Word: vet
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Viet Nam vet who takes issue with the fad of Rambomania. It glorifies all I have been trying to forget for the past 15 years. The destruction of an ancient culture and its people has been a haunting memory for me, and I see no need to depict it in a motion picture. Chip Troiano East Hardwick, Vt. Good Morning Today...
...adoption cable-TV show Who Gets the Dog. While watching one episode, Harley, 4, the daughter of Randa Boyer, one of Petlane's star pet advisers, saw a family drive away with its new pooch and yelled, "That dog has no seat belt!" Boyer contacted the show's vet, Dean Graulich, who now offers pet seat belts at his hospital in Malibu, Calif. Nemeth's response? "I'm so pleased that a 4-year-old got it!" Her hope is that, with Petlane, everyone else will...
...motives behind the backstage banter aren't unmixed: the directors are giving fans what they want, and they're also engaging in subtle, studio-sanctioned advance marketing. (The suits at Warner and Universal vet every entry.) "There's really no downside to having these websites. It can only help the box office," says Paul Dergarabedian, president of Exhibitor Relations, which tracks box-office trends. "You're building the want-to-see factor that you have to have for a good opening weekend...
...series becomes a kind of buddy comic, with Marvin as the wizened vet and Herbert as the comical rookie. Their friendship forms the emotional center of the series, as Marvin gains increasing respect for Herbert, who matures from a 90-lb duckling to self-confident, if somewhat inept, adventurer. This relationship feels genuinely warm, and keeps the series from being just a simple parody, even when some of the gags are as funny as when Herbert and Marvin infiltrate the Hooded Ones' lair disguised as interior decorators, complete with foppish 18th century outfits...
Often the creators choose to take a sweetly mocking approach to the classic iconography, such as in “Batman Smells” written by “The King of Queens” vet Patton Oswalt and drawn by Bob Fingerman. The story elucidates a possible scenario behind the familiar rhyme “Jingle bells/ Batman smells/ Robin laid an egg/ Batmobile lost its wheel/ Joker got away.” The pleasure of this story is that it is funny, original, and totally accessible for younger audiences and non-readers, while still filled with familiarities...