Even though we’re well past the year 2000, we’re still having trouble coming to grips with the fact that today’s present is nowhere near as excitingly futuristic as sci-fi movies had promised us back when we were kids. There are no moving sidewalks, cars still drive on boring old roads, and we have yet to meet a robot butler who’s half as sassy as Rosie from The Jetsons. However, there is one reason we’re glad that the future hasn’t evolved in the way that filmmakers had envisioned: We have much better hairstyles in the year 2009 than they do in the future!
Fess Parker Years active 1950u20132007 Known for Playing Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone Jim Coates in Old Yeller Television Daniel Boone Davy Crockett Spouse(s) Marcella Belle Rinehart u200b u200b ( m. 1960)u200b Then How old was Fess Parker when he played Davy Crockett?
This listing is the sale of a lifetime for anyone who might want to continue practicing social distancing long into the future.
On Patience Island, in the town of Portsmouth, Rhode Island, "abound by nature and serenity," lies a small 600 square feet house. The home happens to be the only one inhabiting the entirety of Patience Island's 210 acres.
The property was recently listed up for sale for $399,900 with the slight catch of being a cash-only purchase, according to The Newport Daily News.
Note: This article contains spoilers for the finale of Amazon Prime Video's Wilderness, based on the book by B. E. Jones.
If you've already managed to binge-watch all six episodes of Amazon Prime Video's twisty new thriller Wilderness, you're likely still digesting the shock ending (and trying to get the ear-worm theme song, Taylor Swift's Look What You Made Me Do out of your head).
Although cheating husband Will (Oliver Jackson-Cohen), is the one who ends up behind bars after being framed for the murder of his mistress, Cara (Ashley Benson), by his wife, Liv (Jenna Coleman), director So Yong Kim told Newsweek there's no clear "
When Marilyn Monroe filmed a love scene with Clark Gable in The Misfits, she dropped the bed-sheet and exposed her body in what would have been the first nude scene by an American actress in a feature film.
But director John Huston refused to include it, insisting on a retake, and the risqué footage was thought to have been destroyed.
Now, more than half a century later, the author of a forthcoming Monroe biography has discovered that it has survived.