved by the Bell and Farscape didn't make the cut, but 10 other great television shows did. Go check them out soon, and enjoy the luxuries of commercial-free TV. It's like your own personal HBO.
(02/19/04 5:00am)
My family got HBO for me two and a half years ago, because I wanted to watch Sex and the City. Back then, HBO was still considered uncool in New York. Now, of course, things are different. HBO has Sex to thank for that. I have always watched Sex with my parents -- even the dirty parts. Together we have grown to love it. Now, on summer Sundays, I crowd in bed with my family, four or five friends and anyone else who appears in our entry foyer. That is something I will miss.
(01/29/04 5:00am)
Sublime has changed my life.
(11/20/03 5:00am)
Caroline in the City (1995-1999)
(11/06/03 5:00am)
The Matrix was a good movie. Perhaps a great movie to some, but commonly accepted as at least a good movie by most. Reloaded was not good. Fine, it was not terrible. Some say "the second one blew chucks," but if it had not been released to such high hopes, it would have been fine. It could have been a standalone action hit. Plus, one knew that Revolutions would be not simply good but great -- a huge ball of Gnostic-Christian-postmodernist, graphically-exceptional fun.
(10/30/03 5:00am)
Back in the day, John Holmes was the biggest -- and therefore the best -- in the biz. "Johnny Wadd" starred in more than 2000 adult productions and reportedly bedded more than 10,000 women over the course of his career -- including his wife.
(10/23/03 4:00am)
If families who pray together stay together, then families who act together must contract together, because in Hollywood, not only do individuals get typecast -- sibling sets do, too. Here are some of the best, and some of the worst, of the famous families, and why you should watch out for them.