Liam Neeson Approached by Seth MacFarlane About a Naked Gun Reboot
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Today in Mad Libs, Academy Award nominee and frequent action-thriller star Liam Neeson claims that he s been approached to star in a reboot of The Naked Gun movies with none other than Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane spearheading the effort. Speaking in an interview with
SlashFilm), Neeson revealed the news in a matter of fact way, outright saying: I ve been approached by Seth MacFarlane and Paramount Studios to maybe resurrect the Naked Gun films, before adding, It ll either finish my career or bring it in another direction. I honestly don t know. Having just said he s retiring from action movies, this could be the next step for him as an actor.
Kids Tablet Market Size, Share, Growth opportunities, Industry Demand, Segments and Forecast 2025
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For all their simplicity, viruses are sneaky little life forces.
Take SARS-Cov-2, the virus behind Covid-19. Challenged with the human immune system, the virus has gradually reshuffled parts of its genetic material, making it easier to spread among a human population. The new strain has already terrorized South Africa and shut down the UK, and recently popped up in the United States.
The silver lining is that our existing vaccines and antibody therapies are still likely to be effective against the new strain. But that’s not always the case. “Viral escape” is a nightmare scenario, in which the virus mutates just enough so that existing antibodies no longer recognize it. The consequences are dire: it means that even if you’ve already had the infection, or produced antibodies from a vaccine, those protections are now kneecapped or useless.
Heaven Beats Iowa
Robert Pollard would have been 10 years old when the Ohio Express’ inescapable “Yummy Yummy Yummy” hit number four on the charts in the spring of 1968. Across 32 albums and counting, the Dayton, Ohio musician’s Guided By Voices have often paid homage to the raucous windmill guitar work of the Who, but on the debut EP from Pollard’s new Cub Scout Bowling Pins project, it turns out that some 53 years later the bubblegum snap of the Super K Productions hit factory made an impression on him, too.
The staccato, introductory bursts of guitar and snare on “Heaven Beats Iowa,” for instance, match “Yummy Yummy Yummy” beat-for-beat; a jubilant Farfisa organ melody, meanwhile, might owe more to 1910 Fruit Gum Company’s “1,2,3 Red Light”. But while Cub Scout Bowling Pins have a knack for recreating this vintage feel, the song isn’t mere pastiche. In a true-to-GBV way, it’s deceptively complex, cramming countless chord changes into its sub-three-m
In this week s episode of
Rule Breaker Investing, Motley Fool co-founder David Gardner is joined by analysts Rick Munarriz and Karl Thiel to break down some not-so-good stocks. Find out what went wrong for these companies, if there s light at the end of the tunnel, and more.
To catch full episodes of all The Motley Fool s free podcasts, check out our podcast center. To get started investing, check out our quick-start guide to investing in stocks. A full transcript follows the video.
This video was recorded on January 5, 2021.
David Gardner: What s the worst investment you ve ever made? The worst? Did you lose 100%? I sure hope you didn t do worse than that. I mean, the only way to do worse than that is to borrow money that you didn t have and then lose all of that. Well, as many losers as I ve had and as used to losing as I am, I ve still never picked a stock for The Motley Fool that went down 100%, but I ve come close. This time, every year, once a year, I talk about my worst s
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